Root v. KAMO Electric Cooperative, Inc.

1985 OK 8, 699 P.2d 1083, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 226
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1985
Docket56995, 57071
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 1985 OK 8 (Root v. KAMO Electric Cooperative, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Root v. KAMO Electric Cooperative, Inc., 1985 OK 8, 699 P.2d 1083, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 226 (Okla. 1985).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

Appellees, W.C. and Pauline Root, instituted the present action on October 5,1979, by filing a petition alleging unauthorized entry onto appellees’ land by agents, servants and employees of appellant KAMO Electric Cooperative. This petition alleged that one of appellant’s survey stakes had destroyed a tractor tire of appellees’ worth $661. Appellees also requested other actual and punitive damages, including the sum of $1,000 for the right of entry onto the land.

On October 29, 1979, appellant filed an answer and cross-petition. This answer alleged that the entry and survey made had been authorized by law and had been conducted pursuant to a temporary restraining order issued in a collateral suit and properly served on appellees.

Appellant’s cross-petition alleged that it had the power as a rural electric cooperative, organized under the Rural Electric Cooperative Act, 18 O.S.1971, §§ 437 through 437.30, to acquire land by condemnation. Appellant sought to acquire a perpetual easement to establish and maintain a 161 KV electric transmission line across appellees’ property. The easement would be one hundred feet in width and three thousand eight hundred feet long, encompassing approximately 8.8 acres of land. Appellant also sought the right to cross appellees’ land to obtain access to this easement, as well as the right to cut back any trees which would endanger the transmission line.

Pursuant to appellant’s cross-petition the trial court appointed three commissioners to assess the value of the easement to be condemned. The commissioners returned a report valuing the easement at $150,000. Appellant took exception to this report on the ground that one of the commissioners had a conflict of interest. Appellants’ exceptions were sustained and a new set of commissioners were appointed.

The report of the second set of commissioners valued the easement across appel-lees’ property at $12,560. This report was filed on January 16, 1980. On March 17, 1980, both appellant and appellees filed objections to the report and requested a jury trial.

Jury trial of this case commenced on May 4, 1981, and continued through May 7. At trial, evidence concerning appellant’s alleged trespass and resulting damages was presented, as well as evidence concerning the proposed condemnation of the easement and its valuation.

The jury returned a verdict for appellees on May 7, 1981. The jury awarded $1,661 as damages from the trespass and valued the easement to be condemned at $80,000. Judgment was entered on this verdict.

On May 15,1981, appellant filed a motion for new trial, alleging, among other points, error in submission of the trespass question to the jury and in the verdict on that question. In response to appellant’s motion, appellees admitted that the evidence presented to the jury did not establish a *1086 value of the right of entry for which the jury had returned an award of $1,000 in the trespass action. Additionally, appellees stated that the jury had awarded $9.58 in excess of the amount of actual damages proven to have resulted from the trespass. Appellees therefore tendered a remittitur in the sum of $1,009.58.

In hearing the motion for new trial on June 3, 1981, the trial court found that there was sufficient evidence of trespass, but that there was a lack of evidence as to damages as admitted by appellees. The trial court ordered a remittitur in the amount of $1,009.58. The balance of relief sought by appellant’s motion for new trial was denied. Both appellant and appellees thereafter filed petitions in error in this Court challenging the trial court’s rulings. Appellees subsequently dismissed their appeal.

Appellees then filed, in the trial court, a motion to determine and tax attorney fees, litigation costs and interest on the judgment. Appellant responded, asserting that appellees were not entitled to recover any of these elements in this action.

A hearing was held on this motion on June 17, 1981. After hearing evidence of the reasonableness of the requested attorney fees and litigation expenses in the form of expert witness fees, the trial court awarded interest, attorney fees and litigation expenses to appellees. Appellant in turn appealed from this ruling. Both of appellant’s appeals have been consolidated for determination at this time.

I.

Appellant’s initial challenge to the judgment rendered pursuant to the jury verdict is presented on the grounds that certain of the instructions given to the jury by the trial court were erroneous and were properly objected to by appellant. In assessing this proposition we must be guided by the standard to be applied to a challenge to a jury verdict on the basis of improper instructions. As stated in the case of Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad v. Harper: 1

It is well settled in this jurisdiction that a judgment will not be disturbed because of allegedly erroneous instructions, unless it appears reasonably certain that the jury was misled thereby, resulting in prejudice to the complaining party. See Commonwealth Life Insurance Co. v. Gay, Okl., 365 P.2d 149. As said in that case (at pgs. 153 and 154):
“The salient test of reversible error in instructions is whether the jury was misled to the extent of rendering a different verdict than it would have rendered, if the alleged errors had not occurred. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Co. v. Jones, Okl., 354 P.2d 415.”

A.

Appellant first asserts error in the trial court’s review of the pleadings to the jury. In the course of this review the trial court stated that appellant’s cross-petition for condemnation had stated that the easement was taken “for the construction, operation, maintenance and reconstruction of an electric power transmission line_” Appellant maintains that the word “reconstruction” had not been mentioned in the pleadings and that its inclusion in the court’s review misled the jury into believing appellant had taken broader rights than those involved in the construction, operation and maintenance of an electric transmission easement for a single transmission facility consisting of several conductor wires. Upon review, we do not believe that the jury was misled by the court’s statement.

In the case of Gendron v. Central Maine Power Co., 2 the court faced the decisive issue of whether the power company’s “proposed replacement or maintenance program [would] extend [the power company’s] use beyond the rights acquired in the 1927 easement.” The 1927 easement had been granted by deed which gave the power company the right to set and maintain a *1087 line of fourteen poles. The power company-sought to replace all the poles as part of a long-term maintenance program. The grantor of the easement sought to enjoin this replacement. The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine stated:

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Bluebook (online)
1985 OK 8, 699 P.2d 1083, 1985 Okla. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/root-v-kamo-electric-cooperative-inc-okla-1985.