Shabino v. Dolese Bros. Co.

1935 OK 773, 49 P.2d 686, 174 Okla. 69, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1364
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1935
DocketNo 25659.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1935 OK 773 (Shabino v. Dolese Bros. Co.) 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
Shabino v. Dolese Bros. Co., 1935 OK 773, 49 P.2d 686, 174 Okla. 69, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1364 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

BEK CURIAM.

The plaintiff, Olive M. Shabino, brought this suit in her own behalf and in behalf of the children of Charles R. Shabino, deceased. However, the action was abandoned as to the claims made in behalf of the oldest son, Charles I,. Sha-bino. The suit grew out of a collision between a Cadillac sedan, being driven by the deceased, and a truck of the Dolese Bros. Company, being driven by the defendant Frank Guiles, as an employee of said Dolese Bros. Company. The accident happened at a point on U. S. Highway No. 66 or 77, between Oklahoma City and Edmond, Okla., at a point on said highway at about the south line of 'what is known as Seventieth street in Ravens Wood Manor, a platted subdivision, located about three miles north of the State Capitol Building in Oklahoma City.

The pleadings and the evidence disclose that Charles R. Shabino was driving south out of Edmond, Okla., on September 28, 1932 ; that his wife and youngest son were in the ear with him; that the road upon which they were traveling is a paved highway 18 feet in width, and that Seventieth street is approximately 460 feet south of an elevation in the highway along 'which Mr. Sha-bino was driving; that the road from that point is down grade to and beyond Seventieth street. The record further discloses that Frank Guiles was driving a truck belonging to Dolese Bros. Company, proceeding along the same highway approaching said Seventieth street, from (lie south, and chat the collision occurred on said highway !at a point approximately even with the south line of Seventieth street where it intersects said highway. The record discloses, and it is aa-mitted, that Mr. Shabino received injuries in said accident and as the result of said collision, from which on the same date he died .at the University Hospital in Oklahoma City.

The plaintiff contends that the collision was due to the negligence of the defendant, Frank Guiles, while operating the said truck for the Dolese Bros. Company, in the course of delivering a load of sand to a customer in the said Ravens Wood Manor and charging such negligence also to said company. The defendants contend that they were without negligence and that the collision was due to the negligence and lack of care on the part of the said Charles R. Shabino and that bis negligence and lack of ordinary care proximately caused or contributed to <vuse the accident complained of. The case was tried to a jury on the 6th, 7th and 8th days of December, 1933, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial in due course, and the same was, on the 22nd day of December, 1933, overruled, and the case came here on appeal from that order.

The evidence consists of oral testimony of witnesses, photostatic cuts of the car and truck, also' diagrams, measurements and other data reflecting the physical conditions in the highway at the point of collision and explanatory of the testimony as to the location of this intersection with reference to the hill or elevation north thereof. The evidence. Including both the testimony of the witnesses and the physical facts and circumstances, seems to have been fully pre- *71 seated to and considered by tbe court and the jury. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony upon the vital issues of negligence. It being admitted that Charles B. Shabino, the deceased, died as the result of the injuries received in this collision, the jury was therefore called upon to determine only the issues of negligence and contributory negligence as presented in the petition of the plaintiff and in the answers of the defendants. Plaintiff sets out a number of assignments of error, same being lettered from “(a)” to “(I).”

The first point argued as ground for reversal appears at page 33 of plaintiff’s brief, in language as follows:

“The trial court erred in refusing to grant a new trial, when the verdict did not meet the considerate approval of the mind and conscience of the court, and the court was not of the opinion that the verdict was right.”

Plaintiff cites a number of authorities in support of this particular ground for reversal of the judgment. A leading ease cited is that of Hall v. Polson, 130 Okla. 136, 265 P. 1068. The court in that ease reaffirms the rule that:

“It is the duty of the trial court, upon a motion for ai nelw trial which challenges the verdict upon the ground that it is contrary to the evidence, to weigh the evidence and to approve or disapprove the verdict, and, if the verdict is such that in the opinion of the trial court it should not be permitted to stand, and in his opinion should have been for the other party, to grant a new trial.”

However, the court in this case makes it clear that that rule may be easily misunderstood and misapplied. In concluding the first syllabus, the court states:

“* * * gut this duty of the court does not prevent the trial court from yielding his impression or opinion, and adopting that of the jury, if, upon consideration of the evidence, the court is of the opinion that the verdict is right, and by reason thereof yields his own opinion to that of the jury. ”

In the body of the opinion the court makes use of this language:

“As we View it, the trend of the decisions of this court has been too broad as applied to motions for new trial in law actions where a jury passes upon disputed facts and 'where there is a conflict in the evidence: moreover, when such a motion is sustained, we think it far better practice on the part of trial courts to state in the record the ground upon which the court sustains or overrules such a motion.”

The motion for new trial in this case was passed on and overruled on December 22, 1933, and the order thereon is embodied in the journal entry shown at pages 427-430 of the ease-made. The court’s minutes on this order, while not a part of the record, appear on page 481 of the case-made, and merely recite the order overruling the motion, plaintiff’s exceptions thereto, and the notice of appeal.

The record upon which the plaintiff relies appears at pages 422-426 in the case-made, and represents an attempt on the part of the plaintiff to constitute the remarks of the court, which 'were theretofore made in connection with the consideration of the motion for new trial, a part of the record proper, and this proceeding shows to have been signed by the judge on January 4, 1934, and same was then recorded by the direction and in pursuance of the order of the court. Without passing upon the sufficiency cf this entry as being a part of the record, we will briefly refer to pertinent-parts thereof upon, which the plaintiff relies as showing that, in the mind and judgment of the court, the verdict Was not sustained by the evidence, and as showing that the court was of the opinion that the verdict was wrong in point of law, under the facts. At page 424 of the record the court used the following language:

“I am willing to admit that if I had been on that jury I wouldn’t have agreed to a verdict as they did, but I think the case was fairly submitted. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony, and to my mind there is no doubt but ,what the truck driver was guilty of negligence. Now, he said he held out his hand. The jury had a right to believe that or disbelieve it. There is no evidence to the contrary except it was not seen.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 773, 49 P.2d 686, 174 Okla. 69, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 1364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shabino-v-dolese-bros-co-okla-1935.