Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Beers

1938 OK 606, 91 P.2d 777, 185 Okla. 331, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 29, 1938
DocketNo. 26706.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1938 OK 606 (Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Beers) 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
Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Beers, 1938 OK 606, 91 P.2d 777, 185 Okla. 331, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 522 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

HURST, J.

This action was commenced by Juanita Beers, upon attaining her majority, to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained when she was about four years of age. She had mashed her fingers in a rod line on an oil and gas lease which her father was pumping for defendant, making it necessary to amputate three fingers. Her action was based on the theory of attractive nuisance. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor, and defendant brings this appeal.

Defendant assigns as error the order of the court overruling defendant’s demurrer *332 to plaintiff’s evidence, the order overruling the motion of defendant for a directed verdict in its favor, and the order overruling defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict of the jury. In support of these assignments the defendant presents the proposition that “the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict of the jury based on the theory that a rod line and its connections constitute an attractive nuisance.” Our inquiry in this regard requires an examination of all the evidence. In this we are required to view the evidence in the most favorable light toward plaintiff’s case. Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. Powell (1931) 150 Okla. 39, 300 P. 788.

There was competent evidence to establish the following facts: For some time prior to the date of the injury, plaintiff’s father had been employed by the defendant as a pumper on defendant’s oil and gas lease. There were about eight pumping wells on this lease. The defendant furnished plaintiff’s father with a house in which to live upon the lease. This house was located about 75 yards from the powerhouse which supplied the power for the pumping of the wells. The lease was not located in the vicinity of any town or city, but there was a private road running north and south between the pump house and plaintiff’s house which offered a means of access to the county section line roads. Also there was a path running from plaintiff’s house to the pump house, exclusively for the use of the workers on the lease. Extending from the powerhouse for some six to ten feet were iron rods, one for each well. These rods continuously moved back and forth, resting on a “bull pen.” which was, in effect, a small fence 12 or 15 inches high running partly around the powerhouse some six or ten feet away. The rods coming from the powerhouse passed over this bull pen and were then connected with rods coming from the oil wells by means of a hook and loop. The hook was connected to the lines coming from tire powerhouse, and the loop was attached to the end of the . lines leading to the wells. Thus an individual rod line running to a well might be hooked onto rods protruding from the powerhouse, enabling each well to be pumped independently. When a particular well was not being pumped, the rod line running to that well was attached to a stationary rod protruding from the pump house beneath the moving rods. It was obvious that if one’s hand became caught between the hook and the loop in connecting the rods, injury would result, and it required but slight effort to bring the hook and loop in contact with each other.

On May 20, 1920, some adult persons discovered plaintiff with her hand caught between the hook and the loop, and it was necessary to disconnect the rod line in order to free her. One finger was entirely severed, and it was necessary to partially amputate two others. The injury was sustained on the opposite side of the powerhouse from plaintiff's .house. Two small children were with her at or near the powerhouse at the time of the injury. It appears that plaintiff, together with the other children, had been engaged in playing around the pump house at the time of the injury and plaintiff had some wild flowers in her hand. It is assumed that plaintiff must have attempted to connect the loop and hook as she had seen her father . do on previous occasions. There was no fence around the powerhouse. The plaintiff testified that she had no recollection of the injury.

The evidence was to the effect that this connection contrivance was standard equipment and similar in all material respects to the equipment universally used by producers of oil throughout the state, and that in the use of such equipment no guards or fences were ever employed. There was evidence that it would be impractical to construct fences to enclose the rods and connections. It was shown that oil producers generally conducted their pumping operations in the same manner as the defendant was then doing. The evidence was that plaintiff’s father instructed her to remain away from the powerhouse, and that the company rules prohibited anyone from going near the powerhouse except those specifically authorized. Also, the evidence was uneontradicted that children had not previously been seen playing at that particular place. The evidence indicates that the defendant did not require the immediate attendance of the pumper- or any other person at the point where this connection was placed during all the time the power was in operation.

1. It is first argued that plaintiff was a trespasser, inasmuch as the license to go to and from the house and to live in the house did not include a license to use all of the other premises of the defendant. Under the view we take of this case, it is immaterial whether plaintiff was a trespasser or licensee, but in view of the 'order *333 of the company expressly prohibiting anyone other than employees near the pump house, we think it clear that plaintiff was a trespasser. 45 C. J. 742. However, as plaintiff was but about four years of age at the time, she could be guilty of only a technical trespass. Ramage Mining Co. v. Thomas (1935) 172 Okla. 24, 44 P.2d 19.

It is a time-honored doctrine that a property owner owes no duty to trespassers other than to avoid wantonly, intentionally, or willfully injuring them. He is otherwise under no obligation to keep his premises safe for them. But many courts recognize an exception to this doctrine in ease of children of tender age where injury or death results from the child trespasser’s contact with a dangerous condition of the premises. The English case of Lynch v. Naudain (1841) 1 Q. B. 29, was the pioneer case pronouncing this exception. In 1874 the United States Supreme Court followed by applying the new doctrine to a case of injuries caused by a railroad turntable, allowing the infant plaintiff to recover, even though he was a trespasser. Railroad v. Stout, 17 Wall. 657, 21 L. Ed. 745. Since then innumerable cases have raised the question. Many courts have sanctioned the doctrine, and others have disapproved it, subjecting it to a storm of criticism. However, there is a strong tendency to limit, rather than extend the doctrine. 45 C. J. 784; 20 R. C. L. 80, sec. 71. In adopting the doctrine in this state, the tendency to limit it and apply it with caution has been consistently expressed. An exhaustive analysis of the doctrine as adopted in this state appears in City of Shawnee v. Cheek (1913) 41 Okla. 227, 137 P. 724. The formula applied in that case is, in effect, to recognize the general rule restricting liability to intentional, willful, and wanton injuries to trespassers, but to give effect to the doctrine by a further' recognition that “a mere omission, although superficially characterized by mere thoughtlessness or heedlessness, but in its deeper explanation.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 606, 91 P.2d 777, 185 Okla. 331, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-petroleum-corp-v-beers-okla-1938.