Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Voss

1942 OK 56, 126 P.2d 540, 190 Okla. 675, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 3, 1942
DocketNo. 29235.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1942 OK 56 (Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Voss) 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. Voss, 1942 OK 56, 126 P.2d 540, 190 Okla. 675, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 181 (Okla. 1942).

Opinions

BAYLESS, J.

William H. Voss and Flora Voss, his wife, filed an action in the district court of Noble county, against Shell Petroleum Corporation et al. to recover damages for the permanent injuries to land, for certain expenses incurred in drilling for water, and for the loss of a filly; and the defendants appeal from a judgment, based on the verdict of the jury, in favor of plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs own a quarter section of land that is bisected by Black Bear creek meandering across the farm, generally along the north line of the south 80. This creek has been polluted by salt water escaping from near-by oil fields since 1925, and defendant companies operate leases in those fields, and no issue is made before us as to their part in the pollution of the creek. In 1927, these plaintiffs sued several companies, some of whom are defendants herein, to recover damages for certain permanent and temporary injuries to this land; and, in 1929, this action was settled by agreement and dismissed on order of the court with prejudice. A covenant not to sue the companies again within a ten-year period was executed by the plaintiffs, and this period expired in 1935. The present action is to recover damages that have been occasioned by injuries done since the expiration of the ten-year period.

Defendants first contend that the order of dismissal in the prior action is res adjudicata to plaintiffs’ present cause of action insofar as it relates to permanent injuries to the land. This is the same contention that was made and disposed of in the case of Shell Pet. Corp. v. Hess, 190 Okla. 669, 126 P. 2d 534, this day decided, involving an almost identical fact situation. What *676 we said in that .decision in declining to apply the rule of res adjudicata to that case applies here. We pass this point by in order that we may consider other assignments.

There are two propositions that relate to the damages claimed for the land, and we now consider them together. It is contended that the burden of proof is on the plaintiffs to show by competent evidence that the thing they complain of is capable of producing the injuries pleaded, and that the uncontra-dicted evidence fails to disclose a causal connection between the injuries complained of and the alleged acts of negligence of the defendants.

As stated before, we must begin the consideration of this matter with the knowledge that this creek had been polluted for many years. The proof herein discloses that beginning about 1930, the creek,began to clear up, and by 1933 or 1934, was again usable to some extent. About 1935, it suddenly was polluted again by salt water, and remained so thereafter. We have carefully considered the evidence on that point and the plaintiffs’ contentions regarding the degree of decrease of pollution and the corresponding increase in usability, and while it parallels to a marked degree the evidence in Shell Pet. Corp. v. Kent, 187 Okla. 637, 105 P. 2d 230, we are unable to say that plaintiffs herein rely upon the repollution of the creek as creating a new injury as was the contention in the Kent Case. In the Kent Case it was contended that the creek had cleared up to the extent of being usable and safe for cattle, whereby a new right of use arose which was thereafter destroyed by repollution to Kent’s new injury and damage. In this case there is considerable evidence relating to the decrease in degree of pollution up to 1935, and the subsequent increase of pollution, so that in 1937, 1938, the creek was again nearly as badly polluted as it ever had been. But plaintiffs herein make it clear that at all times they kept their cattle fenced away from the creek, and showed that such of their animals as evaded their guard and drank from the creek died after drinking therefrom, from which we understand that they are not now asserting that the creek ever became usable and was again rendered unusable by the increased pollution. The plaintiffs in the Kent, Hess, and Voss Cases lived within relatively short distances of each other, and used many of the same persons as witnesses in each case, but their contentions seem to us to differ, and this difference accounts for the conclusions reached in the cases.

In this case the plaintiffs alleged and introduced proof to show that beginning in 1935, there was an increase in the salt water content of this creek, and that beginning in that year more and more timber adjacent to and along the creek died, and that all of the vegetation died; that the creek banks were softened and loosened by the loss of natural vegetation, shrubbery, and roots of trees, and by the deteriorating effects of salt water by reason of which they sloughed away and widened the creek channel; and water wells drilled near the house and barn became foul and unfit for use. It is sufficient to say that plaintiffs introduced ample proof of the loss of timber, the loss of vegetation and shrubbery, the sloughing away of the creek banks, and the depositing of salt water on the surface of the land subject to overflow which, after evaporation, left crystals of salt visible. In no instance did plaintiffs’ witnesses undertake to say what caused the trees, vegetation, and shrubbery to die, or the creek banks to slough away. The trial judge constantly ruled that these witnesses had not qualified to undertake to give their opinions as to the cause, and that their testimony was limited to conditions that they observed.

The defendants attempted to controvert plaintiffs’ evidence on the issue of decreased or increased pollution, and whether the creek banks had actually sloughed away more than was normally to be expected. In this respect, we cannot undertake to weigh the evidence, for it is in conflict, and if the jury’s verdict is otherwise sustainable, it must be allowed to stand on this issue.

*677 However, defendants by cross-examining plaintiffs’ witnesses made it abundantly clear that there was much dead timber all over plaintiffs’ farm; that there were live and dead trees in the same general places all over the farm, both on the overflow land and the high ground; and that vegetation was growing close to the banks of the creek, although they differed with defendants’ witness whether this was a natural, valuable growth or simply a valueless, wild growth that would appear under unfavorable circumstances. In this respect, defendants were preparing a predicate to show that salt water pollution was not the cause of the death of the timber on the overflow land, for timber died on land that was not subject to overflow.

Defendants used two expert witnesses, one a forestry expert and one a chemist specializing in geology and chemistry of soils. Without reciting all of the facts upon which the forestry expert based his opinion, he gave an opinion that the timber died as the result of drouth and the attacks of insects. He also examined the banks of the creek, and gave as his opinion for the cause of the sloughing away thereof the cutting effect of the water. Plaintiffs’ proof was that there had been two very high floods in 1937 and 1938, and that the sloughing away of the creek banks was worse during and following these floods. The chemist took samples of soil from various places and depths on the farm, and analyzed them. His analysis showed no more salt content than is average in soil of that type, and it was only one-twentieth part of the minimum amount necessary per acre to affect the utility of soil.

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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 56, 126 P.2d 540, 190 Okla. 675, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-petroleum-corp-v-voss-okla-1942.