Slater v. Mefford

111 P.2d 159, 188 Okla. 525
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 15, 1940
DocketNo. 29344.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 159 (Slater v. Mefford) 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
Slater v. Mefford, 111 P.2d 159, 188 Okla. 525 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This appeal presents certain assigned errors that are alleged to have occurred in an action commenced by the defendant in error to recover damages against the plaintiffs in error for the alleged wrongful death of Thurman Eldridge.

The cause was tried to a jury and judgment was entered in accord with a verdict for the plaintiff.

The parties will hereinafter be referred to by their trial court designations of “plaintiff” and “defendants.”

The deceased was employed as a pumper upon an oil and gas lease owned by the defendants and lost his life while engaged in repairing a gas engine on said lease. The defendants’ legal responsibility for the fatal accident was predicated upon their alleged failure to provide Eldridge with a safe place in which to perform said task and to instruct him with reference to a safe method or manner of performing it.

In urging a reversal of the trial court’s judgment, the defendants, under three propositions, dealing with the alleged insufficiency of the evidence, attempt to demonstrate the merit in the separate motions in which the trial court, after all of the evidence had been introduced, was requested to direct the jury to return a verdict in their favor. It would unnecessarily lengthen this opinion to describe or discuss this argument,'however, for the matters dealt with therein are not properly before this court for decision. The record reveals that, although they demurred to the plaintiff’s evidence, after waiving the question thus presented by introducing evidence in their own behalf, the defendants challenged the sufficiency of the evidence as a whole by separate motions for a directed verdict. The defendants then allowed the cause to be submitted to the jury without ever obtaining any specific ruling from the trial court upon said motions. It is well settled that a “motion which, so far as appears from the record, was never decided or ruled on below presents no question for decision in the appellate court.” 4 C.J.S. p. 656, sec. 321e; and see Holcombe & Hoke Mfg. Co. v. Waters, 109 Okla. 107, 235 P. 198. In Cushing Gasoline Co. v. Hutchins, 93 Okla. 13, 219 P. 408, this court held that a “party who permits a case to proceed to judgment without having the court act upon a motion made by him must be deemed to have waived his right to have the same acted upon”; and we declined to consider the alleged error of the trial court in refusing to sustain such a motion. The principles enunciated apply as well to motions challenging the sufficiency of evidence. 3 C. J. 889, sec. 795d. While it is true that the first peremptory instruction submitted by the defendants was a direction that a verdict be returned in their favor, the record contains no showing that an exception was taken to said refusal. That this court will not review an error predicated upon such a ruling is well settled. See section 360, O. S. 1931, 12 O.S.A. § 578; Wesley v. Chandler, 170 Okla. 13, 44 P. 2d 827; Shobe v. Sykes, 169 Okla. 491, 37 P. 2d 908; Chowins v. Gypsy Oil Co., 185 Okla. 630, 95 P. 2d 586.

In an attempt to circumvent the application of the foregoing principles to the within cause, counsel for the defendants apparently take the position that they challenged the sufficiency of the evidence so frequently that it is unnecessary for them to have an exception to a ruling by the court upon which to predicate its alleged error in submitting the cause to the jury. They say that “the only purpose of an exception is to direct the court’s attention to its error,” and that since they called the court’s attention to the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain plaintiff’s cause of action and objected to its submission to the jury by demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence, motion for a directed verdict, and request for a peremptory instruction, and again asserted the alleged insufficiency of the *527 evidence in their motion for a new trial and petition in error, the record thus shows that they never admitted the sufficiency of the evidence or acquiesced in its submission to the jury. On the basis of this argument, it is asserted that according to the decision in the case of Wilkinson v. Whitworth, 169 Okla. 286, 36 P. 2d 932, the defendants are entitled to a determination by this court as to whether the evidence introduced at the trial was sufficient to justify its submission to the jury. This argument not only fails to recognize well-settled principles of our practice and procedure which govern the operation of the rule announced in the Wilkinson Case, but misconceives the true character and purpose of excepting to the rulings of a trial court upon matters of evidence. The rule that exceptions need not be saved to secure a reversal of an order or judgment cannot apply to a case like the present one, where the error complained of does not inhere in any order or judgment that comprises a part of the judgment roll or record proper. This is demonstrated by the complete text of the rule of which the latter is but a corollary. The rule, together with one of its corollaries, was first enunciated by this court in the case of Territory ex rel. Taylor v. Caffrey, 8 Okla. 193, 57 P. 204, as follows:

“Rulings and orders of the trial court as applied to the evidence, those constituting errors of law occurring on the trial, and generally rulings upon the trial of the cause complained of, must be excepted to at the time. * * * But exceptions are not necessary to enable this court to review and correct errors that are apparent upon the judgment roll or record proper.”

It will readily be seen that the trial court’s refusal to instruct or direct the jury to return a verdict for the defendants, if error, was not one that is “apparent upon the judgment roll or record proper.” See Tribal Development Co. v. White Bros., 28 Okla. 525, 114 P. 736; Kellogg v. School Dist. No. 10 of Comanche Co., 13 Okla. 285, 74 P. 110, 111; Denson v. Frame, 98 Okla. 132, 224 P. 311; see, also, cases discussed in Pure Oil Co. v. Quarles, 183 Okla. 418, 82 P. 2d 970, 972, 973. Consequently, an exception to such action was a necessary predicate for the assignment of same as error. Nor in the absence of an exception thereto can the defendants successfully deny that they acquiesced in the alleged error. In this jurisdiction as well as in other code states, a failure to except to the ruling of the trial court is deemed an acquiescence therein. See General Explosives Co. v. Wilcox, 131 Okla. 190, 268 P. 266; State v. Laundy (Ore.) 206 P. 290. In the light of the foregoing discussion, it is apparent that the record before us presents nothing that has been properly preserved as a predicate for the defendants’ claim that the trial court erred in submitting the cause to the jury on account of the insufficiency of the evidence.

The rest of the defendants’ argument pertains to alleged errors in the court’s instructions to the jury. Under their fourth proposition, they state that the plaintiff’s pleadings were copied and incorporated in the first (unnumbered) instruction given. Such a method of issuing instructions is asserted to have constituted error, not only because it failed to give the jury a clear and concise statement of the issues, but to have been prejudicial for the reason that plaintiff’s pleadings contained certain allegations that are claimed to be without application to the issues. In support of the first phase of this argument, the case of Lambard-Hart Loan Co. v. Smiley, 115 Okla. 202, 242 P. 212, is cited as authority for the following rule:

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Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 159, 188 Okla. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slater-v-mefford-okla-1940.