Stimpert v. Benson & Son

1926 OK 173, 244 P. 22, 118 Okla. 165, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 1926
Docket16181
StatusPublished

This text of 1926 OK 173 (Stimpert v. Benson & Son) 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
Stimpert v. Benson & Son, 1926 OK 173, 244 P. 22, 118 Okla. 165, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 865 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, 0.

This was an action in; replevin instituted in the district court of Kay county by the defendants in error, as plaintiffs, against the plaintiffs in error, as defendants, to recover the possession of certain personal property described in their petition and consisting of portions of a string of oil well drilling tools. Parties will be hereinafter designated as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiffs were drilling contractors operating neár Augusta, in the state of Kansas, and they claimed that the property had been stored by them on a lease near Augusta, in the state of Kansas, about February 15, 1928, and that sometime between tbis date and May 10, 1923, it had disappeared, the exact date of the disappearance not being shown; that the tools were last seen on the lease the latter part of February, 1923, and that on May 10th thereafter a part of them were found to be missing. It was alleged that the defendants had possession of the property and were wrongfully detaining it; that they had made demand upon the defendants therefor, and demanded judgment for the return of the property, or for its value in case a return of the property could not be had.

The defendants were likewise drilling contractors operating in the Tonkawa field near Blackwell, Okla., and they filed their answer in the form of a general denial, and upon the issues thus raised the cause was tried to the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the jilaintiffs. After unsuccessful motion for a new trial the defendants gave notice of appeal, and the cause comes regularly to be heard in this court on appeal by the defendants from said judgment.

Two propositions are relied on by the defendants for a reversal of the judgment as follows; First, that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, and, second, that the court erred in admitting evidence on the part of the defendants in error.

Upon the first proposition it is sufficient to say that the plaintiffs rested their claim of right to recover the property upon certain marks of identity, which enabled them to distinguish the property as their own. The trial of the case largely revolved around *166 the controverted question of the existence and sufficiency of these identifying marks. It is the contention of the defendants since the plaintiffs had no individual marks on the property, by which they could identify it, plaintiffs were ■ forced to rely upon the general resemblance of the property found to thoir own property, and that such identification was not sufficient to entitle them to recover. While the propositions argued and discussed under this assignment of error are not free from difficulty, we cannot say that the trial court erred in submitting the case to the jury, if the ruling of the trial court upon other law questions presented during the trial had been free from error.

This brings us to the second proposition; Error is predicated upon the action of the trial court in permitting the plaintiffs, over defendants’ objection, on eross-examinatiou of the defendant Hess, to inquire concerning a transaction had with one Ralph Ewing sometime in May, 1923, for the purchase of certain drilling tools, other than those in controversy in the pending suit, which had apparently been stolen. It is contended by the defendants that the inquiry on cross-examination related to a matter beyond the scope of the direct examination, and under the rule that the cross-examination should be confined to circumstances connected with the matters testified to in the direct examination, the cross-examination was improper. In our view of the case, however, the correct answer to the question turns on whether or not the trial court abused its discretion in permitting the cross-examination to proceed in the manner indicated. In order to determine this question, it will be necessary briefly to review some of the evidence as disclosed by the record before us.

It appears that sometime in May, 1923, some Kansas parties, located some seven or eight miles from where the defendants had stored their tools, recovered some tools in the Tonkawa field. These tools had been recovered and returned to the Kansas field shortly after the plaintiffs had discovered the loss of their own tools. The Kansas authorities were endeavoring to apprehend the parties responsible for the theft, of the recovered tools, and the sheriff secured the consent of one L. E. Wills, an employee of the plaintiffs, to accompany him to Oklahoma for the purpose of identifying, if possible, the person who was supposed to have stolen the recovered goods as Bill Irwin, and who was supposed at that time to be in Oklahoma, around the oil fields at Tonkawa. Wills accompanied the sheriff to Tonkawa, but Bill Irwin, the supposed thief, was never found. While there Wills claimed that he had located the tools in controversy in the possession of the de.endants, and proceeded to seize them under a writ of replevin. In a conversation with Mr. Hess, one of the defendants, he 'learned that Hess had some time in May, 1923, attempted to purchase some drilling tools from a man by the name of Ralph Ewing, but before the transaction was concluded some Kansas parties appeared and identified the tools as their own, and that after he had recovered from the seller his check for $372, issued in payment for the tools, and while he was in the act of turning the seller over to the authorities, the seller escaped from custody, and had not been seen or heard of since. It was further disclosed by Hess in the conversation, that Ralph Ewing, with whom he had the transaction in May, was the same party from whom he bought the tools in controversy. It was cn the testimony of L. E. Wills that the plaintiffs relied for the identification of the tools in controversy as their own.

On cross-examination the witness, Wills, in answer to questions propounded answered as follows;

“Q. Do you claim that the man that stole your tools was Irwin? A. I couldn’t say that he was the man that stole these other tools, I suppose so. Q. Well, you don’t know whether he is the man that stole the other tools? A. No, sir. Q. Well, how does your identification affect that man at all with reference to that particular property? A. I don’t know as it does. * * * Q. You stated, did you not, that Bill Irwin stole these tools? A. No, I couldn’t say as to those, he told me, Mr. Hess told me that it was the same man that he had in the car and tried to catch. Q. Well, did you see that man? A. I did not. Q. Did you see the man he claimed sold Hess and Stimpert any tools? A. I did not. Q. So then you don’t know who the man was that stole the tools? A. No, sir. Q. You' couldn’t say definitely whether that man had brought the tools from Kansas or from Covington? A. I couldn’t say that he had. * * * Q. Would you say Bill Irwin did sell them to them? A. I can’t say that, he did. Q. Did you see the. man himself? * * * A. Not Bill Irwin. Q. If you had seen him you would have known him? A. Yes. Q. Do you know whether or not Bill Irwin took these things in question out of Kansas? A. I couldn’t say that he did.”

The defendants both testified that they bought the tools in controversy from a man by the name of Ralph Ewing, who claimed to be a driller operating in the Tonkawa field; that the tools in controversy were delivered in a "Masters” truck, owned by parties operating a transfer business in the *167

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 173, 244 P. 22, 118 Okla. 165, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stimpert-v-benson-son-okla-1926.