Sun Oil Co. v. Hoke

1946 OK 30, 169 P.2d 753, 197 Okla. 261, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1946
DocketNos. 31384, 31668.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1946 OK 30 (Sun Oil Co. v. Hoke) 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
Sun Oil Co. v. Hoke, 1946 OK 30, 169 P.2d 753, 197 Okla. 261, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 514 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

These two appeals grew out of a trial and judgment in cause No. 14516 in the district court of Payne county. No. 31384 was lodged in this court April 13, 1943, by petition in error and case-made, while No. 31668 was lodged in this court November 12, 1943, by petition in error and transcript. On November 30, 1943, an order was entered by this court consolidating the two cases for disposition here. No. 31384 will be first considered, as it involves the merits as developed on the trial in the district court.

This action was commenced in the district court of Payne county by James T. Hoke against the Sun Oil Company, a corporation, and two other defendants. The defendant in error recovered, judgment based on the verdict of the jury against plaintiff in error for the sum of $2,500. For convenience the parties will be hereafter designated as plaintiff and defendant as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff in his petition alleged that he was the agricultural tenant in possession of the N.E.% of section 1, township 19 north, range 5 east, Payne county, Okla.; that he was engaged in the business of raising livestock and particularly pure bred Hereford cattle; that his herd consisted of 90 head of pure bred registered Hereford cattle of varying ages and 115 head of pure bred Hampshire sheep; that he had a large fresh water pond on the premises that in its natural state provided an abundant supply of pure fresh water; that the defendant operated.an oil and gas leasehold on the premises and was producing large quantities of oil, salt water and other deleterious substances from the ground; that in the operation of this lease defendant was negligent and careless in that it allowed large quantities of oil, salt water and other deleterious substances to escape and flow over the land into plaintiff’s fresh water pond poisoning and polluting same; that his livestock drank said poisoned and polluted water and that he was damaged as a result thereof in the following particulars, towit:

2 dead steers, value $65.00 each $ 130.00
1 dead heifer, value $80.00 80.00
40 cows injured, depreciation $85.00 each 3,400.00
1 bull injured, depreciation 150.00
21 steers injured, depreciation $40.00 each 840.00
25 heifers injured, depreciation ’ $45.00 each 1,125.00
13 dead sheep, value $15.00 each 195.00
102 sheep injured, depreciation $10.00 each 1,020.00
$6,940.00

Defendant filed its answer, which was, in substance, a general denial containing specific allegations as follows:

That it has operated said leased premises for oil and gas without negligence, carefully and in accordance with the best practices known to the oil industry; that it kept the property in the best possible condition and has used no more of the surface of the land than was necessary in the development and operation of its oil and gas wells and in the saving, handling, and marketing of the oil and gas produced; that all of its operations were necessary and prosecuted in good faith; that if plaintiff’s cattle or sheep were damaged, such damage or injury was occasioned by other causes than defendant’s oil and gas operations, and that defendant did not in any way contribute to or cause such injury or damage.

Plaintiff filed reply and the cause was tried upon the issues thus presented.

In its petition in error defendant has made 13 assignments of error, but only *263 three propositions are presented and argued in the brief, as follows: First, failure of plaintiff to prove a cause of action; second, improper measure of damages as given in the trial court’s instructions and failure of proof of damages; third, reversible error committed by the trial court and the plaintiff.

Defendant presents its first proposition in two subdivisions, as follows: First, plaintiff’s whole theory and cause of action failed in the proof; second, no causal connection was proved.

Under the first subdivision of its first proposition defendant argues that because plaintiff’s petition alleged damage and injury to his livestock by reason of drinking polluted water in the latter part of December, 1941, and the early part of January, 1942, while his proof is indefinite and uncertain as to the time when his livestock was poisoned by drinking the polluted water, while the proof of defendant is certain and definite as to the time of certain cleaning out operations which it made on its disposal well, which definitely fixed the only possible time of pollution as being February, that therefore plaintiff’s theory of his case failed.

Apparently the waste matter from the producing wells flowed into earthen receiving pits and from there was pumped into what is called the input or disposal well, being Hoke No. 1. While defendant’s proof is definite and certain by company records that the cleaning out of the input or disposal well commenced February 17, 1942, there is no definite proof as to how long the clogged or bridged condition of the disposal well was forming so that the cleaning out process became necessary.

Warren Stafford began work for plaintiff on these premises January 2, 1942, and it was his duty to look after feeding the cattle and sheep belonging to plaintiff. He testified that early in January some of the cattle became sick and he began an investigation to ascertain the cause thereof; that the fresh water pond froze over during this period and it was necessary for him to cut holes in the ice each morning so that the cattle could have access to water, and in his investigations he found that at the east end of the fresh water pond, some 200 yards from where he cut holes in the ice, the pond had not frozen; that he noticed a small flow of water into the pond at this point and after tasting and ascertaining that it was salt, he traced it back toward defendant’s well; that he never saw the cattle or sheep drinking from this point in the pond where the water failed to freeze but that there were tracks about this place and he drew the impression that the livestock had drunk there when the lake was frozen 'elsewhere.

Plaintiff testified that after he learned of sickness among his stock he made complaint to the company about it; that thereafter on one occasion he had a conversation with Mr. Newton, defendant’s field boss, and with Mr. Parkin, its superintendent, on the street in the town of Yale; that in this conversation he told them of the trouble he was having with his livestock; that during the conversation Mr. Parkin or Mr. Newton made this statement to him: “Jim, confidentially, what happened up there, our disposal well filled up and the salt water had no place to go except to go down to the big pond.”

Mr. Newton was a witness for defendant and admitted this conversation between himself, Mr. Parkin, and the plaintiff in Yale but was not asked about and did not deny the statement attributed to him or Mr. Parkin by the plaintiff.

In reference to the condition of the receiving pits at the time of and before the cleaning out of the disposal well, he testified:

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 30, 169 P.2d 753, 197 Okla. 261, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-oil-co-v-hoke-okla-1946.