Texas Co. v. Alred

1933 OK 665, 28 P.2d 556, 167 Okla. 128, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 12, 1933
Docket22336
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1933 OK 665 (Texas Co. v. Alred) 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
Texas Co. v. Alred, 1933 OK 665, 28 P.2d 556, 167 Okla. 128, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 44 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

BAXLESS, J.

h. W. Aired, hereafter called plaintiff, filed a suit in the district court of Osage county, Okla., against the Texas Company, a corporation, hereafter called defendant, and C. H. Carpenter and R. N. Truscott, its employees. The trial court directed a verdict for Carpenter and Truscott, but submitted the case to the jury as to the Texas Company, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Aired for $3,685.

Plaintiff’s petition, in substance, alleged that he was the owner of certain described real estate upon which he grazed his cattle. That the Texas Company owned and operated an oil and gas mining lease on certain land near by, and that its codefendants were its servants, charged with the active superintending control of the leased premises. That by reason of certain negligence of all of the defendants, salt water and other deleterious substances were permitted to escape from said leased premises into Little Hominy creek, a fresh water stream, and the fresh water supply for Alred’s cattle, whereby said water supply was poisoned and polluted. That this condition existed between the dates of January 27, and February 5, 1930, during which time, without his knowledge or consent, this water was drunk by his cattle and they were injured thereby. The damage resulting is then detailed and the total damage of $10,-295 was asked for.

The Texas Company admitted the ownership and operation of the lease, but denied that the cattle of the plaintiff were in anywise injured as a result of the operation of said lease. The Texas Compauy also alleged positively that it had at all times so operated the lease as to prevent any one else being injured thereby and to prevent the escapg of salt water, etc.

The Texas Company assigned 3l errors in its motion for a new trial. It then makes 34 assignments of errors in its petition in error. In its brief there are 24 assignments of error, but these are argued under five assignments of errors with subheads. It is impracticable to ascertain whether these various en'ors complained of, constantly reduced in number, are always the same in language or cover the same points, but we assume that the assignments under which the argument is presented are fairly comprehensive and complete, and therefore set them out:

“Assignment 1, proposition No. 1. Plaintiff bases his entire right to recover on the specific allegations of the wrongful, willful, and unlawful acts of negligence and fault on the part of the codefendants O. H. Carpenter and R. N. Truscott; therefore, he cannot depend upon any other grounds for recovery.
“Assignment 1, proposition No. 2. The Texas Company, the corporate defendaiit, if liable at all, was liable upon the principle of respondeat superior, hence the judgment in favor of the two servants, C. H. Carpenter and R. N. Truscott, is a complete acquittance of the corporate defendant, the Texas Company, and is tantamount to a judgment in its favor.
“Assignment 1, proposition No. 3. The defendants Cariienter and :Truscott 'were agents of the defendant the Texas Company. If there was liability to the plaintiff, the liability of the agents was primary, and the liability of the principal, the Texas Company, was secondary; the exoneration of the agents, Carpenter and Truscott. exonerates the principal, the Texas Company.
“Assignment 1, proposition No. 4. If the Texas Company be made to respond to damages on account of the acts of its servants and agents, it is entitled to be indemnified by the servants or agents; the servants and agents having been acquitted of the offense, charged in plaintiff’s suit, the Texas Company is entitled to be exonerated.
“Assignment 2. The trial court erred in submitting to the jury the question of permanent injury and damage to the cattle alleged to have been damaged by drinking the salt water, and in refusing to direct a verdict lor the defendant the Texas Company, and m overruling the motion for new trial based upon such error.
“It was error fot the trial court to submit the proposition of permanent injury to these cattle to the jury for the reason that there was no competen>.. relevant or material evidence proving oi wen tending to prove permanent injury to any of the cattle, and there was no evidence except probably some inferences that might have been drawn from the evidence of the witnesses. *130 Lutlier Aired, Fred Rowe, and Hr. Ketcham, that some of the cattle were permanently injured, but, as' we shall point out. this was not evidence, but mere conclusions on the part of these witnesses; such being the case it was error for the trial court to refuse to give the defendant’s requested instruction No. 1 (C.-M. 1023) and, of course, it was equally the duty of the trial court to sustain the demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence interposed by the defendant.
“It was also error for the trial court to overrule and deny a motion for new trial based upon these errors.
“Assignment 2B. Having shown by the above authorities that the evidence of the nonexpert witnesses was incompetent and inadmissible for the purpose of even attempting to prove permanent injuries, it was error for the court to give instruction No. 4 when there was no competent evidence upon which to sustain the claim of permanent injury to these cattle.
“Assignment No. 3 The evidence given by the plaintiff, Alrejl, and by his witnesses, Rowe and Ketcham, as to the claimed effect of salt water causing permanent injury to these cattle was incompetent and inadmissible for three 'reasons:
“First: As we have heretofore rather fully pointed out, the witnesses, Aired and Rowe, not being expert and having no scientific knowledge upon which to base an opinion, were incapable of expressing an opinion, or testifying to any conclusion with reference to the alleged permanent injuries to the cattle.
“Second: The witness, Ketcham, being a veterinary, made no sufficient investigation upon which he could base an opinion, in that his entire examination of the herd of cattle was a mere casual observation and no hypothetical question was submitted to him upon which he was asked to give an opinion.
“Third: The evidence of these witnesses, tending to prove permanent injury and consequent damage to these cattle, was not an expression of an opinion, but was an attempt to testify as to an ultimate fact, which was within the exclusive province of the jury to determine.
“Assignment No. 4. Error of the court in abuse of discretion in limiting and denying this plaintiff in error the right to cross-examine the plaintiff’s witnesses and each of them as to relevant, competent, and material matters brought out on direct examination.
“Assignment No. 5.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 665, 28 P.2d 556, 167 Okla. 128, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-co-v-alred-okla-1933.