Threadgill v. Anderson

1956 OK 91, 303 P.2d 297, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 607
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 13, 1956
Docket36804
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 1956 OK 91 (Threadgill v. Anderson) 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
Threadgill v. Anderson, 1956 OK 91, 303 P.2d 297, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 607 (Okla. 1956).

Opinions

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

In July, 1952, defendant in error’s intestate, Mr. “Ernie” or Ernest W. Vest, at the request of plaintiff in error’s intestate, Mrs. Yvonne Legate Nobel, accompanied her on a trip, in her automobile, from Tulsa, Oklahoma, where the parties lived, to Joplin, Missouri, with Mrs. Nobel doing the driving. They started back to Tulsa that night, and en route, at about 2:00 A.M., the next morning, near Clare-more, Oklahoma, Mrs. Nobel’s auto ran off the highway and down an embankment into a bar ditch, wrecking said car with both of the parties in it, killing Mrs. Nobel and injuring Mr. Vest.

In February, 1953, Mr. Vest instituted the present action against plaintiff in error, as defendant, to recover from Mrs. [299]*299Nobel’s estate, damages for the injuries he suffered in said accident, on the theory that they were due to Mrs. Nobel’s negligent operation of the car in which he was a guest passenger.

In May, about two months after the filing of the action, defendant administrator, by agreement between his attorney at that time and attorneys for plaintiff, took Mr. Vest’s deposition before a court reporter in plaintiff’s counsel’s Tulsa law office. In a dictated statement, apparently made as a preface or preliminary to the deposition, the attorneys, Mr. K. — , for defendant, and Mr. N. — , for plaintiff, entered into the following stipulation:

“Mr. K. — : Depositions taken by agreement, and may we reserve objections ?
“Mr. N. — : Until the time of trial.
“Mr. K. — : To be asserted with the same force and effect as if made now.
“Mr. N. — : Yes, sir.
“Mr. K. — : And waiver of signature.
“Mr. N. — : Yes, sir.”

Later, before the case came to trial, Mr. Vest was shot to death and the cause was revived in the name of the administratrix of his estate. After she became plaintiff in the action, and it appeared that the defendant had never filed Vest’s deposition in the cause, she obtained an order from the court requiring that this be done, to which ruling defendant excepted, and thereafter filed both a motion to strike the deposition from the files in the cause, and written objections to its use, on the principal ground that it was inadmissible “under the Statutes of Oklahoma”, which allegation obviously referred, to the so-called “Dead Man’s Statute” Tit. 12, O.S.1951 § 384.

Later, when the cause came on for trial, the court allowed plaintiff to introduce said deposition as a part of her evidence, over defendant’s objections, then renewed orally. It was the only direct evidence offered throughout the trial as to how the accident happened, or whether or not it was proximately caused by any negligence on Mrs. Nobel’s part. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant interposed a demurrer thereto and at the close of all of the evidence moved for a directed verdict. These were overruled and the cause was submitted to the jury, which thereafter returned a verdict for plaintiff. After entry of judgment in accord with said verdict, defendant pefected the present appeal. Our continued reference to the parties will be by their trial court designations.

For reversal, defendant urges as his “Proposition I” that the trial court erred in requiring him, by the above-mentioned order, to file Vest’s deposition in the cause, and, in later allowing it to be introduced in evidence by the plaintiff admin-istratrix, both of which actions, as here-inbefore noted, were over his objections. His counsel recognize that this court, in the rather early case of Cox v. Gettys, 53 Okl. 58, 156 P. 892, held that where the plaintiff took the deposition of the defendant with reference to certain transactions had with a deceased person, said defendánt’s incompetency to testify under the “Dead Man’s Statute” supra, was waived, “whether the deposition was ever completed and filed in court or not.” They argue, however, that there are certain important factual distinctions between that case and the present one, which render the rule, there followed, inapplicable here. We see no reason for expressing our opinion on the asserted question of waiver, on which the views of various courts do not appear to be strictly in harmony, see, for instance, Anderson v. Benson, D.C.D.Neb., 117 F.Supp. 765; Pink v. Dempsey, 350 Ill.App. 405, 113 N.E.2d 334; American Fruit Growers, Inc., v. Calvert, 186 Wash. 29, 56 P.2d 1307, and the cases cited in Baker v. Baker, 363 Mo. 318, 251 S.W.2d 31, 33 A.L.R.2d 1431, and in the -Annotations at 159 A.L.R. 411, 412; 134 A.L.R. 212, 230-232, inclusive; 107 A.L.R. 482, 491, and 64 A.L.R. 1148, 1165, if the objection said to be waived is without foundation. The claimed foundation of said objection, i. e., [300]*300the Dead Man’s Statute, supra, reads in part as follows:

“No party to a civil action shall be allowed to testify in his own behalf, in respect to any transaction or communication had personally by such party with a deceased person, when the adverse party is the executor, administrator, heir at law, next of kin, surviving partner or assignee of such deceased person, where such party has acquired title to the cause of action immediately from such deceased person; * * *.” (Emphasis ours.)

In the present case, neither the adminis-tratrix, who was the plaintiff in the action at the time Vest’s deposition was introduced, nor Ernest Vest, the original plaintiff, whose incompetency as a witness, after Mrs. Nobel’s death, is said to he established by the above-quoted statute, was, as specified therein: “ * * * such party * * * (as) acquired title to the cause of action” against Mrs. Nobel, or the representative of her estate, “immediately” from her (“such deceased person”). Causes of action for tort are provided for under statutes such as Tit. 76, O.S.1951 § 5, and Tit. 23, O.S.1951 § 61, which render everyone responsible in damages for injuries to others caused by his or her negligence. Nor did plaintiff’s cause of action “devolve from the deceased”, or her estate. See Olson v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 252 Wis. 37, 30 N.W.2d 196. We think the portion of the statute emphasized above is sufficient to show that it does not cover the deposition of Vest, without regard to whether an automobile accident, like the one involved here, is a “transaction” within the meaning of that word as used in one of the opening lines of said statute. (As to the latter, notice Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice (Perm.Ed.), Vol. 9C, sec. 6325, indicating a divergence of views on that question). Furthermore, this conclusion is in harmony with the previous decisions of this Court and the rule of strict construction to which it has adhered. Mike v. Gidney, 195 Old. 472, 159 P.2d 240. Notice also Berry v. Janeway, 206 Old. 555, 245 P.2d 71, and Preston v. Berry, 205 Old. 63, 234 P.2d 417.

Under Propositions II and IV of the defendant’s brief, his counsel argue respectively that in admitting those portions of Vest’s deposition in which (among other things) the deponent opined concerning the speed of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK 91, 303 P.2d 297, 1956 Okla. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/threadgill-v-anderson-okla-1956.