Tulsa Stockyards Co. v. Moore

1938 OK 426, 84 P.2d 37, 184 Okla. 6, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketNo. 28507.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1938 OK 426 (Tulsa Stockyards Co. v. Moore) 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
Tulsa Stockyards Co. v. Moore, 1938 OK 426, 84 P.2d 37, 184 Okla. 6, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 390 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The defendant was operating a stockyard, consisting of a large number of pens and compartments into which cattle were separately placed, for the convenience of cattle owners bringing their cattle there for sale, or commission companies who sold cattle for the owneis. The plaintiff, ■ a girl of 24 years of age, was gored by a wild and vicious cow in an alleyway of said stockyard, for which she recovered a judgment against the defendant, and the latter appeals.

The plaintiff, in company with her stepfather for whom she worked, had brought: some calves to the stockyard on a certain evening, and the calves were placed in a pen near the south end of the main alleyway, which lay north and south just inside the east side of the stockyards. The next morning she went to the stockyard to see about Hie feeding and watering of the calves which she had left there the evening before. ’She entered the main alleyway on the north and was proceeding southward on foot. The fences on either r-ide were made of wooden planks or boards, two inches by six inches, and there was a space of several inches between boards. On her right, or" the west sid“ of the main alleyway, were many gates. Each of these gates led off into another alleyway, at right angles to the main alleyway, or into pens. When it was desired to *7 head cattle into one of those alleyways, the gate leading into that alley would toe opened, and, it being the same length as the width of the alleys, it would be swung about so as to close the main alleyway, by latching it to the east side of the main Alleyway. In that manner cattle could not proceed on southward, but would have to turn west at that point. The hinge end of the gate was the south end if the main alleyway was open at that point, and the west end if it was closed at that point.

On her left, or the east side of the alleyway, were several “chutes,” where incoming cattle were customarily let out of their ■conveyances. Gates separated the chutes from the alleyway, so that a cow could be deposited in a chute and yet could not enter the alleyway until or unless the gate in the ■side of the alleyway was opened.

When plaintiff had proceeded some distance down the alleyway, the wild and vicious cow in question was let into it, behind her. Plaintiff had just passed a gate which she testified, was ajar, that is, not fastened to either of its two possible alley sides. She heard the foreman, who was in charge of unloading the cow. yell “Oklahoma” or “Oklahoma Commission Company.” Knowing that the Oklahoma Commission Company pen had been to the west of that place ( though without her knowledge it had been changed the day before to the south), or in order to protect herself from the oncoming cow. she fastened the gate to the east side of the main alleyway, which placed her on the south side of the gate, so that the gate was between her and the cow. The evidence showed that it was the custom for dealers and others about the premises, whether or not employed by the defendant, to assist in opening and closing gates to facilitate the handling of cattle.

When the foreman let the beast into the main alleyway he hollered “Fire in the hole,” which, according to custom, meant there was a dangerous animal in there. Plaintiff testified she did not hear this. Shortly afterward he yelled “Close the gate,” which plaintiff interpreted as meaning to close the gate across (he north-south alleyway as described above. The parties argue considerably over whether she fastened the gate in obedience to the foreman’s order to “Close tlie gate” or in order to the better protect herself. We consider that question of slight importance in view of the fact that from whatever motive it was done, the fact was that there was a securely latched gate between her and the vicious animal.

A man by the name of Vic Parker, not employed by defendant, but there under much the same circumstances as plaintiff, was in the main alleyway just north of the gate. .I-Ie, too, heard the foreman yell “Close the gate,” but construed it oppositely to the way plaintiff had construed it. Accordingly, he unlatched the gate and kicked it in a northwesterly arc, thus closing off the opening to the west which the cow would have taken and opening the main alleyway to the south, —hastily, at the same time, climbing the fence to safety. This was, according to the foreman’s testimony, exactly what he meant when he shouted to close the gate, though he intended it for one of his workmen who he thought was there.

This let the cow onto the plaintiff. The animal continued its furious charge, ana though plaintiff attempted to dodge it by darting to the west side and by attempting to climb the fence, the animal was too quick for her. All of this, of course, happened in a few seconds. It struck her and knocked. her down and gored a wound three inches deep in the inside of her left thigh, entirely through the muscle, and inflicted other painful injuries before she was rescued.

Defendant’s first contention is that no primary negligence was shown. Defendant errs in this contention by dwelling at length on conclusions as to contributory negligence of plaintiff, as evidenced by her conduct, a subject which obviously should be treated separately. In so far as the question of primary negligence alone is concerned, defendant stresses two facts: (1) That the foreman did not see plaintiff in the alleyway when he let the animal in or when he shouted to close, the gate; and (2) that Vie Parker, who kicked the gate from between the plaintiff and the cow, was not an employee.

Those facts, under the circumstances of the case, do not negative the existence of negligence. The fact that Vic Parker was not an employee loses much of its argumentative weight when it is considered that, regardless of whether he was or was not an employee, he moved the gate directly at the instance of, and in obedience to, the command of the foreman. He so testified, and the foreman testified that such was his intention by shouting the command, though he mistakenly thought that one of his employees was at the gate. The fact remains that it was moved at the foreman’s command.

As to the fact that the foreman did not *8 see plaintiff, there are several other matters that need be taken into consideration. Should he have seen her, or should he have taken greater precautions before turning such an animal loose into the enclosed alleyway? The uncontradicted evidence in the case answers, that question. The plaintiff was there on business of her own, or of her employer, and likewise of the defendant. She was either a licensee or invitee, it is immaterial. It is conceded that she was rightly there. It was a common thing for people not connected with defendant to be there. It seems to have been the main street of the stockyard. The foreman testified that there were hundreds of people to be contended with in that alley all the time, which probably exaggerated the condition somewhat, but nevertheless it was well known to defendant that people did often pass up and down the main alleyway. It is also admitted that the foreman knew of the unusually dangerous propensities of. the cow, and that she was in fact a very wild and vicious animal. He knew this before he ever turned her loose in the main alleyway. He testified that in four years’ experience he had seldom seen a more dangerous one. But the fact of most importance was the custom prevailing in such a situation.

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Related

Carver v. Ford
1979 OK 26 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)
Jones v. Redford
1969 OK 17 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1969)
Bocock v. Tulsa Stockyards Company
1957 OK 74 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
Splinter v. City of Nampa
215 P.2d 999 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1950)
Phillips v. Ward
1945 OK 114 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 426, 84 P.2d 37, 184 Okla. 6, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsa-stockyards-co-v-moore-okla-1938.