Turman Oil Co. v. Carman

1936 OK 831, 65 P.2d 968, 179 Okla. 388, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 754
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
DocketNo. 26856.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1936 OK 831 (Turman Oil Co. v. Carman) 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
Turman Oil Co. v. Carman, 1936 OK 831, 65 P.2d 968, 179 Okla. 388, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 754 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court. Plaintiff sued the Turman Oil Company, Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, Harry Robbins, and Joe Feinburg and the Sheft’s Supply Company for damages resulting from the pollution of a stream with oil and salt water, which it is claimed resulted in a deposit of oil and salt water on the premises of the plaintiff by reason of which 28 pecan trees died. Certain other elements of damage are alleged. A judgment was entered for the plaintiff for $1,000 against the Tur-man Oil Company and Sheft’s Supply Company. The Sheft’s Supply Company did not appeal. The Turman Oil Company prosecuted its appeal from such judgment in due course by petition in error with case-made attached.

The defendant urges that there is no competent evidence that the damage occurred within two years immediately preceding the filing of the petition, and further that there is no competent evidence that the Turman Oil Company permitted oil and salt water to escape into the creek, and further that there is no competent evidence sustaining the proposition that the injury to the land of the plaintiff resulted from the alleged negligent act, even if the Turman Oil Company is shown to have permitted the oil and salt water to escape into the creek.

It therefore becomes necessary to review the evidence. Plaintiff testified that he had been the owner of the premises for 12 or 14 years; that the Turman Oil Company lease was some distance up the creek that ran by the premises; that the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, in 1930 and 1931, operated a lease between the Turman Oil Company lease and his place; that when it rains hard the water spreads all over his farm, and that he has a pecan grove, and that five acres of this pecan grove died by reason of the flood occurring in 1931 and 1932; and after a flood in January, 1932, he went down to look at the premises and found the land all flooded in the area of the pecan trees; that this was in the spring of 1932, and that it left a lot of water standing in this area, which is a little bit lower than the rest of the farm; that this water was salt water; that he never noticed any salt water until in January, 1932; that he could not describe the quantity of it, but it was all over the small place, and that the salt could be seen, and that he tasted the water and it was real salty.

The question of the damages to the trees is amply proved.

Plaintiff further testified that he and witness Delano went to the premises of Tur-man Oil Company in April, 1932, for the first time. He testified as to the watershed of the Turman Oil Company lease; that the water comes off of the watershed into Deep Fork creek and strikes plaintiff’s land; that there were ten or twelve wells on the Tur-man lease, and that there is a pond there *389 in which they impounded the salt water, which is about 400 or 500 feet long and 200 feet wide, and that it is right in the draw; that the first time he was there was in 1932, in the month of April, and that it is about half a mile from where the creek comes into the premises of the plaintiff up to the Tur-man Oil lease; that he did not observe the water coming down; that it hit his land; that he first made the investigation as to the damages resulting alleged in his petition, in the spring of 1932, with Mr. Gillespie and Mr. Delano; that he and Mr. Gillespie went out there on more than one occasion; that they went up this branch and walked up the hill and found the Mid-Continent lease and found salt water in big tanks and big chunks of salt around the wells where the water had evaporated, and that the vegetation around the wells had been killed and that the water which fell upon this area washed down into the branch, and that they could see where it went, and that the oil and salt water were draining down the draw into the creek; that he tasted the water • and never tasted as salty water in his life; that they then came to the Turman lease and found the ten or twelve wells referred to above and found a big lake where the lake had broken loose; that water had come through and broken the dam: that there w'as not any lake there, but it was where the lake had been, but that it had broken through; that they went up there (indicating) and came to the edge of the Wilcox lease and got on their land and saw their men and told them about the salt water damaging their land, and that they showed where it did not do that, and that they were taking care of their water on the other side; that the Wilcox lease had four wells; that this watershed took in part of the Wilcox lease and all of the Turman lease; that there is 200 feet in area around the pond of the Turman lease where there is no vegetation, but that it did not show salt water then (at the time of the testimony of plaintiff). He then testified as to his knowledge about the Turman Oil Company producing salt water as follows:

“Q. Do you know about these wells producing salt water? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you do to show that? A. I got some salt water there day before yesterday. By Mr. McCrory: We object to the answer and move it be stricken as it is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and does not relate to the time complained of. By the Court: Sustained. Q. I am talking about 1931 and 1932? A. I am talking about 1932. Q. When you found the salt water? A. Yes. Q. Did you notice any crystals on the ground? A. It was white around there. Q. On the Turman lease? A. Yes, sir. Q. What about oil? A. There is lots of oil around there. Q. Was there such a quantity of oil and salt water around there that the vegetation had been killed? A. Yea, it is today. I would like to have the jury see it today.”

Plaintiff then continues to testify that he saw just one pond and testified from a map which he states that he made at about that time; and he showed by demonstration about the location of wells draining into this creek and into the pond and demonstrated that the pond had broken loose; that plaintiff and Mr. Gillespie went to the place again in the fall of the year 1932, and found salt in the pond and no dam there, and that the stream was running then and this salt water was running down this stream.

Witness Delano testified as to this state of the Turman lease as follows: That he went with plaintiff Carman in the fall of 1932, and found a lake that had an opening allowing the water to get out, and that the wells had been emptied into the lake, but the dike had an opening in it which came out into the branch; that there was quite a bit of oil on the land above the lake and evidence of salt water; that they saw a good many trees that were dead and tasted the water to see if it was salty.

U. G.

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Related

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1951 OK 203 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1951)
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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 831, 65 P.2d 968, 179 Okla. 388, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turman-oil-co-v-carman-okla-1936.