126 P.2d 530 | Okla. | 1942
This action was instituted in the district court by Vera B McClain and her husband as owners and occupants of certain real property in Oklahoma City against a number of oil companies to recover damages arising out of drilling operations on adjacent lands. The petition sets out two causes of action, the first for damages caused by alleged annoyance and inconvenience resulting from the drilling and operation of various wells, and, second, physical damages to the real property caused by such operations. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiffs on both causes, and defendants appeal.
Defendants charge error in the action of the trial court in overruling their demurrers for misjoinder of parties defendant and causes of action.
This assignment deals wholly with the question of the joint and several liability of independent tortfeasors whose concurrent wrongs contribute to the particular injury.
It is neither charged nor proved that the defendants were common owners or operators of the wells. Nor is there any intimation of design or purpose or of concert of action on the part of defendants in causing the alleged injuries. Defendants say that in view of these circumstances we should apply the rule that the acts of independent tortfeasors, each of which causes some damage, may not be combined to create a joint liability at law for damages, but each is liable only for the proportion of the damage caused by him. This, they say, is the general rule recognized by the overwhelming weight of authority. Many authorities are cited, including those found in 9 A.L.R. 939; 35 A.L.R. 409; 24 L.R.A. (N. S.) 1185; 40 L.R.A. (N. S.) 102. *41
Defendants recognize the established rule in this state that parties contributing to the pollution of a stream may be sued jointly though there was no common design, purpose, or concert of action among them sufficient to brand them as actual joint tortfeasors (Northup v. Eakes,
"Where, although concert is lacking, the, separate and independent acts or negligence of several combine to produce directly a single injury, each is responsible for the entire result, even though his act or neglect alone might not have caused it."
And in referring to that holding the court in the Walters Case, above, said:
"But this ruling being a liberal exception in favor of riparian owners to the general rule that to make tortfeasors liable jointly there must be some sort of community in the wrongdoing, that is, that injury must be in some way due to their joint work, it ought not to be extended to the point of working injustice."
But we cannot see in that statement a purpose or intent to limit the rule in Northup v. Eakes, supra, to pollution cases. The court merely refused to extend it to the point of working injustice. There the landowner sued a group of separate leaseholders for pollution of a stream. Part of the damage was caused by plaintiff's tenant with the consent of the plaintiff or as a result of the ordinary use of the premises. The court held that the plaintiff could not recover from the group of leaseholders without producing evidence sufficient to enable the court to separate the damage caused by the group from that caused by the tenant. It would have been unjust to hold the leaseholders jointly and severally liable for the damage caused by plaintiff's tenant with plaintiff's consent or for the damage resulting from the ordinary use of the premises by such tenant.
A similar situation does not exist here. It does not appear that any of the defendants, or other parties, contributed to the injuries with plaintiff's consent or as a result of contractual right.
The rule that all parties whose wrongful acts unite in causing an injury, notwithstanding the absence of a concert of action, may be joined in one suit, has been so long established in this state, and so many times applied, that a departure therefrom is unwarranted. We see no reason why it may not apply in cases of this character as well as in pollution cases.
Defendants object to certain instructions regarding plaintiffs' right to recover for physical damage to the property.
The damage in this respect was allegedly caused by vibrations set up by drilling operations and transmitted through the earth to plaintiffs' premises.
The court instructed the jury to the effect that defendants had a legal right to carry on the drilling operations, but no one had a right to operate a business, though a lawful one, in such a manner as to do substantial, physical damage to another person's property; that if there had been vibrations as alleged, and they had affected plaintiffs' property in a substantial, physical manner, then defendants would be liable.
The objection goes wholly to that portion of the instruction which would permit recovery merely in event of substantial, physical injury to the property. Defendants say that in such case, where the property is being used in a lawful manner, the owner is not liable for damages resulting to another's property from that use unless he has been guilty *42 of carelessness or unwarranted conduct or was making unreasonable use of the property with respect to the lawful business being conducted.
Defendants' argument is based upon the rule at common law. The acts complained of are in the nature of a private nuisance. Under the common law a private nuisance arose from the unwarrantable, unreasonable, or unlawful use by a person of his own property to the injury of another. The nature of the use with regard to the particular locality or zone was the basic element for consideration in determining whether a private nuisance existed.
But our Constitution has modified the common law. Section 23, art. 2, Bill of Rights, provides that no private property shall be taken or damaged for private use, with or without compensation, unless by consent of the owner. In a case of this character the use need not be of a careless or negligent nature, or unreasonable or unwarrantable, to entitle the injured party to recover. If the use causes a substantial injury to the property of another, he may recover as for a private nuisance. Fairfax Oil Co. v. Bolinger,
Our language as employed in the last-cited case with reference to a similar situation well applies here. There we said:
"In this and many other states the common-law rule does not obtain. Constitutional provisions have intervened to protect a property owner against losses in the nature of real and substantial injury to his property, resulting from the use of adjacent or nearby property by its owner. See E.I. Dupont, etc., Co. v. Dodson, supra; Kenyon v. Edmundson, Adm'r,
We then stated the rule as follows:
"Where the facts show that a lawful business is being conducted in such manner as to constitute a private nuisance causing substantial injury to property, the aggrieved party may recover compensation for the injury sustained."
We find no error in the above instructions.
In support of their argument defendants cite Gulf Pipe Line Co. v. Sims,
Defendants also cite Patterson v. Roxana Petroleum Co., etc.,
Defendants contend further that plaintiffs in no event should recover damages for personal annoyance and inconvenience suffered in the use and occupancy and enjoyment of their premises as sought in the first cause of action. This question, they say, should not have been submitted to the jury.
This contention is based on the premise that no actionable damages could arise in this case had it not been for the intervention of section 23, art. 2, of the Constitution aforesaid, and that since that section applies only to property, the common-law rule relating to the recovery of damages resulting from the proper operation of a lawful business still obtains with regard to the damages resulting from inconvenience and annoyance suffered in the use and enjoyment of the premises.
But a substantial interference with the free use and enjoyment of premises constitutes not only damages to the property but amounts to a taking of the same. In 50 C. J. 745, § 2, it is said with reference to private property that "it necessarily includes everything that can be held or owned by private persons, and it is not limited to a tangible subject matter or corpus, but includes the right of user and enjoyment thereof." In Wells Fargo Co. v. Mayor, etc., of Jersey City, 207 Fed. (D.C.) 871, it is said in substance that the word "property" includes the right to use and enjoy it and that this meaning is presumed to have been intended by the use of the word in a Constitution.
And in the case In re Forsstrom,
"Rights pertaining to ownership of realty are 'property' as much as right to use land to which rights appertain, and, when person is deprived of any of such rights, he is to that extent deprived of his property, although title and possession of land remain undisturbed."
This is a fair statement of the law, and we apply it here.
We therefore hold that an unreasonable interference with the owner's peaceful occupancy and enjoyment of his premises by the operation of a near-by business, though such operation may be lawful, constitutes a taking of or damage to the premises within the meaning of section 23, art. 2, of the Constitution.
The judgment is affirmed.
WELCH, C. J., CORN, V. C. J., and RILEY, OSBORN, BAYLESS, HURST, and DAVISON, JJ., concur. ARNOLD, J., disqualified and not participating.