224 P.2d 600 | Okla. | 1950
The decisive question presented for determination in this case is whether there was a misjoinder of causes of action. The action was brought by the plaintiffs, Frank McKinnis and Anna E. McKinnis, against the defendants, Peppers Refining Company and Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, to recover damages to the land of plaintiffs claimed to have been occasioned by the acts of defendants in flowing oil, salt water and other deleterious substances upon and across the land of plaintiffs and into a stream which traversed said land. The trial court overruled the demurrers of defendants to the amended petition of plaintiffs, their demurrers to plaintiffs’ evidence, and their motions for directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, and submitted the cause to a jury, which returned a verdict against the defendants jointly. Defendants appeal by separate petitions in error.
The essential facts. as shown by the record are these: Plaintiffs were the
The evidence produced by plaintiffs tended to prove that salt water escaped from the Stanolind lease north of their tract and flowed down the creek over and. upon the land of plaintiffs; that oil escaped from the Stanolind lease upon one occasion and ran into the creek, and that Stanolind dammed the creek, in an endeavor to recapture the oil, at a point below where the Peppers wells were located on plaintiffs’ land, and that the dam caused the water of the creek, which was contaminated by salt water and oil escaping from both the Stanolind and Peppers wells, to back up almost to the north line of plaintiffs’ land, filling up the spring above referred to, and injuring the land of plaintiffs and the timber thereon. Plaintiffs’ evidence also showed that salt water and oil escaped from the wells of Peppers Refining Company upon its land and flowed across the land into the creek at a point near the Peppers wells, and that upon one occasion an oil pipe line of Peppers Refining Company broke and the oil covered and ruined about one-half acre of land planted in wheat. Plaintiffs admitted that this damage was occasioned entirely by the act of Peppers Refining Company, and was not in any way chargeable to any act of Stanolind, and admitted that all damage to their land and timber north of the spring above mentioned was occasioned entirely by the acts of Stanolind and was not chargeable to Peppers. The only evidence as to the amount of their damages produced, by plaintiffs was the testimony of witnesses as to the difference in the value of the entire tract due to the production of oil and gas thereon and the pollution of the stream. There was no attempt made to prove the damages occasioned by the separate acts of the two defendants.
Defendants, when their demurrers to plaintiffs’ amended petition were overruled, raised in their separate answers the question of misjoinder of parties and misjoinder of causes of action. Therefore, the defects which did not appear upon the face of the petition were not waived. 12 O.S. 1941 §269.
12 O. S. 1941 §265 sets forth the various causes of action which may be joined or united in the same petition, but states that the causes of action must affect all the parties to the action, except in actions to enforce mortgages or other liens. That the plaintiffs may not unite in their petition a cause of action which affects only one defendant with a cause of action which affects only another defendant, or with one which affects both defendants, is settled by our decisions. Bryan v. Sullivan, 55 Okla. 109, 154 P. 1167; Delaney v. Morris, 193 Okla. 589, 145 P. 2d 936; Comar Oil Co. v. Sipe, 133 Okla. 222, 271 P. 1010; Southern Surety Co. v. Patterson Steel Co., 111 Okla. 39, 237 P. 588. The rule laid down in Northrup v. Eakes, 72 Okla. 66, 178 P. 266, which plaintiffs contend is the applicable rule here, does not apply where different injuries are caused to plaintiffs’ land by the separate acts of several parties, although such separate injuries when considered together reduce the value of plaintiffs’ land.
In Atlantic Refining Co. v. Pack, 198 Okla. 447, 180 P. 2d 840, we said:
“In order to withstand demurrer for misjoinder of causes of actions the relief sought in each cause must to some extent affect each of defendants in the other.”
This rule, in our judgment, applies to the instant case, for while the petition, except in the one instance, alleged that the injuries complained of were the result of the concurring acts of defendants, the evidence established that a portion of the injuries were caused by the separate act of each defendant, and a portion by the concurring acts of both. Where the evidence disclosed this situation the motions for directed verdict made by the defendants should have been sustained, since that was the only manner in which they could raise the question.
While in Delaney v. Morris, supra, it does not appear that the defendants moved for instructed verdicts, but offered requested instructions authorizing the jury to separate the damages, which instructions were by the court refused, and which action we held erroneous, that course could not have been pursued in the instant case, since it was impossible from the evidence to determine to what extent the value of the land had been impaired by the separate acts of each defendant, and what damage had been sustained by reason of the concurring acts of both. Therefore, the trial court erred in overruling the motions for directed verdict and in submitting the cause to the jury.
Reversed, with directions to dismiss the action without prejudice to the right of plaintiffs to file separate actions on their various causes of action.