95 P.2d 849 | Okla. | 1939
This appeal is from a judgment of the district court of Muskogee county which was entered on the 15th day of June, 1938, in favor of Loyd Martin, administrator of the estate of Lila Martin, deceased, against the Western Union Telegraph Company, a corporation, as defendant. The judgment was based upon two causes of action: One for conscious pain and suffering and the other for wrongful death. Position of the parties here is the reverse of that occupied in the trial court. We will hereinafter refer to them as they appeared below. The parties waived a jury and tried the cause to the court. The defendant requested certain findings of fact. The court made some of the findings so requested and denied others, and also made and filed in said cause its own independent findings of fact, wherein it found, in substance, that the plaintiff's intestate had been injured by one of the defendant's messengers in the course of his employment. In accordance with the findings so made, the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff on both causes of action, which judgment was entered on March 16, 1938. The defendant gave notice of appeal, bond to supersede the judgment, and caused a case-made to be prepared and served on counsel for the plaintiff preparatory to lodging appeal in this court. It was then discovered that the court had omitted to make any finding with reference to the first cause of action pleaded in plaintiff's petition. Plaintiff called this omission to *25 the attention of the court, and thereupon the court vacated its former judgment, made additional findings of fact, and reentered under date of June 15, 1938, the judgment in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant has prosecuted this appeal.
As grounds for the reversal of said judgment, defendant assigns 18 specifications of error, which it discusses under four general propositions. The contentions so made resolve themselves into two, which are, in substance, as follows: First, the findings and judgment are without support of any competent evidence; second, the trial court had no authority to vacate its former judgment, make additional findings, and then reenter the judgment.
That the plaintiff in order to impose liability upon the defendant had to prove that the boy who injured his intestate was both an employee of, and engaged in the performance of some duty for, the defendant at the time the alleged tort was committed is too well settled to require any extended citation of authorities. See Neilan Co., Ltd., v. Miller,
We next inquire whether the court had authority to set aside the judgment of March 16, 1938, and make additional findings of fact and re-enter the judgment without a further trial.
That the district courts of this state have a wide and extended discretion in opening judgments and in setting aside or modifying proceedings had in said courts, if done at the term in which the judgment is rendered or the proceedings are had when all the parties are present before the court and no advantage is taken of either party, is no longer an open question in this jurisdiction. Welborn v. Whitney,
In the case at bar the court acted within the term at which the judgment had been rendered and had all the parties before it at the time and no advantage appears to have been taken of either. It appears further that the court in re-opening the judgment for the purpose of making additional findings which it had omitted to make was merely correcting an error of law which had been made by the court. Under such circumstances there was no necessity for any further trial even though the defendant requested such. See Georgia Home Ins. Co. v. Halsey,
The case of First National Bank of Ardmore v. Commissioners of Land Office,
Judgment affirmed.
BAYLESS, C. J., WELCH, V. C. J., and RILEY, OSBORN, and DAVISON, JJ., concur.