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Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Feb 17, 1953
1953 OK 48 (Okla. 1953)

Summary

In Chapman v. W.U. Tel. Co., (supra), this court said: "Thus, where a father sues for a grievous physical injury to his minor child, he can not recover for the laceration of his parental feelings, even in conjunction with damages for the loss of services, though his mental suffering be necessarily severe and heartrending.

Summary of this case from Bazemore v. Savannah Hospital

Opinion

No. 35714.

February 17, 1953.

(Syllabus.)

1. APPEAL AND ERROR — Time for appeal not extended by filing unnecessary motion for new trial. Where all the ultimate facts of a case are stipulated and the case is so treated and presented to the trial court, no motion for new trial is necessary or proper, and the filing of such motion does not extend the time within which appeals may be perfected in the Supreme Court.

2. SAME — Appeal dismissed where no notice of intention to appeal given within ten days. The notice of intention to appeal, as provided by 12 O.S. 1951 § 954[ 12-954], must be given within ten days from the date of the judgment or order from which the appeal is taken; and where no showing is made that the notice of appeal was given within said time, this court is without jurisdiction to review the order and the proceeding based thereon will be dismissed.

Appeal from Court of Common Pleas, Tulsa County; Stanley E. Edmister, Judge.

Action by D.E. Chapman against Western Union Telegraph Company to recover in damages. From a judgment for the defendant, plaintiff appeals. Dismissed.

W.S. Myers, Tulsa, for plaintiff in error.

Martin, Logan, Finney. Stanton Moyers, Tulsa, for defendant in error.


The parties are designated herein as in the trial court.

This case was tried to the court below, upon an agreed and stipulated statement of the facts, a jury having first been duly drawn, empaneled and sworn to try the cause, and then, all the evidence having been agreed and stipulated to, jury trial waived by the parties and the jury by the court discharged. Judgment was rendered April 3, 1952. No notice of intentions to appeal was given in open court at the time or within ten days thereafter. Instead, plaintiff filed a motion for new trial which was by the trial court considered and overruled more than ten days after the pronouncement of the original judgment for defendant, to the order overruling which motion for new trial plaintiff excepted and from which order he first gave notice of intention to appeal, and from which he has appealed to this court.

Motion to dismiss has been filed for the reason that no notice of intention to appeal was given in time. The motion to dismiss must be sustained. 1 O.S. 1951 § 954[1-954] specifically provides that the party desiring to appeal shall give notice in open court either at the time judgment is rendered or within ten days thereafter. In Tulsa Masonic Bldg. Ass'n v. County Treasurer, 205 Okla. 169, 236 P.2d 487, we held:

"Where all the ultimate facts of a case are stipulated and the case is so treated and presented to the trial court, no motion for new trial is necessary or proper, and the filing of such motion does not extend the time within which appeals may be perfected in the Supreme Court.

"The notice of intention to appeal as provided by 12 O.S. 1941, sec. 954 [ 12-954], must be given within 10 days from the date of the judgment or order from which the appeal is taken; and where no showing is made that the notice of appeal was given within said time, this court is without jurisdiction to review the order and the proceeding based thereon will be dismissed."

Plaintiff argues that defendant introduced a telegram involved in the case and that therefore evidence was presented and that the case does not come within the rule of Tulsa Masonic Ass'n v. County Treasurer, supra. A similar argument was presented and disapproved in the case of Durham v. Dalton, 205 Okla. 243, 237 P.2d 142. Therein we quoted with approval from Landers v. Bank of Commerce, 106 Okla. 59, 233 P. 200, wherein it is stated:

"Where a cause is tried upon an agreed statement of all the ultimate facts, leaving for the court the sole question of the application of the law to such ultimate facts, a motion for new trial is unnecessary and unauthorized by statute, and does not extend the time within which an appeal must be perfected in the Supreme Court, and the time for perfecting such appeal runs from the date judgment is rendered, and not from the date of the overruling of such unnecessary and unauthorized motion."

Appeal dismissed.

HALLEY, C.J., JOHNSON, V.C.J., and WELCH, CORN, DAVISON, O'NEAL, and BLACKBIRD, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Feb 17, 1953
1953 OK 48 (Okla. 1953)

In Chapman v. W.U. Tel. Co., (supra), this court said: "Thus, where a father sues for a grievous physical injury to his minor child, he can not recover for the laceration of his parental feelings, even in conjunction with damages for the loss of services, though his mental suffering be necessarily severe and heartrending.

Summary of this case from Bazemore v. Savannah Hospital
Case details for

Chapman v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

Case Details

Full title:CHAPMAN v. WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO

Court:Supreme Court of Oklahoma

Date published: Feb 17, 1953

Citations

1953 OK 48 (Okla. 1953)
253 P.2d 825

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