Antler v. Cox

149 P. 731, 27 Idaho 517, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 69
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 149 P. 731 (Antler v. Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antler v. Cox, 149 P. 731, 27 Idaho 517, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 69 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

— This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries received while in the employ of the respondents, which resulted in the loss of a leg.

It is alleged that the appliances furnished to appellant were unsafe and dangerous. On the trial appellant introduced his evidence and rested and counsel thereupon made a motion for a nonsuit, which the court sustained and entered a judgment dismissing the action. Thereafter a motion for a [521]*521new trial was denied. The appeal is from the judgment and the order denying the new trial.

Appellant assigns as error the granting of respondents’ motion for a nonsuit, denial of appellant’s motion for a new trial, and that the court erred in entering judgment in favor of the respondents.

The following facts appear from the record: Appellant is 38 years of age, of German descent and does not speak the English language very well; has been in this country about eight years and has been employed most of the time as a carpenter, and had not had much experience in working in the woods or in handling horses until employed by respondents, where he had worked only a short time before the accident occurred.

The respondents were engaged in logging and maintaining and operating logging camps for the purpose of carrying on their business. Among other things, they were engaged in trailing logs down a chute. Two days prior to the accident, respondents requested appellant to take a horse and trail logs. The appellant objected to doing that kind of work and informed respondents that he knew nothing whatever about handling horses or of that kind of work, but consented to do the work.

The work of trailing logs is performed by the use of a horse and chain some 20 to 24 feet in length, attached to a singletree by means of a hook. On the end of this chain is attached a trail-hook. A number of logs are placed in the chute, one after another, and the trail-hook is fastened to the upper end of the upper log, and the horse is then driven along the chute, dragging or pushing the logs down the chute to the desired point. The chain in this instance was composed of about ten feet of link chain and about ten feet of wire cable and the hook was not fastened to the chain by a swivel. After the logs had been delivered to the desired point, appellant would remove the hook from the log, turn the horse around and then put the trail-hook in the ring on the singletree and the horse would then be driven back to the point of the chute where the next load of logs was to be taken [522]*522from. This operation was repeated several times an hour. The horse was well broken in this kind of work and was handled without lines; that is, the lines were not taken down from the hames. It appears that the trail-hook was attached to the wire cable without a sfaivel and at times became unhooked, or the hook would come out of the ring on the singletree as the horse dragged it back for another load. Appellant was instructed by respondents to use this appliance and was assured by them that it was safe.

While the appellant was using this appliance as above stated and at the time of the accident, it appears that he had just trailed some logs and was returning for another load; that he had turned the horse around' and hooked the hook in the ring of the singletree and had started the horse back in the proper direction, when for some reason the horse after going a short distance turned from the path along the chute and appellant went in front of him in order to turn him around and keep him in the proper direction. He held up his hands and called to the horse to stop. The horse at that suddenly jumped past the appellant, dragging the chain after him. The hook came out of the ring in the singletree and the chain and cable were thrown around a tree and caught appellant’s leg back of the knee and he was thus dragged some hundred feet or more before the horse could be stopped. Appellant’s leg was badly lacerated and torn by the hook. Thereupon appellant was taken to the camp and a doctor was procured in about twenty-six hours, who stitched up and cleaned the wounds. Gangrene set in about the fourth day and the leg was thereafter amputated above the knee.

Certain expert witnesses testified that the appliance or chain furnished to the appellant was not like the one which is generally used or which is ordinarily or customarily used for such work; that the proper appliance is a chain and a swivel. It is claimed by counsel for appellant that the theory upon which the court sustained the motion for a nonsuit was that the jumping of the horse or the running away of the horse was the proximate cause of the accident, for which the respondents were in no wise responsible, and that appellant [523]*523might have been injured had the respondents furnished a chain and swivel instead of the chain and cable used, and counsel contend undef the authorities that whether or not the jumping of the horse was the proximate cause of the accident, and whether or not appellant might have been injured had respondents furnished the alleged proper appliances, were matters of fact to be submitted to the jury.

In the judgment of nonsuit the court stated as follows:

“The defendant moved the court that this action be withdrawn from the jury and a judgment of nonsuit be entered herein for the reason that the evidence introduced by plaintiff and the proof made by him in this case was not sufficient to warrant submitting the cause to the jury for its decision,” and sustained the motion and entered judgment dismissing the action.

The reason, as stated in paragraph 7 of the complaint, why the defendants were chargeable with this accident, is as follows: “That said appliances were unsafe and dangerous for the reason that the cable to which the trail-hook was fastened was stiff and unwieldy, thereby causing said cable to twist and curl as it was dragged along the ground by the horse, and causing the trail-hook to fly around in a dangerous manner, whereas, had defendants furnished the proper, suitable and reasonably safe appliances as heretofore described, said trail-hook would have remained upon the ground as it was dragged along. ’ ’

The conditions there alleged were not proven on the trial. Instead of proving that this hook dragged on the ground at the end of a cable, and because of the twisting and curling of the cable it would fly around and become dangerous, the appellant testified that its normal condition when not attached to a log was to be hooked in the singletree and dragged on the ground and that it would become unhooked, a condition contrary or opposed to said allegations of the complaint.

In the ninth paragraph of the complaint, it is alleged that “the wire cable to which the trail-hook was fastened, because of being an improper and unsuitable appliance, and not rea* [524]*524sonably safe as hereinbefore alleged, curled and twisted about in such a manner that the trail-hook struck and caught plaintiff,” etc. We find nothing in the testimony offered that would authorize the jury to attribute said accident to the curling or twisting of the cable.

It appears from the allegations of the complaint that the plaintiff relied upon the unsafe and unsuitable condition of the cable, and because of its being an improper and unsuitable appliance it was responsible for the accident; but the evidence introduced does not establish the fact that the cable was responsible for the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 P. 731, 27 Idaho 517, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antler-v-cox-idaho-1915.