Carter v. Ladee Logging Co.

20 P.2d 1086, 18 P.2d 234, 142 Or. 439, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 222
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 1086 (Carter v. Ladee Logging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Ladee Logging Co., 20 P.2d 1086, 18 P.2d 234, 142 Or. 439, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 222 (Or. 1933).

Opinions

Action by R. Thomas Carter and wife and another against LaDee Logging Company. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiffs appeal.

REVERSED AND REMANDED. REHEARING DENIED. Action by plaintiffs for damages caused by forest fires. On the plea of defendant that the judgment in the federal court case, hereinafter referred to, was in effect an adjudication of the issues herein involved, a trial was had on that question alone, in advance of the trial on the merits of the case, and upon the preliminary trial a judgment was entered in favor of the defendant.

In 1926 the Union Lumber Company, Ltd., a corporation of the state of Louisiana and owner of certain timber lands in Clackamas county, Oregon, entered into a contract with the defendant, LaDee Logging Company, an Oregon corporation, granting to the LaDee company the exclusive right and privilege to go upon and remove from its lands the timber thereon, for which privilege the LaDee company was to pay for the timber removed a stipulated price depending upon the market price of logs. The Union company was also joint owner of a certain portion of a railroad of considerable value in conducting logging operations on its lands and granted to the LaDee company the right to use the same in its logging operations.

The contract provided that the LaDee company should "not be deemed to be the agent or representative of the owner (Union Lumber Company, Ltd.) in the conduct of said operations" and that company was to indemnify and save the Union company harmless from any and all damage to the railroad and "from any claims which might be asserted by any person or corporation injured or damaged in any way by reason or in connection with the use of said railroad", and to indemnify and hold the Union company and its property "harmless and free from any and all manner of *Page 442 claims, liens or charges arising out of or in connection with" the LaDee company's operations under the contract.

The LaDee company had been in possession of and logging these timber lands for some time when in September, 1929, a fire, originating thereon, spread to and destroyed the residence and other property of the plaintiffs, Carter and wife.

In November, 1929, Carter and wife instituted this action against the LaDee company to recover the loss suffered by them by reason of the forest fire above mentioned, and contemporaneously therewith instituted a similar action in the District Court of the United States for the district of Oregon against the Union Lumber Company, Ltd. After these actions had been pending for some time the Fidelity Phenix Fire Insurance Company of New York paid the Carters the amount of the insurance policies it had issued on the damaged property, and a supplemental complaint in the state court case was filed by the Carters making the insurance company a co-plaintiff and setting forth the payment of the insurance. In the federal court case an amended complaint was filed, making the insurance company a co-plaintiff and setting forth similar facts in addition to the facts alleged in the original complaint.

After the federal court action was filed, the Union Lumber Company, Ltd., wrote to the LaDee company, calling attention to the provisions of the agreement requiring the LaDee company to indemnify the Union company, stating that the contract provided "that you shall not be deemed to be the agent or representative of Union Lumber Company, Ltd.", and requested that the LaDee company assume the defense of the action. *Page 443 In compliance with this request the LaDee company took charge of, or assisted materially in, the defense thereof, although the Union company's attorneys participated in the trial of the case.

The federal court case was tried first, before the court and a jury. Many witnesses were called, and after several weeks of trial a verdict was rendered in favor of the Union Lumber Company, Ltd. Thereafter the LaDee company filed in this case a supplemental answer setting forth the proceedings in the federal court and alleged that the judgment against the plaintiffs and in favor of the Union company in the federal court "is resadjudicata as to the causes of action herein asserted, and is a bar to further proceedings in this action". A motion to strike the supplemental answer was filed by the plaintiffs on the ground that it did not constitute a defense of former adjudication. This motion was heard by Judge Ekwall and sustained.

Thereafter a supplemental complaint was filed in the state court by the Carters in order to make the insurance company a party plaintiff, and thereupon the defendant filed an amended supplemental answer setting up substantially the same facts stated in its former supplemental answer which had been stricken by the court.

After the case was at issue and upon the stipulation of the parties, the question of whether or not the judgment in the federal court case was a bar to a recovery by the plaintiffs in this case was tried first, resulting in a judgment in favor of the defendant — the lower court holding that the judgment in the federal court in favor of the Union Lumber Company, Ltd., and against the plaintiffs herein, was a bar to the maintenance of this action by the same plaintiffs against the LaDee Logging Company. *Page 444 It is contended by the defendant that the judgment in the federal court case in favor of the Union Lumber Company, Ltd., the owner of the timber land, and against the plaintiffs in that case, is a bar, either as a former adjudication of the issues herein involved or as an estoppel, on the ground of public policy, to the maintenance of this action against the LaDee Logging Company, since the plaintiffs in both cases are the same and the issues involved in both cases substantially identical. On the other hand, the plaintiffs contend that the issues and parties in the two cases are not the same and therefore there can be no estoppel, and that the matters involved are not resjudicata.

In this case the defendant, LaDee Logging Company, is alleged to have conducted its logging operations on certain lands in Clackamas county "with camps and logging equipment comprising cables, donkey engines, locomotives, railroads and the usual appurtenances of such business * * * and had been maintaining and conducting such business there and in the vicinity adjacent for some long time prior to and during the month of September, 1929"; and it is charged with the following acts of negligence:

"The defendant in its logging operations aforesaid did not clean up the brush, slash, debris, downfall and inflammable materials arising out of and connected with its logging operations and allowed the same to accumulate, and did not keep clean and remove from its operated logging railroad right-of-way accumulations of inflammable material, and also tinder, refuse and extra dried vegetation likely to be the cause of or become set on fire, but allowed the same to accumulate on and near the ties and rails of its said railroad so that fire might be communicated thereto, all during the summer of 1929 and prior thereto without any act *Page 445

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Carter v. Ladee Logging Co.
20 P.2d 1086 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 1086, 18 P.2d 234, 142 Or. 439, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-ladee-logging-co-or-1933.