Dalk v. Lachmund

70 P.2d 558, 157 Or. 152, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 114
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 P.2d 558 (Dalk v. Lachmund) 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
Dalk v. Lachmund, 70 P.2d 558, 157 Or. 152, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 114 (Or. 1937).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

The defendants (appellants) present only two assignments of error. The first is based upon a contention that the trial judge erred when he denied the defendants’ motion for a mistrial, based upon the development which we shall shortly mention. The second challenges a ruling which denied the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict.

The plaintiff and his three assignors operated prune orchards in the vicinity of Salem. A few miles from that city the defendants operated a prune dryer to which the plaintiffs delivered prunes between August 12, 1934, and August 17 of the same year. On the latter day the dryer and the prunes delivered to it by the plaintiff and his assignors were destroyed by fire.

The dryer was a structure 96 by 112 feet in its ground floor dimensions and two stories high. It was divided by a fire wall and corridor into two units, east and west. Although the entire structure was de *154 stroyed by fire, this case is concerned with the west section only, of which we shall now give a description. The first story had walls eight inches thick made of hollow tile and was divided into three spaces, each nine by thirteen feet in size, by two other walls made of four-inch hollow tile. The witnesses called these rooms heat chambers. Over each of the three heat chambers w;ere four long rooms, four feet wide, called tunnels. In them prunes were dried by heat created by stoves in the heat chambers. The tile walls of each heat chamber were built up to the lower part of the floor of the tunnels. The front or exterior wall of the heat chamber was thirteen feet high and the rear wall ten feet high. Near the center of the heat chamber, on a concrete slab, stood a cast iron stove, six feet long, three feet wide and three feet high. It burned cordwood. The front of the stove was flush with the front of the building and was fired from outside of the structure. These stoves furnished the dryer’s heat. The ceiling of the heat chamber sloped upward from the rear, thereby causing the heat to flow to the front along the inclined ceiling. The latter did not come flush against the front wall, but left an opening called a throat. Its purpose was to permit the heat created by the stoves to pass to the tunnels above. The heat’s movement was facilitated by a power-driven fan in the throat which sucked the heated air out of the chambers and blew it in hot blasts against the trays of prunes in the tunnels. The ceiling was constructed principally of wood, two inches thick. On the lower side of the wood was a sheet of asbestos about one-eighth inch thick and on the outside of the latter was a sheet of 16-gauge sheet metal. As already indicated, directly over each heat chamber were four drying tunnels. Thus, in the west unit there were three heat chambers, twelve tunnels *155 and twelve fans. Each fan was fastened to a long shaft extending the length of the building and was revolved 500 times per minute by a gasoline motor. The tunnels were approximately four feet wide and high enough to accommodate fifteen trays of prunes placed on top of each other. Their floor was not level, but rose two inches to the foot; that is, the rear where the trays of green prunes were admitted was higher than the front from which the dried prunes were removed. They were constructed of tongue and groove flooring, two inches thick. The joists, exterior, roof, etc., of the building were built of wood. According to the only witness who testified upon the subject — he being one who had had extensive experience with prune dryers— the temperature in the heat chambers of prune dryers is kept at 200 degrees and supplies the tunnels with 180 degrees of heat.

The first assignment of error is predicated upon a ruling made by the trial judge while the plaintiff was being examined by his attorney. We now quote:

“Q. After your prunes were destroyed by this fire, and the other property, did you ever call on any of the defendants and make any demand for a settlement of your damages? A. I did.

“Mr. Carson: Objected to as irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial.

“The Court: That isn’t necessary in this case.

Here followed some colloquy between the presiding judge and the attorney for the plaintiff. The examination then continued:

“Q. (By Mr. Clarence Emmons) Did you at any time after this fire have any conversation with Mr. Lachmund in regard to this fire? A. I did.

“Q. Where did that take place? A. At Mr. Lachmund ’s office.

“Q. Do you remember about when it was ? A. It was in September of 1934 when I first called on him.

*156 “Q. Will you state what was said at that time?

“Mr. Carson: Pardon me, that has to do particularly with the issues involved in this case?

“Mr. O. W. Emmons: It does.

“Q. (By Mr. Clarence Emmons) I will ask you, Mr. Dalle, to state what conversation took place in regard to the loss of your property? A. I went in to see Mr. Lachmund and asked him if he wouldn’t consider our loss and at first he got quite rough, and later—

“Mr. Carson: Pardon me, that is turning him loose—

“The Court: Just state what was said is all, it doesn’t make any difference — it’s what was said.

A. Mr. Lachmund said, ‘We don’t dispute your amount, we feel obligated toward you, and I will take the matter up with Mrs. Carson and Mrs. Pincus and Mr. McNary and I will let you know in a few days.’ So I waited a week and I didn’t hear from Mr. Lachmund and I went back to see him again, and he said, ‘I saw Mr. McNary and he is willing to settle this, but I haven’t seen Mrs. Carson or Mrs. Pincus, but I will see them in a few days and let you know.’ So I went back again and at that time Mr. Muellhaupt went with me and Mr. Lachmund said, “You go and see John Carson, I have left the matter with him.’ So I went to see Mr. Carson and he asked us what we would take for a settlement — ”

At this point the defendants moved for a mistrial, and further moved that in the event their motion was denied all of the above-quoted testimony be stricken. They contended that this testimony indicated efforts at compromise. After argument by counsel, the trial judge, in ruling, called the jury’s attention to this testimony, and, after stating that a motion had been made to strike it from the record, instructed the jury:

“That motion is allowed, and I now advise you that you must not under any consideration whatever allow the testimony concerning the alleged conversations with *157 Mr. Lachmund, in any shape, manner or form, to influence you in your decision in this case in any way, either for plaintiff or defendants. You must totally disregard that and keep this clear in your minds.”

The assignment of error predicated upon this ruling is expressed in appellants’ brief in the following words: “The court erred in failing to declare a mistrial upon the respondent’s interjection of testimony relating to a conversation had in an attempt to reach a compromise between the parties.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 P.2d 558, 157 Or. 152, 1937 Ore. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dalk-v-lachmund-or-1937.