Darnold v. Voges

300 P.2d 255, 143 Cal. App. 2d 230, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1594
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 18, 1956
DocketCiv. 21108
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 300 P.2d 255 (Darnold v. Voges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darnold v. Voges, 300 P.2d 255, 143 Cal. App. 2d 230, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1594 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

MOORE, P. J.

Defendants demand the reversal of a judgment for damages allegedly resulting from personal injuries suffered when a cow kicked and fell upon plaintiff. They contend (1) the judgment is without evidentiary support; (2) prejudical errors were made in rulings upon the admissibility of certain evidence; (3) certain instructions were prejudicial.

The Voges brothers, appellants, operated a dairy farm *237 under the name of Inglewood Farms, 1 near Torrance, where they processed milk purchased from divers milk producers. The elaborate processing plant included a barn which appellants had leased to John Bos. He owned a herd of some 300 milch cows which he caused to be milked in the barn. He had agreed with appellants “that they could take visitors around.” Pursuant to such agreement, appellants had thousands of school children coming to visit the dairy to see the bottling and processing of “the complete dairy farm” and university girls about to become teachers came to learn something of the dairy industry. In all, about 7,500 visitors were shown by appellants annually through the dairy. So secure was the right of appellants to use the barn for their purposes that they “built a cement step-up all the way down the side of the barn” so that they could get about “95 children up there at one time to watch the milking processing.”

Among appellants’ visitors were some spastic children which appellants brought inside the barn in their wheel chairs right next to the cows. Also, at times, appellants took their visitors “down the feed aisle when the cows were in there being fed and milked.” From the foregoing it is clear that the jury were warranted in finding that appellants were unrestrained in their use of the barn and its passageway from which photographs were taken. Not only did appellants come and go as visitors through the barn as it pleased them, but they made use of their privilege by inviting such parties as would serve their own purposes into the barn.

In order to stimulate a wider interest in their business, appellants contracted with the Torrance Herald to advertise the business of Inglewood Farms. In turn the Herald engaged one Hartford to obtain an advertisement from appellants. Having procured a contract for the publication of such advertisement, Hartford had the Herald’s photographer, one Svensk, accompany him to Inglewood Farms, October 31, 1952. On that day, Bos had employed respondent as a milker. At the time of the accident, he was engaged in milking his employer’s cows by the use of a mechanical device. As he sat on a stool nine inches high reaching under cow number 3 to attach a milking machine to her, a flashlight bulb flashed nearby, whereupon cow number 2 whose head was in a stanchion pulled back violently and in a moment had crushed respondent to the floor. On crawling out, re *238 spondent called to photographer Svensk to inquire who gave him permission to enter the barn and take pictures. His reply was that the foreman (of appellants) had done so. Respondent suffered serious injuries for which the jury returned a verdict for $72,813.90. The motion for a new trial was denied on condition that the sum of $25,000 be remitted from the verdict.

On their arrival at the Farms, Hartford introduced Svensk to Stanley Voges who introduced Svensk to Mr. Barnard, appellants’ technologist and plant manager; also, he advised Stanley of his desire to take photographs of “anything of interest.” Having taken a number of pictures of the Farms, Svensk said they would be pleased to get photographs of the actual milking. Barnard replied that permission to do so would have to be obtained from Bos, since he was lessee of the barn and in control. Appellants now say that “the record was conclusive that it was under Bos’ complete control,” and thereby seek to avoid responsibility for the acts of Svensk. But the jury could reasonably have determined that by virtue of the agreement with Bos for appellants to bring visitors into the barn, Barnard as superintendent for appellants had led the photographer into the barn and told him he now had permission to take pictures of the actual milking. After Barnard left the scene, Svensk took two flashlight pictures of cows being milked. At that time the bovines stood so that their bodies were 2% feet apart with their necks in stanchions. It was at the time of such photography that respondent was injured by cow number 2.

By reason of the agreement that appellants might freely conduct visitors through the barn and of their having generously exercised such privilege, the jury were warranted in making their implied finding that appellants had invited Svensk into the barn and had caused him to flash the light in the faces of the cows. Also, such finding was supported by Bos’ emphatic testimony that neither he nor his agent had consented to anyone’s taking pictures in that area.

Mr. Barnard testified that neither he nor anyone in appellants’ office was authorized to permit pictures to be taken in the barn. But the jury were justified in rejecting Barnard’s testimony so far as authority from appellant is concerned for the reason that Hartford and Svensk had come to the plant for the purpose of taking pictures to be used for the benefit of appellants’ business; not that of Bos. They were to be published in the Torrance Herald. The *239 contention that they were there on their own business and not for the benefit of Inglewood Farms is to disregard the implied finding that they were there with appellants’ permission to take the photographs, if, indeed, they were not present on the invitation of appellants. The advertisement was not to benefit Bos or his herd. Moreover, when Hartford and Svensk arrived at Inglewood Farms, they were greeted by Stanley Yoges who left them with Barnard, the Inglewood Farms’ foreman. The latter “paved our way for all pictures,” testified Hartford, and accompanied the two men as they photographed a number of scenes. Having been placed in Barnard’s charge, they asked him and he told them what views might be taken. After cows 2 and 3 had been photographed, respondent inquired of Svensk who gave “him permission to take a picture in there.” The only reply was: “The foreman, the foreman.” Since Svensk had met only Stanley Yoges and Barnard and since the milkers had no foreman, it must be conceded that the jury were correct in finding that Barnard, foreman of Inglewood Farms, gave Svensk permission to photograph cows 2 and 3 and that he was authorized by appellants to do so.

In doing any act that might disturb a herd or a single bovine, the person to be consulted is he who is close at hand and likely to be affected. Because a man is engaged in the performance of a menial task is not a valid excuse for ignoring him when danger lurks in the offing. He is still an individual whose personality demands respect and protection against potential dangers. Insofar as his rights to be protected against latent perils are involved, every man is a king. But Darnold was ignored by Svensk and by Barnard.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P.2d 255, 143 Cal. App. 2d 230, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darnold-v-voges-calctapp-1956.