Dorrell v. Norida Land & Timber Co.

27 P.2d 960, 53 Idaho 793, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 180
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1933
DocketNo. 6040.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 27 P.2d 960 (Dorrell v. Norida Land & Timber Co.) 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
Dorrell v. Norida Land & Timber Co., 27 P.2d 960, 53 Idaho 793, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 180 (Idaho 1933).

Opinion

HOLDEN, J.

In the spring of 1931, the Norida Land & Timber Company (hereinafter called the Company) purchased a complete sawmill plant, frame factory and *795 planing-mill located at Dover, Idaho, about twelve miles from Laclede, Idaho. Dover was the headquarters of the Company, where it had about a hundred houses, as well as a boarding-house for employees, and operated a store. At the time of the purchase of the mill property the Company also purchased, for speculative purposes, certain lands located near Dover and Laclede.

Some of the land at or near Laclede had been used as a town site and lumber-yard, and upon which land a lumber company had a lumber-mill. The mill had burned down and the property abandoned for mill purposes, and as a result part of the land was strewn with old slabs, iron and debris and in addition to that, there were a lot of concrete foundations, with an abundant crop of growing weeds. In 1931, the Company, for the purpose of improving and selling the land, cleaned and plowed up some of the land and put it into oats and grass seed. In 1932, the Company either planted, or caused to be planted, to timothy, about eighty acres of its land near Dover, as well as about eighty acres near Laclede, to oats.

The Company employed "William Dorrell in August, 1931. It appears that one David E. Hurley, in September, 1932, was “more or less” in charge of the outdoor affairs of the Schaeffer-Hitchcock Company; that September 13, 1932, Mr. Hurley requested two Schaeffer-Hitchcock Company teams to be sent down to the tract of land so planted to oats, and that William Dorrell was sent down with the teams; that the work of gathering and hauling the oats to a common assembling point for threshing, began September 13, 1932, under the direction of Mr. Hurley, with four of the teams and wagons of the Schaeffer-Hitchcock Company; that Company being paid for the work by the Norida Land & Timber Company. Between 10:30 and 11 o’clock of the morning of September 13, 1932, Dorrell got down to the oat land near Laclede and began helping in the work of hauling and assembling the oats. He loaded and drove one load to the assembling point, and as he was driving the second load out of the field, in crossing a depression, “he lost his *796 balance and fell off and struck the -nigh horse and slid down under the wheels and the wheel of the wagon passed over him, killing him instantly.”

The Company had not, prior to the date of the accident for which the widow claimed compensation, “elected in writing filed with the board, that the provisions of the Act-(Workmen’s Compensation Law) shall apply,” as provided by section 43-904, I. C. A., under which the protection of the statute of those employed in agricultural pursuits is otherwise denied.

Upon the hearing of the widow’s claim for compensation before and by the Industrial Accident Board, the claim was allowed and compensation awarded, from which award an appeal was taken to the District Court for Bonner County. March 17, 1933, a decree was entered in said District Court affirming the award of the Industrial Accident Board. From that decree the Norida Land & Timber Company, employer, and the State Insurance Fund, surety, appealed to this court.

While numerous errors are assigned, appellants state, and we think correctly, that the alleged errors may be grouped into two fundamental questions:

1. Did the injuries of the deceased, William Dorrell, arise out of and in the course of his employment?

2. Does the evidence support the findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment?

Those questions, which we deem to be decisive, will be discussed in that order. The record contains a report of the Company dated September 14, 1932. That report states the employer Company is insured by the State Insurance Fund; that William Dorrell was an employee of the Company, and had been, since August, 1931. The record also contains another paper, which paper is signed by the Company and designated both as “Pay Boll Report” and “Policy No. 16108.” Under a heading, in a column of the Pay Roll Report and Policy, reading: “Description of work,” we find the following: “Contractors — Watchman, etc.”

*797 Concerning tlie work performed by the deceased, and the nature of his duties, John E. Schaeffer, president of the Company, testified:

“Q. Do you know of your own knowledge what Mr. Dor-rell’s work mainly consisted of?
“A. Mainly the upkeep of the property.
“Q. Yes.
“A. Such as hauling fence posts to various fences and nailing up windows where they were broken, cutting weeds along the highways, in fact, keeping the property up the best we could. That was our only object and the only kind of work we had, in fact.
“Q. Now, Mr. Schaeffer, state if you know at the time you took out insurance with the State Insurance Fund, what did you state or what was stated in the insurance issued by the State Insurance Fund that your employees — what business were your employees to be engaged in?
“A. Watchmen and upkeep.
“Q. Lumbering?
“A. No. Watchmen at the plant, night, watchmen, and day wages and for the upkeep of the plant, repair work.
“Q. You stated on direct examination in reply to a question of Mr. Davis that you had paid premiums in all that you had employed including Mr. Dorrell.
“A. Yes.
!<Q. Now, what did you class Mr. Dorrell as? What was he doing?
“A. He was repairing and working around the upkeep of the plant.
“Q. He was working in the upkeep of the plant?
“A. Whatever there was to do around there.
“Q. I want to ask a question. Did Mr. Dorrell perform all of his duties at the farm at Laclede?
“A. No, he was just down there a part of the time. I guess it was the first time that he ever worked down there.
“Q. The day that he got hurt was the first time that he worked there?
*798 “A. I think it was the first day that he was there, if I am not mistaken. I don’t think that he ever worked there before. "We have our foreman here that knows exactly, but his work was entirely at Dover until we sent him down there with two teams. Our foreman is here.
“Q. What did he do at Dover?
“A. He repaired fences and drove teams whenever they had any work to do, any sidewalks to fix, and last winter, I think, when the heavy snow caved the roof of the boarding house in he helped fix it, just general repair work. I don’t know whether he did any watching around there or not.

Mr. David E. Hurley, outside foreman of the Sehaeffer-Hitcheock Company, testified:

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.2d 960, 53 Idaho 793, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorrell-v-norida-land-timber-co-idaho-1933.