Ellstrom v. United States

694 F. Supp. 1331, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10617, 1988 WL 96748
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 20, 1988
DocketNo. 84 C 9481
StatusPublished

This text of 694 F. Supp. 1331 (Ellstrom v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellstrom v. United States, 694 F. Supp. 1331, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10617, 1988 WL 96748 (N.D. Ill. 1988).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW1

ASPEN, District Judge:

This is a bench trial. We have heard testimony and reviewed depositions and other exhibits received in evidence in the plaintiff’s case. We have also examined the legal briefs submitted by the parties in the pretrial order. At the close of the plaintiff’s ease, the defendant2 moved for judgment in its favor. Both parties presented oral argument on this motion. For the reasons stated in the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,3 defendant’s motion for judgment in its favor is allowed.

Findings of Fact4

1. Richard E. Ellstrom (“Ellstrom”) was a citizen and a resident of Illinois on November 19, 1982, when he was injured in a hunting accident at Shawnee National Forest in Southern Illinois.

2. The Shawnee National Forest is owned by the United States and is administered by the Forest Service which is a part of the United States Department of Agriculture.

3. The Shawnee National Forest consists of over 260,000 woodland and bluff country maintained in its natural condition. In its maximum approximate dimensions are 85 miles east to west and 45 miles north to south. It covers parts of ten counties in Southern Illinois.

4. The Shawnee National Forest is maintained by the Agriculture Department [1333]*1333for agricultural purposes, namely, the production of lumber.

5. In addition, the Shawnee National Forest is open to the public for recreational purposes. There are six developed recreational areas which include a total of thirteen camping areas, two swimming areas numerous picnic sites.

6. Hunting is permitted in the Shawnee National Forest subject to regulation by the State of Illinois with respect to matters such as licensing, hunting seasons and bag limits.

7. The Shawnee National Forest does not permit hunting in developed recreational areas.

8. The Shawnee National Forest is managed by a “Forest Supervisor” who, in turn, supervises four “District Rangers.” The injury in this case occurred in the Vienna District of the Shawnee National Forest.

9. The Vienna District consists of approximately 97,000 acres in four counties.

10. The Vienna District Ranger from 1978 through 1985 was Roger Bucklew, who had worked for the Forest Service from 1962 until his retirement. He recently died.

11. The Vienna District had a staff of approximately fourteen people.

12. On November 18,1982, Ellstrom entered Shawnee National Forest Forestland with five other men to hunt deer. No fee was charged.

13. They arrived in a van with a tent and other camping equipment intending to camp out for two or three nights. They set up camp in a wooded area of the Shawnee National Forest approximately ten miles from the nearest developed recreational area and briefly scouted the area for deer blinds until it got dark.

14. They did not camp at a designated camping area. Instead, they drove into the forest on a muddy, rut-filled, dirt, firebreak road to a place where they could barely pull the van off the road. They set up camp in a purely natural, thickly-wooded area with no man-made facilities.

15. The next day, November 19, 1982, deer season opened at daylight in the State of Illinois. Plaintiff had a duly issued license to hunt deer during the season.

16. On November 19, 1982, Ellstrom awoke at about 4:30 a.m. and left camp alone about that time to find an acceptable area to hunt.

17. Ellstrom was not an experienced deer hunter. He had only been deer hunting once before, several years prior in ' Pennsylvania. He was told by his companions that the way to hunt deer is to find a tree blind, climb into it and hunt from it. His companions also told him that you see one on occasion in the Shawnee National Forest and that he might find one.

18. When Ellstrom left camp on November 19, 1982, he walked from 4:30 a.m. to approximately 6:00 a.m. searching for a tree blind.5 He could not find one, so he sat by a tree from 6:00 a.m. to about 7:00 a.m. looking for deer. He did not see any and got up and walked again looking for a better place from which to hunt and for a tree stand. He found a tree stand. He might have found this tree stand when he initially left camp at 4:30 a.m., except that it was too dark, and he did not see it.

19. The tree stand was not in a heavily-wooded area. There were deer trails going near it. He climbed into this tree stand and sat in it for about an hour. It was made of a single two-by-four in the fork of a tree with an approximately 18 inch circumference, and it was eight to ten feet off the ground. It was nailed to the tree.

20. By 7:30 a.m.-8:00 a.m., Ellstrom had not seen a deer, and he walked back to camp and had a cup of coffee. He left camp and began walking up the fire road in the same direction he took when he first left camp. He decided to stay closer to camp on this occasion, and after walking about 100 yards he turned to his right and [1334]*1334went down a slope. He saw a large tree with a chair built out of two-by-fours and other wood in the tree. This chair or tree stand was ten to twelve feet up the tree. It looked downhill on the slope, and he could see 100 yards in an open area with a view of the area.

21. There was no ladder or other device to climb into this tree. In getting into the tree blind, he had to grab onto tree branches and climb on the “Y” shaped trunk of the tree. He got to the tree stand somewhere around 8:00 or 8:30 a.m.

22. The “tree blind” consisted of three or four pieces of wood for a two-foot wide seat and three or four pieces of wood for a backrest. The wood was nailed to the tree. Some of the wooden pieces were rotten or loose, and he pulled those two or three pieces off and threw them down. He left the pieces that he felt were sturdy enough, and he checked those sturdy pieces before he sat in the tree stand.

23. It did not appear to Ellstrom that anyone had used the chair recently because, if someone had sat on it, he would have gone right through the rotten pieces of wood.

24. Ellstrom was wearing a backpack. He had his shotgun in a sling that was slung over his back. He climbed into the tree blind carrying his backpack and shotgun in this fashion.

25. About the time he got into the tree, it started raining. He was wearing a plastic jacket that he put on just before climbing into the tree blind. He was sitting in the tree blind for about 45 minutes when he became uncomfortable and stiff. He stood up to stretch his legs. He stood on the trunk of the tree where the chair was built. He was hanging onto the tree with his right hand and the barrel of his gun with his left hand. He sat the butt of the gun on the same trunk on which he was standing.

26. The butt of the gun slipped off the trunk. When the gun slipped off the tree trunk, it fell to the ground and fired while he was reaching for the gun with his left hand. He was shot through the left hand. He was standing when he was shot, holding the tree with his right hand.

27. He looked at his hand, and there was a big hole in it. He was concerned that he would pass out from the pain and blood loss, so he jumped from the tree. He screamed for help.

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Bluebook (online)
694 F. Supp. 1331, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10617, 1988 WL 96748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellstrom-v-united-states-ilnd-1988.