Fred Harvey Corp. v. Mateas

170 F.2d 612, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2698
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1948
DocketNo. 11858
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 170 F.2d 612 (Fred Harvey Corp. v. Mateas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fred Harvey Corp. v. Mateas, 170 F.2d 612, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2698 (9th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

Elmer Mateas brought suit in California against Fred Harvey Corporation to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly sustained by being thrown from a mule belonging to the corporation. The case is in the federal court because of diversity of citizenship. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the court, sitting without a jury, granted defendant’s motion for a judgment of dismissal and plaintiff appealed. This court reversed the judgment and remanded the case for a new' trial. 146 F.2d 989. The second trial was to the court and jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff and we are now considering the defendant corporation’s appeal from the judgment entered in accordance therewith. For clarity we shall generally refer to the defendant-appellant as Harvey and to plaintiffappellee as Mateas.

Harvey maintained a resort hotel on the south rim of the Grand Canyon in Arizona, and in conjunction therewith maintained mules for rental to. excursionists on trips into the canyon. The trips were customarily made iri groups, each of which was led on the trail by an experienced guide. Before the start, the guide, together with the trail foreman, assigned a mule to each individual rider.

Mr. Mateas and his wife, while at the hotel, read a circular provided by Harvey and decided to take the trip. The circular read: “Trail Trips Into the Canyon. Although visitors may venture shor*- distanc es down these trails on foot, the accepted mode of travel for longer journeys is by the famous Grand Canyon mules. These faithful, sure-footed animals, in charge o experienced guides, hold a 30 years record of carrying many thousands of inexperienced riders down the trail and back in perfect safety.” Mateas informed Har vey’s- employees that he had never ridden a mule or a horse nor any animal excepting a burro a few times in early childhood, and was told by them that most of those who took the trips were inexperienced riders.

Mateas and his wife, after assignment to mules and to places in a single string of seven, started down the trail. The guide was in the lead, while Mateas brought u], the rear on .a mule named “Chiggers.”

This was' Chiggers’ first trip down the canyon with an excursion party since being brought in from winter pasturage. During the taking of testimony, the guide was asked by a juror whether or not this mule had been No. 7 in a string before, to which the guide answered, “More than likely he was, yes.” Question: “Had he at times headed the string or been up close to the foot of the string?” Answer: “Oh, yes; he had headed the string when the packers -or guides was riding him.” The guide was [614]*614then asked if he had ever before seen Chiggers as the last of the string and the answer was in the negative.

Along on the trip, “Chiggers” pressed the mule immediately in front of him, seemingly attempting to pass by on the outer side of the trail. There is testimony of conversation and laughter between members of the party directed to the mule’s pushing against the mule 'ahead, and once - his bridle got caught in the other mule’s tail. One member remarked that Chiggers “must have a bee in his bonnet.” A woman of the.party testified that she thought from what she heard that the animal must be bucking. When asked to give the conversation she heard, or its substance, she replied, “Well, they kept kind of kidding him [Mateas] about the mule and — I don’t know.” No one else made any reference to “bucking” and Mateas testified that his mule did not buck until as hereinafter related. Later in the progress of the case, counsel for Harvey asked Mr. Mateas the following question: “At the time that the accident happened was the first time the mule had bucked during the entire trip; is that not right?” To which Mr. Mateas answered, “Yes sir.” It is thus seen that neither party to the action claims the mule bucked before its action which resulted in Mateas’ being thrown.

The group stopped for luncheon at Indian Springs, a place well down into, but not at the bottom of, the canyon, and after lunch Mateas and Mri Boles, the rider immediately ahead of him in the string before lunch, exchanged mounts. It is somewhat uncertain whether this was originally through error or by design, but at any rate, and after some discussion between the.two, the change was agreeable to both men. The guide, however, after hearing the men explain that perhaps Mr. Boles, an experienced rider, could better control Chiggers’ habit as just related, would not consent to the change, and the men resumed their former mounts and the party proceeded down the trail in the order as before lunch. At a point of time between a half an hour and an hour, when the party was nearing the bottom of the canyon, Mr. Boles’ mule stopped long enough for the string to get a few lengths ahead. Urged by the application of Mr. Boles’ heel, his mule hurried to catch up with the string, which had now stopped. Chiggers hurriedly closed the breach and then, without further apparent provocation, proceeded to buck, continuing in such rough stuff until he had thrown Mateas forward to the ground, causing him serious bodily injury.

Appellant prays for the reversal of the judgment for compensatory damages upon the claim that prejudicial hearsay evidence was received over his■ objection, and that a prejudicial, erroneous instruction was given the jury, as to which he duly excepted.

The claimed prejudicial evidence was as to the conversations between members of the party directed to Chiggers’ antics as heretofore related. Harvey claims that the conversation was not within the hearing of the guide, hence was hearsay, and Mateas claims it was well within the guide’s hearing. The court did not think so. Upon admitting the conversations for a limited purpose, the court informed the jury that the conversations were not to be considered as proof that anything -which the conversations may have alluded to was a fact, but as proof only of what was said. The -court explained the situation several times so that jury and counsel would clearly understand the limited purpose for which the conversations were admitted. In support of the court’s position, which we think is the correct one, we cite: Liebrandt v. Sorg, 133 Cal. 571, 65 P. 1098; Smith v. Whittier, 95 Cal. 279, 30 P. 529; People v. McCrea, 32 Cal. 98; People v. Estrado, 49 Cal. 171; Wharton on Evidence, § cc. 254; Greenleaf on Evidence, § cc. 100; Starkie on Evidence, § 89. The California cases are cited as comprehensive statements of what we believe to be general law,

However, even if the ruling was erroneous, the error does not call for the reversal of the judgment. It is the theory of Mateas that, since he had been assured of the dependability of Harvey’s mules, it was negligence for Harvey to assign a mule to him which was freshly in from pasture and which had been used to lead the pack string. Neither of these facts was known to Mateas. Further, it is Ma-[615]*615teas’ idea that Harvey was additionally negligent in that the guide, acquainted with these facts and acquainted with Chiggers’ habit of the morning, permitted and persisted in Mateas’ continuing to ride the mule after lunch. Before the start on the trail after lunch, the actions of Mr. Mateas’ mule were made clear to the guide, and the jury had evidence that the actions had been clear to him. The evidence seems all one way to the effect that Chiggers did push ahead as several witnesses testified, and the conversations between the riders to which the criticism is directed reveals nothing further.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F.2d 612, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fred-harvey-corp-v-mateas-ca9-1948.