Ganser v. Erickson

156 N.W.2d 224, 279 Minn. 235, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1186
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 9, 1968
Docket40495
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 156 N.W.2d 224 (Ganser v. Erickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ganser v. Erickson, 156 N.W.2d 224, 279 Minn. 235, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1186 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

Peterson, Justice.

Plaintiffs seek damages resulting from injuries plaintiff minor sustained while hunting with defendant. The jury returned a verdict for defendant, and plaintiffs appeal from an order denying their post-trial motion to set aside the jury verdict and for a new trial. The issue is whether the trial court erred in its submission of the defense of assumption of risk.

The facts to which the trial court’s instruction related are simple and essentially undisputed. Martin L. Ganser, Jr., who will be referred to herein as plaintiff, then age 14, and defendant, Gary Erickson, then age 15, went squirrel hunting together on June 25, 1962, as they had done before on many occasions. The boys rode their bicycles to a wooded schoolyard that day and sighted a squirrel in a tree. They jumped off their bicycles, ran to the tree, and positioned themselves to shoot the squirrel. Defendant stood about 20 feet directly east of the tree and plaintiff stood about 15 to 18 feet southwest of the tree. Plaintiff was about on a 45-degree angle from defendant’s direct line of fire, or about 6 or 7 feet off the target line. Defendant was about 5 feet 2 inches in height and plaintiff was about 5 feet 4 inches, but, because there was a downgrade to the west, defendant’s head was 1 or 2 feet higher than plaintiff’s. The positions taken by the boys were similar to those which they had taken many times before in hunting squirrels, the purpose of which was to have more constant sighting of their tree-circling quarry.

On this day the young hunters were hunting with slingshots and defendant used an acorn for “ammunition.” Defendant at this time hurriedly shot at the squirrel when it was between 5 and 7 feet up the trunk of the tree, or at about his eye level. They usually followed the “safe procedures” of shooting upward at squirrels in trees and giving a warning to the other before shooting. Defendant did first call out, “I’ve got a shot.” Plaintiff responded, “Get him.” The acorn missile, however, *237 missed its target and struck plaintiff in the eye, from which he sustained severe damage to his vision.

Plaintiff knew that he was in a dangerous position when he took the position in the area near defendant’s line of fire. Although both boys had the reputation of being the “best [shots] around,” plaintiff knew that neither could hit their target every time, particularly when using a slingshot and an irregularly shaped acorn missile fired in haste.

Assumption of risk, we hold, contrary to plaintiff’s initial contention, was an issue for submission to the jury in the circumstances of this case. It was as much an issue for submission as that of contributory negligence, about which plaintiff had no objection. The issues are not the same, of course, but do bear similarities, as Mr. Chief Justice Knutson recently noted in Knutson v. Arrigoni Brothers Co. 275 Minn. 408, 413, 147 N. W. (2d) 561, 565:

“* * * [T]he essential elements in assumption of risk are a knowledge of the danger and an intelligent acquiescence in it or a willingness to encounter the danger in spite of the knowledge, while contributory negligence involves a departure from that standard of reasonable conduct which is required of an ordinarily prudent person. * * * It is difficult to see how assumption of risk does not involve departure from reasonable conduct also and in that limited sense it may be. a phase of contributory negligence; but it is also something more in that the ordinary tests to establish contributory negligence are not enough to invoke the doctrine of assumption of risk.
“Ordinarily, whether a person has knowledge that will permit the application of the defense of assumption of risk is a jury question, at least where there is conflicting evidence or evidence from which different inferences may be drawn; * *

The trial court instructed the jury on assumption of risk essentially in the form of Instruction 1.35, Minnesota Jury Instruction Guides:

“Now plaintiff denies that he was guilty of any contributory negligence and plaintiff further denies that he assumed any risk of this injury.
*238 “A person may assume that every other person will exercise reasonable care until the contrary should reasonably appear.
“Assumption of risk is voluntarily placing oneself in a position to chance known hazards. To find that Marty Ganser assumed the risk, you must find that Marty had knowledge of the risk. Two, that Marty appreciated the risk. Three, that Marty had a choice to avoid the risk or chance it, and voluntarily chose to chance it.
“If Marty Ganser assumed the risk, he cannot recover for any injury.
“Assumption of risk should be distinguished from contributory negligence. Assumption of risk does not involve a failure to use reasonable care. A person who does assume the risk is one who voluntarily chooses to chance a danger which is known and appreciated.”

Plaintiff contends, however, that the instruction was deficient because it failed to define “the risk” which plaintiff must be found to have knowingly chanced. We would agree that the mere act of hunting does not necessarily invoke an instruction on assumption of risk. Hunting does not inherently impute knowledge of any and all momentary or specific acts of negligence of a hunting partner. This is not to say, however, that certain kinds of activities, such as hunting, are not risky and attended with almost self-defining risk. But although we agree with plaintiff that he did not necessarily assume the risk of being shot in the eye merely by going hunting with defendant, we do not agree that plaintiff was in the circumstances of this case prejudiced by a less incisive instruction. The risk of which plaintiff could be found to have knowledge, and therefore to have assumed, would seem to be specifically apparent in this case. To stand in the general line of fire of a hunting partner inescapably involves the known hazard of being struck by the projectile fired, and to do so where the partner is using a weapon and projectile of inherent inaccuracy is specifically to court disaster. A jury might have greater difficulty separating assumption of risk from contributory negligence than in determining what was the risk in these circumstances.

This case is at once distinguishable, we think, from such cases as Lange v. Nelson-Ryan Flight Service, Inc. 259 Minn. 460, 108 N.W. (2d) 428; Id. 263 Minn. 152, 116 N. W. (2d) 266, certiorari denied, 371 U. S. 953, 83 S. Ct. 508, 9 L. ed. (2d) 500. That case arose out of an *239 aircraft accident in which the phot and his flight companion, Lange, were killed. It was the subject of two appeals. In the first appeal, the issue related only to the adequacy of the evidence as to the pilot’s negligence, and we there took judicial notice that flying an aircraft is a mode of travel in which “the necessity for constant vigilance, and the ever-present threat of disaster in case of accident all require higher skills, greater precautions, and heavier responsibilities to constitute due care” than in others. 259 Minn. 466, 108 N. W. (2d) 432.

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Bluebook (online)
156 N.W.2d 224, 279 Minn. 235, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ganser-v-erickson-minn-1968.