Hamilton v. Redeman

97 P.2d 194, 163 Or. 324, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 144
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 97 P.2d 194 (Hamilton v. Redeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. Redeman, 97 P.2d 194, 163 Or. 324, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 144 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the circuit court, entered against him in a personal injury action after a jury had returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. At the time of his injury the plaintiff was a general farm hand upon the defendant’s ranch. He was injured by a cave-in which occurred in a gravel pit to which he had been sent by the defendant to obtain gravel for use upon the latter’s ranch. The complaint averred that the gravel pit was an unsafe place for the performance of plaintiff’s labor.

The defendant presents 34 assignments of error. The contention which underlies virtually all of them is that this case is governed by the common-law principles of negligence, contributory negligence and assumption of risk, and not by the Employers’ Liability Act, §§ 49-1701 to 49-1707, Oregon Code 1930.

The circuit court, after receiving testimony that at the time of his injury the plaintiff and five other *326 employees were engaged in construction work upon the defendant’s ranch, withdrew from the jury’s consideration the testimony concerning the five other employees. At the time of that ruling the plaintiff stipulated with the defendant that he (plaintiff) was employed for “general farm work” upon the ranch; but we do not understand that he conceded that the work he was doing in the pit was “farm work.” The instructions to the jury stated not only the doctrines of negligence, contributory negligence and assumption of risk, but also the provisions of the final or “and generally” clause of § 49-1701, supra. They declared that the latter governed if the jury found that the plaintiff “was employed in a hazardous occupation,” but that if his work involved no danger within the purview of the Employers’ Liability Act, the rights of the parties were to be determined by the common-law principles just mentioned. The defendant contends that the reception of the testimony concerning the employment of the men in construction work, although subsequently withdrawn from the jury’s consideration, and the statement to the jury concerning the Employers’ Liability Act constituted errors. Two forms of verdict were submitted to the jury. One was: “We, the jury, regularly and lawfully impaneled to try the above-entitled cause, find that the plaintiff was at the time of the accident complained of engaged in a hazardous occupation, and find for plaintiff in the sum of # * That form was returned unsigned by the jury. The following, over the signature of the foreman, was returned as its verdict: “We, the jury, regularly and lawfully impaneled to try the above-entitled cause, find for plaintiff in the sum of $150.00 special damages, and $1,100.00 general damages.”

*327 The defendant owned and operated a ranch seven miles north of Bend. In charge of it was a foreman named Dewey Stouffer, and under him worked a crew of six men. One of these was the plaintiff. A year or so prior to the plaintiff’s injury, which occurred October 22,1937, the defendant undertook to improve his ranch by the construction of some buildings. A witness mentioned them as “ a complete set of ranch buildings, ’ ’ and said that they included a feed shed, hoghouse, hay barn, silo and feeding troughs. The construction was done by the men who, like the plaintiff, had been hired as general farm hands, with the exception of one of the employees named Henry Wagner. "Whenever the men could be spared from the farm work they were assigned to the construction work. Concrete was one of the materials that was used; the gravel for it was obtained by the employees from a pit some distance from the ranch which apparently belonged to no one. The pit was crescent shaped, about 350 feet across; its lines, however, were irregular. Its depth was 10 or 12 feet.

The gravel in the pit’s embankments was not loose but compact, and required the application of a pick before it could be loosened for shoveling. Over the gravel bed was a stratum of hardpan and over the latter was the surface soil. The defendant described the embankments as “some overhanging and some the reverse.” Stouffer, referring to the walls, testified: “Some of them sloped back and some of them sloped under.” One of the witnesses swore that the overhang extended out two feet or more and that the overhanging walls were dangerous. No one contradicted that testimony or expressed a belief that the walls were safe. Lloyd Binning, who was in the defendant’s employ at *328 the time of the plaintiff’s injury, testified that he told Stouffer “at least three or four different occasions that the pit was really not safe to work in; that at times chunks had fallen from the edge of the pit into the pit where we had been working; that we had to watch it very closely, and that it wasn’t really safe to work under. ’ ’ He swore further: ‘ ‘ Stouffer would always say that he knew it was in bad condition, that something should be done, but right at that time we would not have time.” Stouffer contradicted neither statement. Binning also testified that about a year before the plaintiff’s accident the defendant, in an effort to rid the pit of the overhanging walls, “tried to blast them down with dynamite” but was unsuccessful. The defendant thought that he did the blasting in 1935, and, although admitting that his efforts were unsuccessful, said that had they succeeded not only would the gravel have been more accessible but the walls would have been safer. He had been familiar with the pit for 20 years, and did not contradict the aforementioned testimony which described the overhanging walls as dangerous. According to one of the witnesses, the pit gradually became more dangerous as more and more gravel was taken out near the foot of the embankment, thus causing the overhanging ledge to be further undermined. The defendant provided no timbers which could be used as braces and no such material was in the pit. Stouffer testified, that when he took gravel from the pit he used a plow and obtained the gravel from the floor of the pit. No plow was provided for the plaintiff. Clean gravel, essential to good concrete, was always obtainable by digging into the foot of the walls wherever an overhang existed, but by so doing the overhang was undermined. The gravel in the walls that receded was *329 likely to be mixed with top soil which had slid down from its original position.

In October, 1937, the employees were engaged in the construction of some concrete pavement around the hoghouse and feed pen. Binning was the employee who ordinarily operated the defendant’s truck and brought gravel from the pit to the ranch when it was needed. About three or four days before the plaintiff’s injury Binning hurt his hand and thereupon the twenty-year-old plaintiff was assigned to the truck. The latter was used for hauling feed, milk, livestock, etc. Gravel was hauled in it when it was needed. The plaintiff entered the defendant’s employ May 21,1935, and until April 5, 1937 (six months before the accident), his duties were confined to the milking of cows. He had been to the pit “not over fifteen times” he said. He had had no experience in such a place and had never driven a gravel truck. He swore that the defendant had not told him of the dangers present in this gravel pit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P.2d 194, 163 Or. 324, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-redeman-or-1939.