Hudson v. Roberts

270 P.2d 837, 75 Idaho 224, 1954 Ida. LEXIS 214
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1954
Docket8028
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 270 P.2d 837 (Hudson v. Roberts) 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
Hudson v. Roberts, 270 P.2d 837, 75 Idaho 224, 1954 Ida. LEXIS 214 (Idaho 1954).

Opinion

*227 KEETON, Justice.

Claimant, respondent Everett H. Hudson, while in the employ of Max Roberts, whose surety under the Workmen’s Compensation Law, I.C. § 72-101 et seq., is the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, received an injury during his regular hours of employment, while he was on duty on the employer’s premises performing the work for which he was employed.

At the hearing before the Board, and on appeal, employer and surety contend, among other things, that the injuries for which compensation is sought did not arise out of the course of the employment; that at the time the injuries were received, claimant was acting as a peace officer, marshal of the Village of Atomic City, and/or as a deputy sheriff of Bingham County; that the injuries suffered are not compensable.

At the time of the injuries complained of claimant was employed as a bartender and clerk in the Twin Buttes Bar & Cafe in Atomic City. While on duty and when there were eighteen or twenty persons in the barroom, a third person, unconnected with the establishment, one Clyde Gish, appeared on the sidewalk in front of the bar .with a rifle, the muzzle of which was thereafter thrust through the door into the interior of the barroom where claimant was working. Claimant testified that Gish came to the front door waving a gun and was going to shoot everybody; that he acted like á maniac, and was raving and waving the gun in the air. While in the act of attempting to secure possession of a pistol to protect himself, the customers therein, or both, or the employer’s property, claimant was wounded by a rifle bullet fired from the sidewalk through the window, by Gish. Immediately prior to the wounding of claimant, Gish had shot and killed a man named McAvoy, who had attempted to disarm him.

Appellants contend that the evidence established that the assault made by Gish on claimant, and which resulted in claimant’s injuries, was motivated by spite> ill will, or a desire for personal revenge for .real or imaginary wrongs committed by claimant; that the assailant had no purpose in coming to the barroom where claimant was working except to inflict bodily injury on him; that the assault was personal to claimant and unconnected with the employment; and contend the harm and injuries suffered by claimant would, or could have occurred at ■ any other place where the claimant might be. In other words, appellants contend that the injuries suffered were not occasioned by a hazard of the job or the place of employment.

Immediately prior to the appearance of Gish, Mrs. Gish, his wife, had approached ■the bar and told claimant (according to his .testimony) that Gish was coming over to (Shoot him.and a number of other men whom she 'mentioned, some of whom were in the barroom at that time. Claimant testified :

*228 “She said her husband had been beating up on her and she says, I told him I had been playing around with you, and she mentioned about five or six other men, and she said the reason I told him this was so he would leave me alone, and she said he grabbed his gun and started for town. That probably isn’t the exact wording, but I can’t remember her exact words.”

The deceased McAvoy was in the place of business when Gish appeared in front of the building with the gun, and went outside to remonstrate with and disarm him.' In' the struggle which ensued Mc-Avoy' was shot and killed.

Other witnesses testified that Gish, while outside the building, spoke through the .open door and said to claimant:. “Come on out I am going to shoot you.”

While outside the building, speaking to, and pointing the gun through the door at Mrs. Gish, Gish directed her to admit in"timacies with claimant and two or three others, “He pointed the gun at her and I guess' she was scared and she said ‘yes’ ”.

There were witnesses who testified to facts from which a reasonable inference or deduction might be made that the attack on the place of business and those therein was a general invasion or trespass, and with an intent, on the part of Gish, to shoot several customers then in the barroom ; that his malice was not directed exclusively to an assault on claimant.

In testifying as to Gish’s actions at the time in question the witness Barnes said :

“Well he was just yelling and he was going to shoot everybody.
“Q. Is that what he said? A. He was going to shoot Mr. Becker and he named over several he was going to shoot.”

Witness Zimmerman testified:

“He came toward us with the gun/ he had the gun pointed toward the wall, and he told us he had shot two guys already and he was after Eddie’s wife.
“Q. What did he say to Roberts to the effect that-he wasn’t going to shoot him ? A. When we came to the back door, he was up to the front, and he told us we could come in, he wasn’t going to shoot us.
“Q. At that time, what did Gish say? A. He said something about he was looking for Hudson’s wife and wanted to know where Hudson’s wife was. We said we didn’t know and we turned around and went to the back and when we got to the back he was at the front door.
“Q. What did he say? A. He said we could come on in, he .wouldn’t shoot us.
“Q. Did you say he wanted to shoot somebody else? A. Yes, he said he wanted to shoot Vern Nelson.
*229 “Q. Was he in the cafe? A. Yes. (The cafe referred to was in the same building as the bar)
“Q. Did he say he wanted to shoot anyone else? A. He mentioned Becker and Vern Nelson.”

Relative to the actions of other persons in the bar at the time the witness testified:

“Q. Did they all run for cover ? A. Most of them did as quickly as they could. It was hard to get out of the way, you couldn’t cross the room because if he shot down the center of the room, — most of them just backed off.”

As to the conduct of the claimant, the witness Roberts testified:

“Q. Then what did Eddie [claimant] do? That’s when Gish hollered for Eddie to come out, and I believe he [claimant] said, What’s the matter, are you crazy?’ and stepped back against the wall.”- ******
“Q. Did you hear Mr. Gish say he • was going to shoot several different • persons? A. Well, yes, he said something about,— * * * he said he was going to Straighten out several things with some of them, — I think he named out Eddie and Shorty Nelson and, I don’t know, it seems like there was another one or two, — I think Becker.”

As to the nature of the employment and the duties of the claimant at the time he suffered the injuries inflicted, both claimant and employer testified that it was claimant’s duty, among other things, to preserve order. The employer testified:

“Q. Would Mr. Hudson [claimant] still be in line of duty in attempting to quiet down a disturbance? A. Yes.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 837, 75 Idaho 224, 1954 Ida. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-roberts-idaho-1954.