Kuhn v. Bader

101 N.E.2d 322, 89 Ohio App. 203, 45 Ohio Op. 455, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 700
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 1951
Docket489
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 101 N.E.2d 322 (Kuhn v. Bader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuhn v. Bader, 101 N.E.2d 322, 89 Ohio App. 203, 45 Ohio Op. 455, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 700 (Ohio Ct. App. 1951).

Opinions

Guernsey, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Mercer County, in an action wherein the appellee, George Kuhn, was plaintiff and Lloyd Bader, the appellant, *204 and Otto Murphy were defendants. Defendant Murphy did not appeal.

The action is for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff and alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants.

The material facts in evidence, as disclosed by the bill of exceptions, are as follows:

1. The defendant Lloyd Bader' is the owner and operator of Bader’s Used Parts and Pilling Station Lot located on the northeast corner of U. S. route 127 and Ohio route 219, some four miles south of Celina. Immediately north of the Bader place of business is the Willet farm, the barn on which is 2,000 feet north of the gasoline pumps of the Bader filling station. Immediately west of the Willet farm is a farm owned by Raymond A. Younger. Plaintiff lived on this farm and his father John Kuhn had been a tenant thereon for more than 20 years.

2. On June 15, 1946, the date this cause of action arose, the defendant Bader had two persons employed and working for him, namely, the defendant Murphy and Bader’s brother, Vernon. Late daring the afternoon of that day the defendants Bader and Murphy went to Coldwater on business and while there slopped at the Star Restaurant where they engaged in conversation with one Adkins. The general subject of this conversation was hunting and guns. The defendant Bader told Adkins that they were going to do some target practicing with a deer gun and invited him to join them, but Adkins was on a call. Upon returning from Coldwater, defendants Bader and Murphy, together with Vernon Bader, between 5:30 and 6 o’clock ■that evening, did shoot a deer gun on and over the above-mentioned premises of the defendant Bader. There is some conflict as to just how many times each *205 shot, but a fair statement from the evidence would be. that each of the three shot at least twice.

3. Evidence introduced by plaintiff as to the direction in which the shots were fired was to the effect, that the defendants, when questioned on the Monday-following plaintiff’s injury, said they were shooting-in an easterly direction.

4. Defendant Bader’s testimony was to the effect that all the shots fired by himself, Vernon Bader, and-Murphy, except one fired by Murphy, were fired in an easterly direction to-ward a large pile of dirt and a big pile of gravel as a target. The pile of dirt was seven-, or eight feet high and the pile of gravel, which stood'1 between the persons shooting and the pile of dirt, was four- or five feet high. The pile of dirt was thrown-out of an excavation made for the basement of a house under construction and was approximately 42 feet-long.

5. The defendant Bader testified further that he did-not shoot any shells at any place other than a target,, but that there was one shot fired by Murphy other than at a target, and that he, Bader, then told Murphy that he did not want any more shooting in the air, and: made him quit.

6. Lester Ebright, a witness called by the defendant Bader, testified that in the fall after the shooting Mur phy, in his presence, talked to Clarence Kuhn, a brother of the plaintiff, and ‘ ‘ admitted shooting George.”

7. Clarence Kuhn, called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that the actual words used by Murphy in the conversation were: “Clarence, I want you to tell your brother and your father that I am very sorry that this had to happen. * * * You know I don’t have-a cent to my name; and I can’t help in that way.”

*206 8. Murphy, although present at the trial, did not testify.

9. Witnesses called by plaintiff, who had questioned the defendants following the injury to plaintiff, testified that Bader had said to them that “there were no shots fired, in the direction of the barn”; that “they didn’t shoot north”; that “they hadn't shot to the north”; that “none of them shot to the north”; and that Murphy, when questioned by them, answered in the same manner.

10. At the time this shooting was going on the plaintiff, together with the tenant on the Willet farm, Meyer, and three other neighbor boys were unloading baled hay in the barn on the Willet farm from a tractor-drawn trailer, the floor of the barn being about two feet off the ground. While working on this trailer the plaintiff was struck by a bullet which passed through his head. At the time, plaintiff was facing west and the bullet entered in front of his left ear and came out on the right side of his face in front of his right ear.

11. When plaintiff’s injuries were discovered ho was carried out of the barn to a water pump, after which Meyer got in his model A Ford and drove down to the Bader filling station to call a doctor. Opon leaving the barnyard Meyer had a blowout and drove the remaining 2,000 feet on a flat tire. On arriving at the Bader station, Meyer encountered defendant Bader, and they went into the station together, where Meyer used the telephone.

12. Shortly before Meyer drove up, Hubert Becker arrived at the Bader station, parked on the south side of the station and walked around to the north where he met the defendants together with Vernon Bader coming to the front of the station. At that time defendant Murphy had the gun in his hands. He gave it *207 to Becker together with the last two shells he had, and Becker walked east to the back of the station where he fired the two shells into a pile of sand or clay which had been dug out of the basement for a house then under construction. Before Becker shot he noticed and heard Meyer drive up, noticing particularly the noise which his car made because of its flat tire.

13. After Becker fired the two shells he came around to the front of the station and got Lloyd Bader and Vincent Meyer in his car and started toward Celina. He let Meyer out at the barnyard gate and took Bader on in to Celina.

14. The gun which the defendants used was a 32 caliber, special Winchester rifle commonly known as a deer gun. The undisputed evidence showed that the cartridge used in this gun contained 32.6 grains of gun powder, whereas an ordinary 22 long cartridge contains only 3 grains; that this amount of powder generates 35,000 pounds pressure per square inch when exploded; and that a bullet fired from this gun travels 2,260 feet per second with a range of between two and three miles. The ballistics expert from the Ohio Bureau of Investigation and Identification, whose testimony was uncontradicted, testified that in order to trap a bullet from this gun it was necessary to put two additional bales of cotton in the nest, and that it was the highest powered gun he had tested at the bureau during his 15 years of experience.

15. The defendant admitted at the trial that plaintiff was seriously injured. The evidence showed serious, permanent, physical impairment.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E.2d 322, 89 Ohio App. 203, 45 Ohio Op. 455, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhn-v-bader-ohioctapp-1951.