Louie v. Bamboo Gardens

185 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 469, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 126
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1947
DocketNo. 7350.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 185 P.2d 712 (Louie v. Bamboo Gardens) 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
Louie v. Bamboo Gardens, 185 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 469, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 126 (Idaho 1947).

Opinions

*471 MILLER, Justice.-

This case was submitted to the- Industrial Accident Board on a stipulation of the facts as agreed to between the parties, and from which, among other things, it is made to appear:

That Tom Louie, claimant and appellant, about 45 years of age, on the 18th day of October, 1946, and for 'more than three months prior thereto, was in the employ of the Bamboo Gardens, a restaurant in Boise, Idaho, as a dishwasher therein; that he was casually acquainted with one Fook Lee Hong, another Chinaman, 'but "that said Hong was not a patron of the Bamboo Gardens, nor a customer thereof in that he had never taken his meals thereat and was in nowise interested therein. September 21, 1946, Fook Lee Hong and three other Chinese were arrested on a narcotic charge by officials of the United States; that during the latter part of September 1946, Hong was fined $50 by the U. S. District Judge, at Boise, Idaho, on account of his plea to said charge and thereupon discharged from further custody. Hong was a discharged veteran of World War II. After his discharge for the violation of .the Narcotic Act,- 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, §§ 2550 et-seq., 3220 et seq., he seems’-to have labored under the delusion - that -it was thought that he had turned “State’s evidence,” and that someone was -going to kill him. After his said discharge and prior to October 18, 1946, he stated to an Assistant United States District Attorney that members of a tong society to which Tom Louie- belonged, and to which Hong did not -belong were going to import *472 “hatchet men” from Walla Walla, Washington to Boise, Idaho to kill him because members of such tong thought he had turned State’s evidence against his former companions on the narcotic charge; that for several days before October 18, 1946, he was more or less in hiding at the American Legion Building in Boise, Idaho, asserting that someone was going to kill him. The Prosecuting Attorney of Ada County, Idaho, made an investigation and found there were no reasonable grounds for his suspicions that someone was going to kill him, but in his own mind he suffered the delusion that an attempt would be made upon his life.

October 18, 1946, at about 5:45 P.M., Tom Louie, claimant and appellant, received an injury, during his regular hours, and in the course of his employment, and while he was on duty performing the tasks for which he was employed at his employer’s place of business, at 107 South 7th Street, Boise, Idaho, in that while taking water glasses from the kitchen to the serving table in the dining room, Fook Lee Hong entered the restaurant by the front door on 7th Street, carrying a loaded 38 caliber revolver, which he brandished in a threatening manner, and then shot the same within the restaurant three times, one of which shots struck Tom Louie, claimant and appellant, in the upper back region, piercing his chest cavity and his lungs. The employer was notified of such accident and injury sustained by said claimant and appellant, during the evening of October 18, 1946, and that a claim in writing, stating the name and address of the employer, the time, place, nature and cause of the injury, signed by claimant and appellant, was filed with the Industrial Accident Board on October 30, 1946; that as the result of the injury sustained, claimant and appellant was hospitalized at St. Luke’s Hospital at Boise, Idaho, for a period commencing the evening of October 18, 1946, and until and including November 9, 1946, and that the hospital and medical charges in the sum of $475.55 were paid by claimant and appellant; that claimant and appellant was under medical care at the time of filing the stipulation of facts with the Industrial Accident Board and that at the time he was totally disabled for work and would continue to be so totally disabled for a period of time subsequently to be determined; that he was not then surgically healed and whether or not he will sustain a permanent injury is yet to be determined as well as the degree thereof, if permanent injury results therefrom.

On or about October 21, 1946, a criminal complaint was filed against Fook Lee Hong by the Prosecuting Attorney of Boise, Idaho, and on October 31, 1946, Hong was held by the Committing Magistrate to answer to the District Court for the crime of assaulting Tom Louie with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder. An information was filed in said District Court, November 1, 1946, charging Hong with an *473 assault to commit murder. A plea was interposed under I.C.A. Sec. 19-3202, that Fook Lee Hong was insane. The issue was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict of insanity and which was duly filed and entered in said District Court on November 18, 1946. November 20, 1946, the said District Court made and entered its commitment, committing Hong to the State Hospital South at Blackfoot, Idaho, by virtue of his having bee)n found insane as aforesaid.

The Industrial Accident Board considered the stipulated facts and on January 6, 1947,' made and entered its findings of fact, rules of law and order dismissing appellant’s claim. The findings of fact follow very closely the stipulation. Finding No. 7, among other things, recites as follows : “The sole issue presented is one of law. It is conceded that the accidental injury to claimant Tom Louie arose in the course of his employment by the Bamboo Gardens. The precise issue is whether said accidental injury arose out of such employment.” There is no dispute as to the facts.

Paragraph 1 of the Rulings of Law states:

“The claimant has failed by a preponderance of the evidence to show that his accidental injury arose out of his employment.”

'Paragraph 2 recites:

“So far as the stipulated facts reveal a cause for the maniacal attack of Fook Lee Hong upon the claimant, they show that it was because the claimant was a member of a tong, which Fook Lee Hong in his delusion believed was going to import ‘hatchet men’ to kill him. There is no evidence that the assault resulting in claimant’s injury was connected even remotely with claimant’s employment by the Bamboo Gardens, or that the assailant’s presence at the Bamboo Gardens was in any wise connected with the business there conducted.”

Paragraph 3 says:

“The Board finds and rules as a mixed statement of law and fact that claimant’s accidental injury did not arise out of his employment.”

The Board then makes the following order:

“Wherefore it is hereby ordered that the claimant take nothing by his claim and petition herein and that said claim be and is hereby dismissed.”

February 5, 1947, appellant filed and served his Notice of Appeal from the order of the Industrial Accident Board denying and dismissing appellant’s claim for compensation.

The brief of respondent, page 6, says:

“Though the facts are somewhat meager in this case, they indicate that Fook Lee Hong was particularly looking for Tom Louie at the time he shot him, and had either a real or imaginary grievance against him.”

*474

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Bluebook (online)
185 P.2d 712, 67 Idaho 469, 1947 Ida. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louie-v-bamboo-gardens-idaho-1947.