Lucey v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co.

131 P. 897, 23 Idaho 628, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 101
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 131 P. 897 (Lucey v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co.) 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
Lucey v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co., 131 P. 897, 23 Idaho 628, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 101 (Idaho 1913).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

— This action was brought to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of the carelessness in felling a tree which struck the plaintiff and broke his leg, while he was in the employ of appellant. The cause was tried by the court with a jury and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $2,999. Thereupon a motion for judgment was made by the appellant non obstante veredicto, which was overruled by the court and a motion for a new trial was also denied. The appeal is from the judgment and said two orders.

The appellant is a corporation engaged in logging and lumbering in the state of Idaho. It is alleged in the complaint [631]*631that the respondent was employed at what was known as Camp No. 1 of the appellant company, as a laborer, blowing out stumps, and on the 23d of August, 1911, was directed to cease work at that camp and was transferred to another camp known as Camp No. 2, and directed by the appellant, together with another man, to build a bridge across a small stream; that the superintendence and control of the work of building said bridge or turnout with other work done by the appellant was under the direction of a foreman, and that said foreman was in direct charge of the work of building said bridge; that it was the duty of plaintiff as a laborer to do such work in such place and in such manner as the foreman directed; that the duties of the foreman were to do whatever was necessary to determine whether the places where the employees were working were reasonably safe, and to direct the performance of said work in such a manner as was necessary to keep the same safe; that on August 25, 1911, the plaintiff was directed to go to work upon a bridge and to construct same in the manner directed by the foreman, and while the plaintiff was engaged in said service, deeply engrossed in his work, the appellant caused a large tree, about twelve inches in diameter and about 60 feet in length, to be cut and felled, so that the same struck the plaintiff and injured him; that the tree was cut and felled by an employee of the appellant working on the hill above where plaintiff was working; that no notice or warning was given that the tree was about to be felled or was falling until it fell and struck plaintiff; that plaintiff was deeply engrossed in his work, with his back in the direction in which the appellant was cutting the tree; that the plaintiff was unaware of the fact that the tree was being cut where the same might fall on him; that it was the duty of the appellant to give the plaintiff warning of the falling of a tree in order that he might seek a place of safety and thus protect himself; that no warning whatever was given and that no notice was given the plaintiff that the tree was about to be cut; that the employee who cut the tree was working under the direction and control of the foreman; that it was carelessness and negligence on the part of appellant to allow plaintiff to become [632]*632engrossed in his work and at the same time direct another man to go on the hillside above him and cut a tree and permit the same to be felled without giving plaintiff any notice or warning, so as to permit him to escape to a place of safety and ■avoid danger when the tree was felled; that by reason of the injuries so received the plaintiff suffered a double compound fracture of both bones of his right leg between the ankle and the knee, and was severely injured, and from which he was still suffering at the time of the trial.

The appellant answered, denying practically all of the allegations of the complaint that would make appellant liable, and plead affirmatively contributory negligence and negligence of a fellow-servant and assumption of risk.

The evidence in the case was quite brief. The plaintiff testified that he had been working in Camp No. 1 under a boss named Mullen; that on August 23, 1911, Mullen told him to go to Camp No. 2, which was under the charge of a boss named Radigan; that at Camp No. 1 he had been engaged in blowing out stumps and clearing a right of way as a common laborer, at.$2.75 per day; that Mullen told him to go up to Camp No. 2 and work there two or three days, as they were short-handed there, and to report to Radigan; that on the morning of August 23d, Radigan and plaintiff walked up the gulch and Radigan told him to work on the skid road; that he told plaintiff to lay poles three feet apart and bury them in the ground, and let about three inches stick over so that a sleigh could slide along on the top; that he kept at that work in the forenoon, and in the afternoon Radigan came along and told him to build a bridge about thirty feet long and twelve feet wide, so that teams could switch out and pass each other; that Radigan told him he would have the timber brought to him; that he was getting $2.75 a day, the same as at Camp No. 1; that Radigan selected the work that he was to do; that Radigan was supposed to go around and tell the men what to do; that he was the only foreman in the camp; that he hired and discharged men and signed their checks; that the timbers for the bridge were felled and carried to the bridge by an Austrian and another man who were work[633]*633ing under the supervision of Radigan, the names of whom plaintiff did not know; that the bridge was being built in a little gulch with a little creek in it and there was a stringer on each side of the creek about thirty feet long plaintiff and his partner were covering the bridge, plaintiff working on one end chopping a notch and his partner doing the same on the other end, when plaintiff was struck by a falling tree; that the two men who were getting the timber had been felling it up the gulch a ways and bringing the timber down, for a day and a half; that at the time of the injury plaintiff was working on the stringer where Radigan told him to work; that the tree that fell on him came to the right of him; that he did not see any men chopping a tree and did not know that any men were chopping a tree prior to the time it fell; that he had no warning of the falling tree; that the men “never hollered at all”; that prior to the falling of the tree on him, he had never seen the two men cutting a tree near him; that there were men working all around him in the woods, some skidding logs and. others chopping; that every man was supposed to holler “Timber!” and give a man a chance to get out of the way when a tree was being felled, and that that had been his experience in the camps of the Stack-Gibbs Lumber Company; that he did not remember of ever hearing the foreman of the camp instruct the men to give that kind of a warning or any kind of a warning; that a man was supposed to holler and give a man a chance to get out of the way; that there were skidding.teams climbing the hills all the time; that while he was notching the log on the bridge he did not see the men cutting the tree as they were to the right of him; that he did not know they were in there; that he thought they were up the gulch further; that they had been working up the gulch further; that they had been carrying the logs down on their shoulders to him; that at the time he went to work neither the foreman nor any other person advised him that they were going to cut any timber around close to where he was working; as a result of the tree striking him, his leg was severely broken-; he was laid up in bed seven months and it was still swollen at the time of the [634]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 P. 897, 23 Idaho 628, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucey-v-stack-gibbs-lumber-co-idaho-1913.