Lynch v. Oregon Lumber Co.

108 F.2d 283, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
Docket9116
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 108 F.2d 283 (Lynch v. Oregon Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynch v. Oregon Lumber Co., 108 F.2d 283, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2547 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

HANEY, Circuit Judge.

In an action brought by appellant to recover for personal injuries, judgment and verdict were rendered for appellees. Appellant seeks review of the judgment urging only error in the instructions of the court.

Appellant was employed by the company as a “choker setter” in a logging camp belonging to the company. The company was engaged in bringing logs from the woods to a spar tree by means of power-driven donkey engines. The spar tree was on the top of a hill. The logs were then hauled from a pile at that point some seven hundred feet to a loading landing by means of a tractor which normally hauled five or six logs at a time. Appellant placed chokers on the logs in the pile, and one Harpell then hooked them on to the tractor. On one trip two loose logs were carried on top of the logs attached to the tractor for a distance of fifty to eighty feet where they rolled off the other logs. When they came to rest the logs were not quite parallel'. The ends of the logs farthest uphill were from five to eight feet apart, but the other ends were crossed. Both logs were about ’forty feet long, the upper log having a larger diameter than the lower. When appellant attempted to place a choker on the lower log, the upper one rolled off and struck him, inflicting the injuries of which he complains.

It was alleged that appellees were negligent in the following particulars:

1. In compelling plaintiff to work in and about a place of great danger; that is to say, immediately under a log hanging in the precarious position hereinbefore described.

2. In not securing said upper log before attempting to put the choker around the lower log, so as to prevent the same from falling upon plaintiff in the manner hereinbefore described.

3. In not inspecting said logs before, directing plaintiff to put a choker around the same.

4. In dropping said logs and leaving them in the dangerous position hereinbefore described.

5. In failing and neglecting to employ for said operation a “rigging slinger”, or other supervising employe, to direct and supervise the detailed work of the plaintiff, and his fellow-workmen, and to inspect, discover and correct the dangerous and hazardous conditions, as hereinbefore described, likely to injure said plaintiff and other employes.

A sixth charge, in general, covered all the foregoing particulars.

The evidence was agreed that Harpell was appellant’s immediate superior; that the lower ends of the two loose logs did not touch the ground at that point; and *285 that if the end of one loose log was on the end of the other loose log, the latter could not have been “choked” from the end. Evidence that there was “lots of loose chunks and limbs” and loose dirt at the stump where the accident occurred, was not controverted.

Appellant’s version of the accident was that as'the tractor started for the loading landing, one log attached to the tractor “hung up” on a stump, and at that point the two loose logs rolled off the others; that the log which had “hung up” was then disconnected, and Harpell called to appellant telling him to bring two chokers; that Harpell took one choker and choked the top log and told appellant to “snare” the lower log; that he could not choke the lower log from the end because the end of the upper log rested on the end of the lower log; that he could not choke the lower log from the side opposite to the one used, because the log which had “hung up” prevented it; and that the ends of all three logs did not extend beyond the stump. Harpell, testifying for appellee, admitted he called for two chokers, denied that he had told appellant to choke the lower log, saying that he “left him to use his own judgment in getting them on there”, and denied that he choked the upper log before the accident. He testified that the ends of the logs extended beyond the stump about four feet; that there were only two logs there, and that appellant could have choked the lower log from the side opposite to the one used.

Witnesses Olds and Boardwell testified for appellee that they were working near the spar tree; that they did not see the accident when it happened, but went to the stump immediately after it happened; that there was no choker on the top log; that appellant could have choked the log from the side opposite to the one he used; and that the ends of the logs extended beyond the stump about four feet. Olds agreed with appellant that there were three logs at the stump, a point concerning which Boardwell did not testify.

Appellant further testified that he did not wait 'for the tractor to pull the top log off the other, because the “camp boss” had given orders to have the chokers set so that the tractor would not be delayed upon its return from the landing. The “camp boss” testified that the orders were “to set as many chokers as possible, where safe”. Harpell testified that his “understanding was that that equipment was to be kept rolling on that job”.

Finally, appellant testified that “When I looked at this log before I went under, it looked perfectly safe to me” and

“Q. Now, did you do anything to the log, touch it or anything, before you went under it? A. I put my hand up on it and it looked comparatively solid.”

The trial court instructed the jury that his instructions as to the law were final and binding, and

“On the other hand, I have the power to suggest to you what my idea is as to the determination of the questions of fact. I can sum up the evidence in the case and give you an idea. I do not intend to do that, gentlemen, because you are competent judges of the weight and value of the evidence. I want to give you a caution in that regard, that insofar as I have given any idea of what I think about the weight or value of the evidence or credibility of witnesses, that you are not bound by that, any more than you are by the suggestions made to you by counsel. You are the sole and exclusive judges of the facts in this case, and even though you may have some idea as to how I might determine the case if it were left up to me, it is your duty to decide it according to your own lights and you need not follow me in any suggestion of the way I would determine the matters of fact in the case. That is your exclusive duty, gentlemen.
“With that introduction, gentlemen, I will now proceed to talk about the legal basis of this case. * * * ”

Thereafter a number of instructions, which will be hereafter considered, were given to which exceptions were taken by appellant. The jury returned a verdict for appellees, and this appeal was taken from the judgment rendered thereon.

Before considering the specific questions raised, we advert to one contention made by appellees to the effect that the burden is on appellant to show both error and prejudice. Appellees rely on Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 82, 55 S.Ct. 629, 79 L.Ed. 1314, and Valley Shoe Corporation v. Stout, 8 Cir., 98 F.2d 514, 520, which is based on the former.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 F.2d 283, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-oregon-lumber-co-ca9-1939.