Mateas v. Harvey

146 F.2d 989
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1945
DocketNo. 10783
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 146 F.2d 989 (Mateas v. Harvey) 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
Mateas v. Harvey, 146 F.2d 989 (9th Cir. 1945).

Opinions

STEPHENS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant brought action against appellee for damages for personal injuries incurred when he fell from a mule belonging to appellee, herein called the Corporation. The complaint was originally filed in the Superior Court of California, but the case was removed to federal court because of diversity of citizenship. Trial was had without the aid of a jury under a stipulation to that effect. At the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss, and plaintiff appeals.

There is competent evidence to the following effect:

For many years, including the time material herein, the Corporation has maintained a resort hotel on the south rim of the Grand Canyon in Arizona. Transportation of both men and goods from the south rim into the Canyon is by mule over one of three trails, called the Bright Angel, Kaibib, and Yankee trails.

Mules to be employed on the steep, narrow trails of the Canyon are used for one or two years as pack animals, although the packer rides different ones of them back up the trails. When the packer and trail foreman think the mules suitable for such use, they are ridden by guides until considered safe enough to be ridden by persons desiring to go on excursions into the Canyon. The excursion groups are limited to ten persons, and each is led by an experienced guide. The trail foreman and the guide assign mules to riders according to poundage capacity of the mounts.

Appellant and his wife, while at the hotel, read and believed a circular gotten out by the Corporation, in which was printed the following: “Trail Trips Into the Canyon. Although visitors may venture short distances down these trails on foot, the accepted mode of travel for longer journeys is by the famous Grand Canyon mules. These faithful, sure-footed animals, in charge of experienced guides, hold a 30 years’ record of carrying many thousands of inexperienced riders down the trail and back in perfect safety.” Appellant inquired at the ticket booth in the lobby of the hotel about the mule excursion and remarked that he had never ridden a mule or a horse before. He was told by the clerk that most of those who took the mule trips were inexperienced riders. Thereupon, appellant bought tickets for himself and wife.

Appellant and his wife were assigned to a group of seven, and started down Bright Angel trail to the Corporation’s “Phantom Ranch” near the base of the Canyon. An experienced guide was in the lead, appellant’s wife was about in the middle, and appellant was, according to the guide’s direction, riding on “Chiggers,” the rear mule of the string of seven. Chiggers had been used as a- pack and guide mule in the Canyon for two years before he became part of the “dude’.’ string, and for the next two years he carried riders. However, the trip here under attention was the first time he had been up or down a trail since spending the winter months in pasture. The other riders in appellant’s group let their reins hang from the saddle horns, but appellant was instructed by the guide to hold the reins in his hands at all times.

On the ride down the trail Chiggers tried several times to squeeze past the mule ahead on the outside or! precipice side of the trail. After about two or three hours the caravan stopped for rest and luncheon at a camp called Indian Gardens. Upon resuming the journey appellant changed mules with an experienced rider, but after explaining to the guide that he could not handle Chiggers, he was required to remount and proceed on that animal. Almost immediately Chiggers took up his old trick of pressing forward. In a half hour or so, while Chiggers was pressing the mule ahead, appellant reined him back, and Chiggers started bucking, throwing and seriously injuring appellant.

It is not entirely clear from the complaint upon what theory appellant bases his action. Following certain background matter he alleges that he paid the fee for the trip into the Canyon by the Bright Angel trail; that the string of mules provided for the persons taking the trip were under the sole control, charge, and management of the guide who was an employee of the Corporation; that a mule named Chiggers had never been up or down the Bright Angel trail and had never carried excursionists until the day of the accident and that appellant knew none of these facts concerning the mules; that appellant informed the Corporation of his total inexperience as a rider; that the mule Chiggers was selected for him to ride; that he rode at the end of the string of mules; that the Corporation knew, or should have known, [991]*991the mule was unsuitable for the purpose involved and was not sáfe to be ridden by an inexperienced rider; and that some distance down the trail the mule bucked and threw appellant off his back to appellant’s injury. During the course of the trial appellant’s attorney emphasized the point that the action was not based on the theory of negligence, but rather on the theory of breach of warranty that the mule was safe and fit for the purpose involved. However, as is said in Smith v. Pabst, 233 Wis. 489, 288 N.W. 780, 784, “It appears that there is little, if any, distinction in the applicable law, whether the action is grounded upon implied contract or warranty or upon negligence.”

In Kersten v. Young, 1942, 52 Cal.App.2d 1, 125 P.2d 501, at page 504 is stated the following: “We may affirm a judgment of nonsuit only when, from a review of the evidence, we can say that, disregarding the fact that there may be a conflict therein, and giving full credit only to that portion' of the evidence, whether produced by plaintiff or defendant, which tends to support the allegations contained in plaintiff’s complaint, indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn from that evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substan-tiality to support a verdict for plaintiff if such verdict were given. * * * ”

The accident to appellant took place in the State of Arizona, and the law of that state governs, although, probably because all parties assumed that the applicable law of Arizona and California is the same, the court tried the case upon California law. No references to the law of Arizona are included in the briefs filed herein, and we find no Arizona authority exactly in point.

The cases relied on by both appellant and appellee, and which, at first blush, appear to be applicable, are for the most part the “livery stable” cases.

Cousino v. Huss, 1942, 71 Ohio App. 107, 47 N.E.2d 919, at page 920: “While plaintiff’s petition reads like a petition in tort, she insists upon and tried her case as one upon at least an implied warranty, < a bailment; not, of course, of some chattel like a wheelbarrow or an automobile or other machine which might be examined by the bailee for faulty parts, but an animal, a horse, and a very young horse at that.

“The rule of law to be applied to the defendant in the conduct of his business is stated in an extensive note in 12 A.L.R. 774, to which reference is made by the Ohio Supreme Court in Troop A Riding Academy v. Miller, 127 Ohio St. 545, 189 N.E. 647, 649, a tort case where plaintiff fell from a saddle horse. The rule is, as there announced, that:

“ ‘Livery-stable keepers who let animals for hire are bound only to exercise ordinary care and diligence in providing an animal suitable for the purpose for which it is hired.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
146 F.2d 989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mateas-v-harvey-ca9-1945.