Matter of Robinson

541 P.2d 506, 23 Or. App. 126, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 906
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 20, 1975
Docket411-675
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 541 P.2d 506 (Matter of Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Robinson, 541 P.2d 506, 23 Or. App. 126, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 906 (Or. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

LEE, J.

Claimants are the minor child and spouse of the deceased employe whose claims were denied by the hearing officer, the Workmen’s Compensation Board, and the circuit court.

Ingrid Vivian Robinson was a 29-year-old married woman, and Robert (Bobby) Symes was a 57-year-old single man. Mrs. Freda Felts, a non-complying employer, owned the cafe in a Portland suburb where Robinson worked as a waitress at the time of her death.

Symes and Robinson first became acquainted about 1970. They then lived in separate apartments in the same apartment house. At that time, Robinson (then Foss) was living with “Skip” Robinson whom she married on July 9, 1971. The Robinsons resided elsewhere after their marriage.

A Miss Anderegg was a former cafe employe of Felts and had known Symes for four years. She lived at her father’s farm where Symes resided on May 14, 1973. She testified that in 1972 and until approximately May of 1973, Robinson and Symes were “very affectionate” toward each other and she had observed “kissing and hugging.” Anderegg had also observed the words “I love you” written on a mirror in Symes’s bathroom. She was told by Symes that Robinson had written it; the writing was in pink lipstick.

Evelyn Remsen owned a shop near the cafe. She testified that about a month before Robinson’s death, she saw Robinson and Symes “kissing.”

Symes had been a friend of Felts for eight *128 years. Symes occasionally did chores — such as washing the dishes and emptying the trash at the cafe in return for meals. This was not a scheduled arrangement. Symes was also a frequent paying customer of the cafe.

Robinson had worked for Felts as a waitress from May 1971 to May 1972; September 1972 to February 1973; and finally, from May 7, 1973 until her death May 14, 1973.

When Felts was asked, “How would you describe the relationship between Mr. Symes and Mrs. Robinson from your own firsthand observations'?”, she replied, “Well, she couldn’t keep her hands off of him.” She said that Robinson and Symes were “more than friends.” She observed embraces and “passionate” kisses between the two. Felts observed displays of affection between Symes and Robinson “many times.” She testified that “Every time Vivian [Robinson] would get off work, he could hardly wait to get his coat on and open the door and go out with her every time, every day.”

Another witness was Connie Moyer. Mrs. Moyer worked in the “Ship” (formerly Ship Ahoy) tavern nearby. She had known Symes since her childhood and had known Robinson since she worked at the cafe. Mrs. Moyer was also a customer of the cafe where she saw Robinson and Symes together, kissing and embracing “several times” in the six months immediately preceding the killing. Mrs. Moyer also saw Robinson and Symes at the tavern where, again, they were affectionate to one another.

In 1973, Symes’s landlady saw Robinson and Symes embracing on the street adjacent to her apartment building.

Symes’s daughter, Mrs. McLean, testified that *129 Symes had a picture of Robinson in his apartment and seemed proud of it. Symes. introduced Robinson to his daughter, Mrs. McLean, “with a great deal of pride in the way he spoke of her and in the way he talked to her.” She said that “either in person or on the phone he was always talking about Vivian.” Her observations covered the period of the summer of 1972 to a month or so before Robinson’s death in May 1973.

The relationship between Robinson and Symes became strained in April and May 1973.

Miss Anderegg testified that in April 1973, Symes was upset because Robinson was not encouraging him, was ignoring him and was apparently breaking off their relationship.

Mrs. Moyer was asked whether she observed any changes in the relationship between Symes and Robinson shortly prior to May 14, 1973. She replied, “I think Vivian was just trying to maybe ignore him at the last or not be quite as friendly with him.”

When his daughter, Mrs. McLean, was asked whether Symes seemed any different in April 1973, she replied, “* * * I would call him and he would be waiting for Vivian to call or to show up, and it would upset him because more and more she would say that she would come by to see him or that she would phone him and then wouldn’t. And that didn’t set very well with my father.” She also noted that her father had begun drinking more. She said her father did not forgive easily. She said her father “never discussed things with people. He would sit on them and brood over them, and eventually they could come out.”

Miss Anderegg said that in early May 1973 Symes told her that he was “still having problems *130 * * * getting a hold of her [Robinson] and talking to her” and that Robinson “was not available to him.”

Cafe-owner Felts stated that when Robinson came back to work May 7,1973, Felts asked her “not to have Bobby [Symes] come around because my customers were complaining about it.” Felts testified that she did not, however, tell Symes himself to stay away from the cafe. Felts did not remember ever seeing Symes. in the cafe from May 7 to May 14, 1973.

A few days before Robinson went back to work at the cafe on May 7, 1973, Miss Anderegg had a conversation with Symes during which, she testified, the following exchange took place: “I asked him if Vivian [Robinson] was — I had heard that she was going back to work. And I asked him if she was. And he said, yes, that she had talked to Art [Mr. Felts] and Freda [Mrs. Felts] and she was going back to work. But he said it was over his dead body that she would go back to work.” The witness continued: “* * * When he said it, I said, ‘Oh, Bobby.’ He said, ‘I mean it.’ But still I thought it was just a figure of speech.” Anderegg never communicated the threat to Robinson.

Charles Newton, a habitue of the cafe, had known Symes casually for several years and had been well-acquainted with him approximately two years. Newton testified that he met Symes two or three days before Robinson went back to work and the following conversation occurred:

* * He said, ‘Do you know that Vivian [Robinson] is going back to work under Freda [Felts] V I said, ‘What about it?’ He said, ‘If she does, it will be over my dead body.’ ”

Finally, Mrs. Moyer recalls a tragically prophetic conversation with Symes in the “Ship” wherein Symes said that “[E] very one had someone to go home to. He didn’t. Vivian [Robinson] had her husband. Fre *131 .da had Art, you. know. And he said if he couldn’t have Vivian, nobody could.”

Bill Stender had known Symes for over six years. Shortly prior to May 14, 1973, Stender had heard Symes mention that he had a gun that he kept at Mr. Anderegg’s place for protection. On May 14, 1973, while Symes was living at the Anderegg residence and Mr. Anderegg was away on vacation, Stender assisted Symes by driving a pickup to make a delivery to Mr. Anderegg’s farm which was at a different location than the Anderegg residence. The two men then drove to the Anderegg residence to drop off the pickup and pick up Stender’s car.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stone v. Finnerty
50 P.3d 1179 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2002)
Temple v. Denali Princess Lodge
21 P.3d 813 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)
Panpat v. Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc.
21 P.3d 97 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)
Redman Industries, Inc. v. Lang
921 P.2d 992 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1996)
Quirin v. Weinberg
830 P.2d 537 (Montana Supreme Court, 1992)
Barkley v. Corrections Division
825 P.2d 291 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1992)
Otto v. Moak Chevrolet, Inc.
583 P.2d 594 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1978)
Allen v. State Accident Insurance Fund
564 P.2d 1086 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
541 P.2d 506, 23 Or. App. 126, 1975 Ore. App. LEXIS 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-robinson-orctapp-1975.