Robbins v. Irwin

178 P.2d 935, 180 Or. 667, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 167
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 935 (Robbins v. Irwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robbins v. Irwin, 178 P.2d 935, 180 Or. 667, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 167 (Or. 1947).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

The plaintiff, J. A. Robbins, as executor of the estate of Joseph L. Peter, deceased, brought this action under the state employers’ liability act to recover damages from H. W. Irwin, and others, doing business as Irwin & Lyons, for the alleged wrongful death of decedent. Prom a judgment in favor of defendants, plaintiff has appealed.

Deceased, Joseph L. Peter, was killed in an accident on May 3, 1944, while employed by defendants, who were conducting logging operations in Coos county, Oregon. Areas or strips • of timber lánd ■ had been outlined by William L. Preston, the bull buck, in which *669 the timber fallers were to work. Peter and Avon Wilcox had been assigned to one of these areas and were engaged in felling a fir tree at the time of the accident. They were capable, highly paid timber fallers with many years of experience in the woods. At the time of the accident they were, and for about two weeks prior thereto had been, working together as a two-man team of fallers and receiving the same pay, which was at the rate of 75 cents per thousand feet of timber felled. For over a year prior to his death, Peter had been earning in excess of $400 a month.

There is evidence tending to prove that it was the duty of both Wilcox and Peter to determine what trees to fell and where to fell them; to make the areas or strips in which they were operating safe from various hazards; and to prepare runways or means of escape for themselves from the dangers of falling trees and to clear, them of obstructions. Wilcox was known as the head faller of this two-man team but he had no authority to hire or fire his partner Peter or anyone else. In event of dispute his decision was final. There was, however, no dispute in this case between Wilcox and Peter.

On the day of the accident Wilcox and Peter had felled a number of dead trees before they began felling the fir tree involved in Peter’s death. This tree was described by Wilcox as'more than 200 feet tall and from three to three and one-half feet in diameter at its base. About 15 to 30 feet, the testimony of witnesses varying as to the distance, from this fir was a live maple-tree approximately two feet thick at the base and 100 feet tall. Wilcox testified that the question whether the: maple tree should be felled before the fir was a matter for him and Peter to decide. Joe Lussi testified that he heard Preston, the bull buck, *670 tell Peter that, he, Peter, would not get paid if he cut down the maple tree. This was denied by Preston and also by Wilcox, both of whom testified that if the, maple tree' had been felled by Petér and'Wilcox, they would have been paid therefor at the same rate as for felling any other tree.

Wilcox testified that after the cutting and sawing of this fir tree had, been completed Peter inserted a steel-wedge on ,the opposite side from, which they wanted the tree -to fall, and. after the tree started to fall Peter “probably went back, I would say, thirty feet; twenty or thirty feet.’ ’ He further stated:

“Q. .Which direction did you run?
A. I-went out to the side. I didn’t run at all. I had lots of time and he went down there and stopped. And then as this tree went over, it brushed the maple, and when a maple goes over, or any tree that you brush, when it comes ■ back you always watch it, because that is when . it will throw limbs.
Q. Sure.
A. Either a limb off the maple or one from the fir that would catch in it. Well, it didn’t throw any limbs the first time. Then when it went over the second time, well, we quit watching it-then because we considered the danger over; you naturally would. And the next time about a quarter of that — of the top, or at least a big limb off of it, come back. And I didn’t see it until it tvas, well, right close to his head. Just the ends of that struck him; just the top limbs of that.
:£ # #K #
Q. As I gather from your testimony, this was an unusual accident in that this did not fly up ' on the first rebound?
A. That is right. If it flew off the first .rebound it would have been nothing to get out of the *671 road; we could very easily, either one of us, have got out if we had been standing there.
Q. Because you were both watching it at the first one?
A. That is right.
Q. And the fact that it didn’t, then you directed your attention to your other duties ?
A. We directed attention to see how the tree was going to light.
Q. Then it apparently took another rebound and came back?
A. That is right.
Q. That is rare that that happens, is it?
A. I don’t know if I ever noticed it to happen before.
Q. You never saw a similar happening to that?
A. No, I didn’t; not as big a limb, I didn’t.
Q. They usually fly off on.the first rebound?
A. That is right.
Q. Now, there is nothing unusual about falling a tree where it brushes another one going down?
A. No, it is not.
Q. It is not unusual at all?
A. Not at all.
*****
Q. Now Joe was standing about thirty feet back, would you say, approximately?
A. Between twenty and thirty feet.
Q. There was nothing to prevent him from going further back, was there?
A. He had plenty of time to go further if he had felt like it.
Q. Plenty of time to get any place out of the way?
A.. That is right.”

Peter was taken to the hospital where he died a short time after arriving there.

The complaint alleges that the defendants were negligent in the following particulars, to Wit: (1) In failing and neglecting to direct the felling of the large *672 maple tree prior to the felling of the fir tree; (2) in failing to properly, or at all, supervise the felling operations so as to avoid and minimize dangers there existing to their employees, particularly Joseph L. Peter; (3) in compelling Peter to work in and about a place of great danger and in failing and neglecting to provide him with a safe place to work; (4) in failing and neglecting to comply with the provisions of the logging safety code which specify that in felling timber “adjacent brush shall be cleared away from around the tree to be felled so there is sufficient room to use saws and axes and to permit a quick getaway.”

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Related

Wills v. PETROS
357 P.2d 394 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1960)
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345 P.2d 405 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1959)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 935, 180 Or. 667, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-irwin-or-1947.