Robinet v. Hawks

252 P. 1045, 200 Cal. 265, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 535
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1927
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3765.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 252 P. 1045 (Robinet v. Hawks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinet v. Hawks, 252 P. 1045, 200 Cal. 265, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 535 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

Defendants are farmers and owners of a team and wagon driven by plaintiff on defendants’ ranch. Plaintiff was employed as a teamster collecting boxes of fruit, and was injured by being thrown off the wagon he was driving, along with the load of fruit thereon, for which injuries so sustained he sought judgment against defendants from the court sitting with a jury and charging defendants with negligence in and about the matters alleged in the complaint.

Defendants denied negligence and pleaded that the injuries received by plaintiff were solely the result of his own negligence. Upon the issues thus made the jury awarded plaintiff one thousand dollars in damages and the trial judge gave judgment on the verdict, from which judgment defendants have appealed.

Appellants urge that the evidence is such as to preclude a finding of negligence on the part of defendants; also that ¡the evidence shows conclusively that the plaintiff’s negligence .was the sole cause of the injuries received by him; also that the court misdirected the jury in that it told them that defendants were insurers of the safety of their premises, and of the appliances used by plaintiff as their employee; and *268 lastly, that the evidence offered by defendants to the effect that the equipment and appliances furnished plaintiff by the defendants were those customarily used for such purposes was erroneously excluded by the court. We shall discuss these questions in the order named.

It must be borne in mind that the relationship here between the parties is that of employer and employee, which, makes what is known as the Roseberry Act (Stats. 1911, p. 796) applicable, excluding, however, from operation herein the so-called Workmen’s Compensation Act. (Stats. 1913, p. 279.)

Under the Roseberry Act assumption of the risk is no defense to an action of this character, and the doctrine of relative negligence modifies the old rule of contributory negligence. (Hackelberry v. Sherlock, 39 Cal. App. 764 [180 Pac. 37], where numerous cases are cited; Elder v. Rose, 63 Cal. App. 545 [219 Pac. 74].)

Under this act plaintiff may recover if he is injured while in the course of his employment through “the want of ordinary or reasonable care of the employer,” and in such cases “the fact that such employee may have been guilty of contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery therein where his contributory negligence was slight and that of the employer was gross in comparison.”

As we have seen, the plaintiff was employed by the defendants as a teamster, his duties being to drive along between the rows of peach trees, gather up the loaded boxes and drive them to the place desired by the employer. Plaintiff’s duties were purely those of driving the team, as he had helpers in other departments of the work. On the morning of the accident he was instructed to drive a team attached to an ordinary farm wagon throughout the orchard for the purposes above stated. The wagon floor or bed was without sides other than a rim around it about four inches high, and there was no device by which the driver could hold on. Portions of the territory over which he drove the team were covered with Bermuda grass and weeds, the latter being, as certain witnesses testified, about three feet high. The ground was rough, and it was admitted that the orchard had been irrigated by means of ridges thrown up by a disc and also by ditches; that after the irrigation sea *269 son was over these ridges had not been smoothed down. One witness testified that it was customary in the vicinity, before the harvesting season began, to smooth down the ground so as to permit the access of teams along the rows of trees.

The evidence also showed that there may have been irrigation ditches left open, wash-out holes, called by some “cat-holes,” and holes caused by the taking out of old trees in the orchard preparatory to the planting of new trees therein; also that in places where these grasses and weeds were, the ordinary eye could not detect the presence of washouts or holes.

The evidence showed that on the day of the accident, while driving through the orchard, and upon making a turn therein, the wagon gave a lurch, which threw the plaintiff, together with his load of fruit, violently to the ground, rendering plaintiff unconscious for a short period of time and giving him the injuries complained of. When plaintiff finally recovered his senses and investigated his condition he found the wagon with one wheel in a hole, hub-deep, with the surrounding ground rough, and with weeds which may well have obscured plaintiff’s view. Also about half the orchard was in a similar condition as to grasses, weeds, and roughness.

Plaintiff testified that he was a careful driver, with thirty-five years’ experience, and that he had never experienced any trouble before in executing his work. He admitted, however, that at the time of the accident he was sitting on top of three of the lug-boxes, piled one on top of the other. The height of each of these boxes is some fifteen or sixteen inches.

There was no evidence that defendants or their employees had any actual notice that the hole existed by reason of which plaintiff was injured, but it is admitted that no effort was made to smooth down the irrigation ridges and that defendants relied upon the presence of the wagon-wheels to smooth down these ridges, which they said were of a sandy material.

It is too clear for controversy that the jury would have been warranted in believing all or either of the following propositions: (1) That it was negligence on the part *270 of defendants to allow a hole deep enough to bury a wagon-wheel to the hub to remain upon the premises where servants were expected to go, with the view thereof hidden by the presence of grasses and weeds; or (2) that defendants were negligent in not providing a wagon which either had a seat or a stanchion or some other device thereon with which the employee might steady himself in case of emergency; or, indeed, (3) that it was negligence on the part of defendants to have no means of holding the boxes on the wagon floor which would at least prevent the bottom layer of boxes from sliding off in case of a sudden lurch or tilting of the wagon.

There is, in our opinion, ample evidence warranting the jury in finding negligence on the part of defendants, and this by a “country-bred” jury as well as by a “town-bred” jury, of which latter type defendants complain. Negligence was properly defined by the court to the jury, and, therefore, no reason appears for setting aside the verdict of the jury for insufficiency of evidence of negligence on the part of defendants.

Appellants further contend that even if negligence might be inferred it was slight as compared with the gross negligence of plaintiff in sitting down on the seat made by three of the fruit boxes piled one upon the other and driving the team while thus sitting, with no seat, stanchion, or other device by which he could hold on or steady himself. However, with the combined height of the three boxes being only from forty-five to fifty inches, we cannot say as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of any contributory negligence, to say nothing of gross negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 1045, 200 Cal. 265, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinet-v-hawks-cal-1927.