Roddiscraft, Inc. v. Skelton Logging Co.

212 Cal. App. 2d 784, 28 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2911
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1963
DocketCiv. 20270
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 212 Cal. App. 2d 784 (Roddiscraft, Inc. v. Skelton Logging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roddiscraft, Inc. v. Skelton Logging Co., 212 Cal. App. 2d 784, 28 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2911 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

MOLINARI, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant from an order of the trial court granting plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, following a jury verdict for the defendant, on the ground that the court had erred in refusing plaintiffs’ requested instructions on res ipsa loquitur. The requested instructions were substantially in the form of BAJI No. 206 (revised) and BAJI No. 206-A (revised).

Question Presented

The sole question presented on appeal is whether the trial court committed prejudicial error in refusing to instruct on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.

The Record

The plaintiffs are: Roddiscraft, Inc., a corporation (hereinafter sometimes called Roddiscraft), Timber Products Company, a corporation (hereinafter sometimes called Products Company), and Ted and Bill Boak, doing business as Ted and Bill Boak Logging Company, a copartnership (hereinafter sometimes called Boak). The defendant is Skelton Logging Company, a corporation (hereinafter sometimes called Skelton). Roddiscraft and Products Company are owners of timber land. Boak is a contract logger. Skelton is both a logger and an owner of timber land.

On August 16, 1958, a forest fire occurred in the Bald Hills area of Humboldt County in California. The said fire destroyed timber on the lands of Roddiscraft and Products Company, and equipment and other personal property belonging to Boak and located on the Roddiscraft land. The damages allegedly caused by said fire are the subject of the present action brought by these plaintiffs against Skelton upon allegations in the complaint which charge the latter with negligently and unlawfully starting the fire and negligently and unlawfully permitting it to escape from its land.

The Skelton land is adjacent and to the east of the Roddiseraft property. On the day of the fire Boak was engaged in logging on the Roddiscraft property, and Skelton was conducting logging operations on its property. Skelton’s operations consisted of logging timbers from the easterly side of a *791 canyon which sloped down towards the Roddiscraft property. The logs which were felled by Skelton were dragged by caterpillar tractors along “cat roads” which led down the canyon to a “main cat road” which in turn led to a “landing,” where the logs were then loaded on trucks. The said “landing” was located on the floor of the canyon approximately 500 feet from the Roddiscraft boundary. The “main cat road” is approximately 100 feet from the Roddiscraft property at its nearest point. On the day in question two caterpillar tractors were being used by Skelton in this operation. One of these tractors emitted excessive smoke from its exhaust stack. This stack was not equipped with a spark arrester. 1 Kenneth Skelton, an officer and employee of defendant, Skelton, testified that the said tractor did not throw off sparks. The operator of the tractor testified, however, that while he was using the tractor during the fire fighting efforts he observed sparks being emitted from the exhaust.

There was no testimony that any person saw the fire start. It was first noticed at approximately 11:30 a.m. The fire originated in the canyon above referred to and in close proximity to the boundary between the Roddiscraft and Skelton lands. There is a dispute as to the exact point at which the fire originated. Ted Boak, and two of his employees (Glenn Easter and Don Metcalf), testified that they first observed the fire from Boak’s “landing,” approximately 750 feet away, and that it then was confined to a small hollow immediately adjacent to Skelton’s main cat road at a location close to the boundary line between the two properties on Skelton’s side, and near the point where a creek running through the Skelton property crosses over into the Roddiscraft property. Forester Cirabelani, a fire-fighting foreman, testified that he arrived at Boak’s “landing” at about 12:30 p.m. and that at that *792 time the fire was moving southerly along the Skelton side of the canyon and that there was no fire whatsoever on the “Boak” side. Forester Doerner, another fire-fighting foreman, testified that he arrived at Boak’s “landing” at 12 noon and that the fire was all on the Skelton side and had not burned down to the creek bottom. Forester Ryder, Assistant Forest Ranger and Fire Boss for this fire, testified that he arrived at Boak’s “landing” at noon; that the fire was spreading rapidly up and along the Skelton side, and that there was no fire on the Boak side of the creek. These three forest rangers were called as witnesses for the plaintiffs. Three of Skelton’s employees, DeRossett, Persson, and Ludtke, gave testimony tending to place the origin of the fire on the Roddiseraft property. DeRossett placed the fire’s origin on the west side of the creek at a point 40 to 50 feet from the main “cat road.” Persson placed the start of the fire on the west side of the creek about 50 feet from said road. Ludtke testified that when he first saw the fire it was on “the opposite side” of the creek. Ludtke identified a stump in relation to where he saw the fire, and stated that a few days later he went there with Jack Sheppard, an engineer, and drove a stake at that point. Sheppard, an engineer and surveyor, testified that after the fire he placed a stake where Ludtke told him he had first seen the fire; and that he thereupon fixed the point of the fire’s origin on the Boak and west side of the creek and 31 feet from the Skelton property line. Ludtke also testified that, other than employees of the defendant, he did not see anyone in the area on the day of the fire. There was also testimony that all of Boak’s men were, on that day, working at Boak’s landing, approximately 742 feet away from the area in which the fire started.

Expert testimony was presented by the plaintiffs to the effect that forest fires may be caused by lightning, power lines, discarded matches and cigarettes, children with matches, arsonists, powder used for blowing checker holes, railroad engines, internal combustion engines without spark arresters, loggers’ “donkeys” and chain saws. One of such experts, George Ryder, testified that in his opinion, based upon a hypothetical question, the fire was caused by the tractor which did not have a spark arrester and which on the day of the fire was observed throwing sparks from its exhaust stack. This witness testified, however, that in his opinion sparks from the exhaust of such a tractor are emitted at a speed of approximately 80 miles per hour and could carry from 25 to *793 30 feet, but that this was not a maximum; that the carry depended on the size of the particles and the topography, and that “[i]f it was downhill it would go far.” Ryder also stated that as sparks come out of the exhaust they are “hot” —in excess of 1,500° F. Six expert witnesses presented by Skelton testified, on the other hand, that they either had never seen or heard of a fire start from the exhaust of “a Cat” or that such sparks could not start a fire. Several of these witnesses testified that their opinion would be the same irrespective of the existence or nonexistence of a spark arrester. 2

Res Ipsa Loquitur

The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is now firmly ingrained in California negligence law.

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Bluebook (online)
212 Cal. App. 2d 784, 28 Cal. Rptr. 277, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roddiscraft-inc-v-skelton-logging-co-calctapp-1963.