Roe v. Boise Grocery Company

21 P.2d 910, 53 Idaho 82, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 110
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1933
DocketNo. 5971.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 910 (Roe v. Boise Grocery Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roe v. Boise Grocery Company, 21 P.2d 910, 53 Idaho 82, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 110 (Idaho 1933).

Opinion

*84 HOLDEN, «J.

Charles A. Roe was a traveling salesman, employed by appellant Boise Grocery Company, being the husband of claimant, Della F. Roe, and lived at Boise, Idaho. He regularly traveled by automobile from Boise to Ontario, Yale, Drewsey, Beulah and intermediate points to Burns, Oregon, and from Boise to Mountain Home, Bruneau, Murphy and Jordan Yalley. One week he covered what we will term the “Burns territory,” and the next week the “Jordan Yalley territory. ’ ’ He traveled both days and nights, seeing customers at hotels, stores and wherever it was most convenient to them, during the day and at nights. In the springtime of each year both the Burns territory and the Mountain Home territory were infested with wood-ticks infected with the virus which causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever. March 21, 1932, Roe left Boise for Ontario, Oregon, for the purpose of covering the Burns territory, and in the afternoon of March 22, 1932, while driving from Beulah to the town of Crane, Oregon, the Roe car got stuck in the mud. Another traveling salesman driving just ahead of Roe stopped and helped him. These salesmen spent the best part of the afternoon and until about 11 o’clock that night gathering rocks out in the sage-brush on either side of the road, and placing them under the wheels of the Roe ear. About 11 o’clock they got into their respective cars and then slept the rest of the night. The next morning about 11 o’clock they got the Roe car out of the mud-hole, and Roe then continued on his way to Crane, and from Crane drove on to Burns. At Burns Roe examined himself to see if he had any wood-ticks, but did not find any. From Burns he visited the other towns in that territory returning *85 borne Saturday evening, March 26, 1932. About 10 o’clock the next (Sunday) morning, a wood-tick was found imbedded in his right leg, and at the point where the tick was imbedded in the leg there was inflammation and an appearance of infection. After the tick was removed Roe went to church, and in the afternoon took his daughter to Mountain Home, but did not get out of his car.

Monday morning, March 28, 1932, Roe left Boise, on a trip into the Jordan Valley territory, returned to Boise about the middle of the week, stayed overnight, and then drove to the towns of Bruneau, Murphy and Oreana. While in Bruneau he visited a daughter either on Wednesday, March 3'0th, or Thursday, March 31, 1932, and returned home in the evening, at which time it was found Roe had a “bite” over his left shoulder-blade. The next morning Roe left home on another trip returning to Boise Saturday night, April 2, 1932. Monday morning, April 4, 1932, Roe left home on another regular trip into the Burns territory, took sick at Ontario, Oregon, returned to Boise and entered a hospital April 5, 1932, at which time it was found he was suffering with Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and on the 16th of that month he died.

It appears from the record that the period of time usually elapsing between the time an infected wood-tick bites a patient and the time the fever manifests itself is from twenty-four hours to ten days, that period being known as the period of incubation.

This appeal is from a decree of the district court affirming an award of the Industrial Accident Board in favor of claimant, Della F. Roe, and against the Boise Grocery Company, employer, and the State Insurance Fund, surety.

We will review the errors specified by appellants in the order in which they are assigned.

That (a) Finding No. Ill, affirmed by the court, wherein the board found “that being bitten by, and infected by, ticks infected with said virus in all of the above-described territory, is a risk incident to all who live or travel in said territory in the spring time,” is inconsistent with *86 Finding No. VIII, wherein the board found, among other things, “that the greater probability is that the infected tick, from the bite of which the Rocky Mountain Spotted fever, of which he (deceased) died, developed, came in contact with his person or clothing and bit him during the time he was actually engaged in the performance of his work for his employer,” and that the deceased “received a personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment with defendant Boise Grocery Company” in that Finding No. Ill holds and determines that the risk of being bitten by infected ticks in the territory in which deceased traveled was a risk common to the public at large; that (b) there is no finding or evidence showing that the deceased by reason of his employment was subjected to any greater or different hazard than that obtaining to the general public, for which reason no liability attached to the decedent’s employer or its surety.

The evidence is uncontradicted and the- board found that the deceased was a salesman; that he was employed by appellant Boise Grocery Company; that he regularly traveled by automobile over certain public highways traversing the territory allotted to him and that wood-ticks were found in the spring of the year in some sections of the territory covered by the deceased. The duties of the deceased required him to make frequent regular trips over the highways, stop at the hotels and visit his customers both to sell and collect; thus, the highways he traveled, the hotels he stopped at and the stores he visited became and were his workshop; they were the places whore he constantly spent his time and worked for his employer. That cannot be said of any member of the .public, not performing similar duties nor similarly employed. Consequently, the deceased was exposed to the danger of being bitten by an infected wood-tick in a greater degree than those who lived in the wood-tick territory and traveled over the highways traversing it. We think that the rule applied to the servant who, in the course of the master’s business, passes along a public street, and sustains an accident by reason of the risks incidental to the *87 streets, should also be applied to a salesman traveling by automobile over the public highways, who sustains an accident by reason of the risks incidental to the highways. This court held in Zeier v. Boise Transfer Co., 43 Ida. 549, 254 Pac. 209, that “where employment requires employee to be on street, he is subjected to different risk than ordinary traveler”; in other words, it is held that such an employee is subject, not only to different, but also to greater risks than an ordinary traveler. "We do not find any inconsistency in the findings covering the matters set forth in the assignment, and believe they are amply sufficient.

While assignments numbered two, three and four are differently phrased, in substance it is complained: That (a) that part of Finding No. IX reading “that as a result of the personal injury received by accident as above stated” (referring to Finding No. VIII) is not sustained by the evidence, and is contrary to law, in that the evidence fails to show when or where the deceased was bitten by ticks and that it is not shown the deceased received a personal injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment; that (b) Finding No. VIII is inconsistent with and contrary to that portion of Finding No. VI reading “that the Rocky Mountain Spotted fever, of which the said Charles A.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 910, 53 Idaho 82, 1933 Ida. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roe-v-boise-grocery-company-idaho-1933.