S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. Robert L. Martin, S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. L. A. Martin, L. A. Martin v. S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green

244 F.2d 556
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 1957
Docket15108_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 F.2d 556 (S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. Robert L. Martin, S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. L. A. Martin, L. A. Martin v. S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. Robert L. Martin, S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green v. L. A. Martin, L. A. Martin v. S. Birch & Sons, a Corporation, C. F. Lytle, a Corporation, and Green Construction Company, a Corporation, Partners Doing Business as Birch Lytle & Green, 244 F.2d 556 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

244 F.2d 556

17 Alaska 230

S. BIRCH & SONS, a corporation, C. F. Lytle, a corporation,
and Green Construction Company, a corporation
partners doing business as Birch Lytle &
Green, Appellants,
v.
Robert L. MARTIN, Appellee.
S. BIRCH & SONS, a corporation, C. F. Lytle, a corporation,
and Green Construction Company, a corporation,
partners doing business as Birch Lytle &
Green, Appellants,
v.
L. A. MARTIN, Appellee.
L. A. MARTIN, Appellant,
v.
S. BIRCH & SONS, a corporation, C. F. Lytle, a corporation,
and Green Construction Company, a corporation,
partners doing business as Birch Lytle &
Green, Appellees.

Nos. 15107, 15108.

United States Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit.

May 15, 1957.
Rehearing Denied June 17, 1957.

Davis, Renfrew & Hughes, Anchorage, Alaska, for appellants.

Bell, Sanders & Tallman, Anchorage, Alaska, for appellee.

Before BONE, FEE and BARNES, Circuit Judges .

BARNES, Circuit Judge.

On August 14, 1952, along a narrow strip of highway approximately six miles south of Anchorage, Alaska, L. A. Martin (hereinafter, Martin Sr.) and his son, Robert Martin Jr., were beaten and bloodied by a group of road construction workers, buoyed by alcoholic beverages and the happy knowledge of a job completed.

Subsequently, the father and son filed these actions against S. Birch & Sons, a corporation, C. F. Lytle, a corporation, and Green Construction Company, a corporation, (partners doing business as Birch Lytle & Green) and five individual defendants, Ross McDonald, Cecil 'Joe' Sipes, John P. Bell, Duane J. 'Bud' Weber, and Raymond E . Wise, all employees of the aforementioned partnership. The actions were consolidated for trial. The cases were tried by a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of Martin Sr. against the three corporate partners, and Bell and Weber, individually, for $7,000 compensatory and $2,000 punitive damages. The trial judge later directed and Martin Sr. consented to remittitur of $2,500 of the compensatory award. The jury also returned a verdict in favor of Martin Jr. against the three corporate partners, and Weber, individually, for $7,500 compensatory and $2,500 punitive damages. McDonald and Wise were exonerated in each action. Sipes was not served with summons and did not participate in the trial. The defendant partnership alone prosecutes these appeals. Martin Sr. has cross-appealed, challenging the propriety of the remittitur.

The incident took place alongside and on a twenty-foot wide stretch of highway. The defendant partnership had just completed work on approximately one thousand feet of new paving on the west half of said highway. The narrow width of the highway necessitated vehicular traffic control by flagmen employed by the partnership. These men were stationed at barricades at each end of the construction zone. They permitted north and southbound traffic to travel alternately along the eastern ten feet width of the highway.

Sometime after 6:00 p.m. and before 7:00 p.m., the plaintiffs, driving their automobile sough through the gathering twilight at the head of a procession of southbound traffic, were flagged onto the eastern one-half of the highway. After traveling approximately one-half the distance through the traffic control, the plaintiffs' vehicle found its forward progress blocked by a northbound car, driven by Sipes, in which Weber was a passenger. The impasse occurred immediately opposite the gravel pit and asphalt plant, which, together with the partnership office and a scale house, were located off the highway to the west. There was no traffic behind the northbound car; there was an undetermined amount of traffic behind the southbound car.

Each driver insisted that the other give him the right of way. An altercation ensued. At this point, the testimony differs. According to the conflicting evidence, Martin Jr., the driver of the southbound car, was grabbed by Weber who stood, 'half-soused,' with beer can in hand outside the Martins' car window and when Martin Jr. tried to disengage himself, Weber pulled him out of the car, or, he (Martin Jr.) jumped out of his car without provocation to do battle with Weber, who was empty-handed and merely feeling 'happy'. Martin Jr. was knocked down by one and attacked by four or five men (including Sipes) and kicked in the mount, or, he knocked down Weber three times, and as one witness positively stated-- was never struck himself. The stories of Martin Sr.'s activities are just as disparate. He was struck in the face and knocked unconscious by Bell, either while reaching for a lug wrench in the car trunk which he sought in order to aid his son, or, after he had obtained the wrench and was rushing into the melee to even it up.

When Martin Jr. saw his father lying on the ground he hurried to his side to protect him from further blows. None were forthcoming. Martin Jr. then lifted his father back into the car and prepared to depart. However, the milling group of men surrounding the car, estimated at then to fifteen in number, refused to permit them to leave the area. One of the men-- supposedly McDonald-- told the Martins that 'We have taken off you S.B.'s for the last four or five years; now, you're going to listen to us; you're not going anywhere.' Martin Jr. obeyed instructions and remained at the scene. His auto, a former taxicab, had a two-way radio in it, and he called the police. After a few minutes wait the Highway Patrol arrived on the scene and plaintiffs were allowed to leave. The entire incident did not consume more than forty minutes.

There is no doubt that the plaintiffs were beaten by someone during the fray. Martin Sr. sustained bloody and cut lips, loss of his set of artificial dentures, a large knot-like lump-- 'As big as an egg'-- on the back of his head, a concussion, and sundry other more minor injuries. Martin Jr. suffered a concussion, a badly cut eye, a bruised knee, had two teeth knocked out and several others loosened.

At the trial the defenses of mutual combat and self-defense were presented counsel for the defendants, but the jury obviously rejected both of them. It apparently accepted plaintiffs' version of the fracas as related above. We cannot not disturb its resolution of conflicts in the evidence as to who among the individuals sued bore the responsibility for the assault. Parker v. Title & Trust Co., 9 Cir., 233 F.2d 505; Capital Transit Co. v. Bingham, 94 U.S.App.D.C. 75, 212 F.2d 241.

The evidence raises certain questions of law. Two distinct theories upon which liability of the defendant partnership could be predicated were submitted to the jury. Plaintiffs sought to impose both vicarious and direct liability on the partnership. Vicarious liability rested squarely on the doctrine of respondeat superior. Direct liability was founded on alleged negligence in failing to use reasonable care to protect highway users during their passage through the controlled area from the unlawful acts of employees.

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244 F.2d 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-birch-sons-a-corporation-c-f-lytle-a-corporation-and-green-ca9-1957.