Moen v. Peter Kiewit Sons Co. ( 1982 )


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  •                                        No. 81-106
    IN TEE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1982
    VIOLETTE MOEN, Individually and as
    Personal Representative,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    PETER KIEWIT    &    SONS' CO., a Corp.,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    No. 82-29
    VIOLETTE MOEN,
    Claimant and Ap2ellant,
    DECKER COAL COMPANY, Employer,
    and
    ELQLOYERS MUTUAL LIABILITY INSURANCE COMPANY
    OF WISCONSIN,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    Ai~pealsfrom:       District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Yellowstone, The Honorable
    William J. Speare, Judge presiding. Also, Workers'
    Compensation Court, Hon. Timothy Reardon, presiding.
    Counsel of Record:
    For Appellant:
    Hoyt   &   Trieweiler, Great Falls, Montana
    For Respondent :
    Crowley, Haughey, Hanson, Toole & Dietrich;
    L. Randall Bishop, Billings, Montana
    Submitted:    July 9, 1982
    Decided:    December 13, 1982
    Filed:   4EC13 1982
    Mr. Justice Fred J. Weber delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    These cases have been consolidated for consideration,
    as both cases involve claims for an employee's death by
    heart attack.   We affirm the lower courts in both cases.
    In Case I, Supreme Court No. 82-29, claimant Moen appeals
    from the order of the Workers' Compensation Court, granting
    defendant's motion to quash her petition for a hearing.     Claimant
    Moen presents two issues to this Court:
    (1) Whether defendant's motion to quash was procedurally
    acceptable.
    (2) Whether newly discovered evidence supports Violette
    Moen's request for a new hearing.
    The defendant argues that this case is res judicata.
    In Case 11, Supreme Court No. 81-106, plaintiff Moen
    appeals from an adverse jury verdict in the Thirteenth
    Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County, in her negligence
    action for the wrongful death of her husband.   Moen raises
    the following issues for review:
    (1) Did the District Court err by not allowing Mike
    Moen's widow to testify regarding her telephone conversation
    with Mike Moen the night before his death?
    (2) Did the District Court err by allowing James
    McCarthy to testify regarding what Mike Moen did not say
    before Moen left for the hospital?
    (3) Was the jury properly instructed?
    Defendant cross-appeals, contending that the ~istrict
    Court erred in not granting its motion for directed verdict.
    Virgil (Mike) Moen was 53 years old and had worked as
    an oiler for Decker Coal Company for three years, when, on
    Saturday, November 1, 1975, an overtime day, he suffered a
    heart attack which led to his death in the Sheridan, Wyoming,
    hospital, early the next morning.
    Moen had stayed in Decker Friday night instead of
    returning to Great Falls, as he usually did, to spend the
    weekend with his family.   On Saturday morning, shortly after
    8:00 a.m. at the request of his supervisor, Delmar Rradway,
    Moen returned to the Decker mine to work overtime steam
    cleaning the engines and transmissions of a number of large
    Terex scrapers.   There were nine scrapers, but two were
    being repaired, and the testimony conflicts as to whether
    Moen cleaned seven or nine.    Because the morning was frosty,
    Moen was not able to start steaming until about 10:00 a.m.
    Co-workers testified that a conscientious worker, such as
    Moen was admitted to be, ordinarily would take 30 to 45 minutes
    to clean each scraper, yet Moen was finished by noon.
    According to Bradway, who was the only employee working
    with Moen in the afternoon, the two men worked from about
    1:00 to 3:30 p.m. steam cleaning the batteries and radiators
    of the same scrapers, with Moen driving the pickup upon
    which the steamer rode, and Bradway, the supervisor, doing
    the steaming itself.   Other workers declared they had never
    seen Bradway do dirty work while a worker sat in the truck
    and that it was contrary to union policy and rules.
    About 3:30 p.m., as Bradway was leaving, he noticed
    Noen standing beside the raised hood of his pickup; Bradway
    asked if anything was wrong.   He noticed that Moen was
    changing oil, and when Moen answered no, he was all right,
    Bradway departed.   Bradway also testified that Moen never
    complained of pain or exhibited any signs of illness.
    Moen's time card for November 1, 1975, is signed; the space
    wherein an employee must indicate an on-shift accident is
    marked "no" and initialed with Moen's initials.
    James McCarthy, a close friend and co-worker of Moen's
    at Decker Coal, also runs the Decker store and post office,
    some five miles below the mine.    He testified that about
    3:50 or 4:50 p.m., Moen appeared at his store and the two
    men talked about going into town (Sheridan, Wyoming, about
    30 miles away).   McCarthy stated that he excused himself to
    continue working on a pump in the cellar, but Moen sought
    him out:
    "There was a knock on the door, and I came
    up from the cellar. And he asked me if I
    would drive him to town; never again stating
    there was anything the matter with him but
    he just didn't feel that--you know he wanted
    to go to town. I says, 'I'll be with you in
    about ten minutes, as soon as I put the web
    back into the pump.' So it must have been
    about 20 minutes later that I came up. Never
    even checked on him, went into the bathroom
    and cleaned up and came out to go with him,
    and he was gone.
    "9. The last time that you saw him did he
    appear to you to be seriously ill?
    "A. No. I will say this, he was pale. In
    other words, he didn't look like the regular
    Mike full of vim and vigor."
    Moen drove himself to Memorial Hospital in Sheridan,
    arriving about 5:30 p.m.     He told the attending physician
    that at about 2:00 p.m. that day he had begun to feel severe
    pain in the left side of his chest, with pain radiating down
    his left arm.   The pain increased in intensity for about 15
    minutes, then continued at about the same intensity.    Moen's
    condition was diagnosed as acute interior myocardial infarction.
    Treatment failed to relieve Moen's pain, which continued
    severe until, after administration of morphine, he fell
    asleep at about 10:OO p.m.    At about 2:30 a.m., nurses noted
    a "dusky" coloring often associated with "pump failureN--
    inability of the heart to perform due to the extent of
    muscle tissue impairment--and, following a breakdowr, of the
    normal sinus pattern, Moen died at 3:35 a.m.
    Mike Moen's widow, Violette Moen, filed a claim for
    workers' compensation on September 27, 1976.          Decker Coal
    Company denied the claim on the grounds that there was no
    causal relationship between Mike Moen's employment and his
    fatal heart attack.         Following hearing and briefing, on
    January 29, 1979, the Workers' Compensation Court found
    Decker Coal Company liable to Mike Moen's widow for benefits.
    During that trial in the Workers' Compensation Court, Delmar
    Bradway was asked whether or not the work involved in steam
    cleaning equipment was more or less taxing than an oiler's
    ordinary work.      Bradway replied:
    "A. It is easier than the regular ordinary
    duties in this case because he didn't have
    to climb around or do anything like that.        . ."
    Somewhat later in that trial, the following dialogue occurred:
    "Q. During that day [November 1, 19751 did
    you see Mike do any running?
    "A.   No, I never noticed any.
    "Q. Any climbing?
    "A. NO, he was dcing the steaming because
    the transmissions are low and their engines
    are fairly low because he was doing the steam-
    ing from the ground, and to cover that many
    engines in this time, why you just can't do
    too good a job on anything else.
    "Q. Was there any occasion for him to climb
    stairs?
    '*A. None. "
    This Court reversed on appeal, holding that claimant
    had not met her burden of proving Mike Moen's death had been
    the result of "a tangible happening of a traumatic nature
    from an unexpected cause or unusual strain."          Moen v. Decker
    Coal Co. (1979),            F o t.
    4n        ,   
    604 P.2d 765
    , 36 St.Rep.
    2220.
    On January 23, 1978, Violette Moen brought a negligence
    action against Peter Kiewit and Sons (Kiewit), seeking
    compensatory and punitive damages for the death of her
    husband.   Kiewit is a large, Wisconsin-based corporation,
    which managed the Decker Coal Co. mine and provided certain
    supervisory personnel at the time of Mike Moen's death.
    Violette Moen charged that Kiewit, through its supervisor,
    Bradway, deliberately refused to provide first aid and
    medical care to Mike Moen when he was having a heart attack.
    She charged that, instead, the Kiewit supervisor kept Mike
    Moen working and compelled him to drive himself to the
    hospital, and that such negligence had caused Mike Moen
    suffering, and led to his death.   A jury trial resulted in a
    verdict for Kiewit on January 29, 1981.   Plaintiff Moen
    appeals.
    Certain testimony of Delmar Bradway in the negligence
    trial differed from his testimony in the original trial in
    the Workers' Compensation Court.    In the earlier trial, as
    noted above, Bradway stated that Mike Jloen's regular work as
    an oiler was more difficult than steam cleaning because
    steam cleaning required no climbing around.    The second
    action against Peter Kiewit (Bradway's employer) included
    the following testimony by Bradway:
    "Q. Now, Mr. Bradway, you stated that Mike
    didn't have to do any climbing or anything
    except standing on the ground to steam clean.
    Then, I believe you said that he had to get
    up in order to clean the front engine by
    climbing up--
    "A.   Climbing in the operator's cab."
    When questioned about earlier statements that Moen's
    job had been "strictly on the ground," Bradway answered:
    "A. I never thought about getting that side
    on the front, never gave one thought of it.
    Rut he was hired to do the job, and that was
    part of the job to do."
    Bradway's testimony in the second action also established
    that although Mike Moen did not start steam cleaning the
    scraper engines and transmissions until 10:OO or 10:30 a.m.,
    he had finished them by noon.
    On July 8, 1981, Violette Moen petitioned the Workers'
    Compensation Court for a hearing.       She alleged that new
    evidence brought out in the negligence action established
    that Mike Moen had done "at least 8 hours of hard, dirty
    work in less than 4 hours," and "had to exert and strain
    himself in an unusual manner in order to accomplish the work
    he did in the morning of November 1, 1975."      Mrs. Moen
    maintained that this exertion was the "unusual strain" which
    precipitated the "tangible happening of a traumatic nature,"
    i.e., the heart attack which caused Mike Moen's death.
    Decker Coal Company moved to quash Violette Moen's
    petition.     The Workers' Compensation Court granted the
    motion on January 11, 1982, and dismissed the petition with
    prejudice, finding "no purpose in granting another hearing
    when it is likely that the result will remain the same."
    Violette Moen appeals.
    Case I   -   Supreme Court No. 82-29.
    Claimant Moen first argues that the Workers' Compensation
    Court erred in considering defendant's motion to quash
    because no procedural rule governing the Workers' compensation
    Division permits a defendant to file such a motion.      Defendant's
    argument is that this Court should take a broad view of
    these uncharted administrative waters, and permit such a
    motion unless it is specifically prohibited.
    Proceedings in the Workers' Compensation Court are
    governed not by the Rules of Civil Procedure, but by the
    Montana Administrative Procedure Act (MAPA).      Dumont v.
    Wickens Bros. Const. Co. (1979),          Iont    .        , 
    598 P.2d 1099
    , 36 St.Rep. 1471; section 39-71-2903, FCA.             Sections 2-
    4-201 and-202, MCA, provide for agencies to adopt rules of
    practice and procedure.       Pursuant to those statutes, the
    Department of Administration has set out procedural rules
    for the Workers' Compensation Court.        S 2.52.201, et seq.,
    Administrative Rules of Montana (A.R.M.).
    Claimant Violette Moen would have this Court view her
    petition and defendant's motion to quash in the light of the
    Workers' Compensation Court rule on answers,          §   2.52.202,
    A.R.M.   (formerly Rule 2).    This rule does not provide for
    any motions other than a motion for a more detailed petition.
    We do not believe the Workers' Compensation Court was so
    limited.   §   2.52.224, A.R.M., governing rules compliance
    (formerly Rule 21) states:
    "If a party neglects or refuses to comply
    with the provisions of this sub-chapter, the
    Court may dismiss a matter with or without
    prejudice, grant an appropriate order for a
    party, or take other appropriate action. How-
    ever, the Court may, in its discretion and
    in the interests of justice, waive irregulari-
    ties and noncompliance with any of the provi-
    sions in the sub-chapter."
    Clearly, the Workers' Compensation Court is granted
    broad discretion in determining whether to entertain faulty
    motions and petitions.
    Here, claimant filed a petition for rehearing (nominally
    a petition for hearing) well beyond the 20 days allowed in
    5 2.52.222, A.R.M.    (formerly Rule 19).        Yet the court chose
    to consider the merits of the petition, because claimant
    alleged that new material evidence had been discovered.
    Defendant moved to quash the petition.       Again the court
    chose to exercise its discretion under       §   2.52.224, A.R.M.,
    and consider the motion despite the fact that the rules do
    not explicitly provide for such a motion.
    W f i n d no a b u s e o f d i s c r e t i o n i n t h e c o u r t ' s d e c i s i o n
    e
    t o c o n s i d e r t h e motion t o quash.               The c o u r t concluded t h a t
    i t would be u n j u s t t o f o r c e Decker Coal t o d e f e n d a g a i n
    t h r o u g h a new t r i a l , and a motion t o q u a s h p r o v i d e d t h e most
    e f f e c t i v e means o f d i s m i s s i n g t h e p e t i t i o n .     The Workers'
    Compensation C o u r t , w h i l e n o t governed by t h e Rules of
    C i v i l P r o c e d u r e , may be guided by them, and t o t h e e x t e n t
    t h a t reference t o those r u l e s lies within t h e d i s c r e t i o n t h e
    c o u r t may e x e r c i s e under       §   2.52.224,       A.R.M.,        such r e f e r e n c e
    i s acceptable.
    V i o l e t t e Moen a l s o a r g u e s t h a t t h e Workers' Compensation
    C o u r t e r r e d i n g r a n t i n g Decker C o a l ' s motion t o quash on t h e
    merits.        She m a i n t a i n s t h a t t h e v a r i a t i o n s i n Bradway's
    t e s t i m o n y a r e s u f f i c i e n t t o j u s t i f y a new t r i a l under K a r t e s
    v. K a r t e s ( 1 9 7 7 ) , 
    175 Mont. 210
    , 
    573 P.2d 191
    ; and S t a t e v .
    Lewis      ( 1 9 7 8 ) , 
    177 Mont. 474
    , 
    582 P.2d 346
    .
    S e c t i o n 25-11-102,         MCA, p r o v i d e s t h a t a former v e r d i c t
    o r d e c i s i o n may be v a c a t e d and a new t r i a l g r a n t e d upon
    a p p l i c a t i o n i f t h e s u b s t a n t i a l r i g h t s o f t h e a p p l i c a n t were
    m a t e r i a l l y a f f e c t e d by
    " ( 4 ) newly d i s c o v e r e d e v i d e n c e m a t e r i a l f o r
    t h e p a r t y making t h e a p p l i c a t i o n which h e
    c o u l d n o t , w i t h r e a s o n a b l e d i l i g e n c e , have
    d i s c o v e r e d and produced a t t r i a l ,          . . ."
    See a l s o X a r t e s v. K a r t e s , s u p r a .       This decades-old standard
    h a s been f l e s h e d o u t by c a s e law e s t a b l i s h i n g t h a t t h e
    d e c i s i o n t o g r a n t o r deny a new t r i a l i s w i t h i n t h e sound
    d i s c r e t i o n of t h e t r i a l c o u r t , F r e d e r i c k s e n v. F r e d e r i c k s e n
    (1980) ,             Mont.                
    605 P.2d 1135
    , 1137, 37 St.Rep.
    1 9 1 , 193, and w i l l n o t be o v e r t u r n e d a b s e n t a showing o f a
    m a n i f e s t abuse o f t h a t d i s c r e t i o n .        G i l e s v. F l i n t Val.
    Forest Products (1979),      Mont.      , 
    588 P.2d 535
    , 538,
    36 St.Rep. 23, 26.   To warrant the granting of a new trial
    on the ground of newly disc~veredevidence, it must appear
    to the court that there is a reasonable probability that,
    upon a retrial, the evidence proposed will change the result.
    Gould v. Lynn (1930), 
    88 Mont. 501
    , 505, 
    293 P. 968
    , 970.
    Here, the Workers' Compensation Court clearly indicated
    its belief that there was no reasonable probability that the
    new evidence would change the result upon retrial.   Its
    rationale was set forth at length in the January 11, 1982,
    order granting Decker Coal's motion to quash.   The court
    recognized that some disparity existed between Delmar Bradway's
    testimony at the Workers' Compensation Court trial and that
    in District Court, but the "new evidence [was] really cumulative
    and not so substantial as to overturn the decision" rendered
    by this Court in Moen v. Decker Coal 
    Company, supra
    .       The
    order stated:
    "All of the facts concerning the events of
    that morning are in the workers' compensa-
    tion trial transcript with the exception
    of the fact that Mr. Moen had to climb up on
    the machines in order to steam parts of the
    engine. Any other facts relating to Mr.
    Moen's exertions on that morning could have
    been readily adduced under cross-examination,
    as they were in the district court proceeding.
    In addition, claimant would have to present
    medical testimony linking the exertions of
    Mr. Moen in the morning to his heart attack
    in the afternoon. Dr. Fletcher, claimant's
    medical expert, has already testified that
    arteriosclerosis was probably the cause of
    the myocardial infarction. In light of these
    facts, the Court sees no purpose in granting
    another hearing when it is likely that the
    result will remain the same."
    We note that while a judge cannot as confidently predict the
    probable result of a retrial by jury, the judge here would
    be hearing the cause upon retrial, and is in a far better
    position to assess claimant Moen's chances to prevail upon
    retrial.
    We find that the Workers' Compensation Court did not
    abuse its discretion in granting Decker Coal's motion to
    quash.      There is ample evidence on the record to support the
    court's conclusion that there was still not sufficient
    evidence linking Mike Moen's exertion on the job to his
    heart attack and death.
    Claimant would have this Court add the new information
    to the facts presented at the initial trial, and conclude
    that Moen v. Decker Coal 
    Company, supra
    , would have been
    decided differently by this Court.      But the test set forth
    in Gould v. 
    Lynn, supra
    , is not whether the original trial
    would or might have been decided differently, but whether
    - new evidence will probably change the result if a new
    the -
    --trial   - granted.
    is           The lower court concluded the result
    would probably be the same.       Substantial evidence supports
    that conclusion, and we will not set it aside.
    Decker Coal Company maintains that the matter should be
    res judicata, as the Workers' Compensation Court concluded in
    its order granting Decker Coal Company's motion to quash.
    This Court has recently emphasized that the Workers'
    Compensation Court is entitled to finality as to its judgments
    in the same manner as district courts.      McMahon v. Anaconda
    Company (1981),          Mont .      - P.2d         , 38 St.Rep.
    1233.      Under section 25-11-102, MCA, that finality does not
    extend to motions for new trial on the grounds therein
    enumerated, whether the motions are made in the district
    courts or the Workers' Compensation Court.
    The Workers' Compensation Court'acted within its
    statutory and administrative authority in deciding to
    consider Decker Coal's motion to quash on its merits, and
    did not abuse its discretion in granting the motion.
    Aff irmed.
    Case I1   -   Supreme Court No, 81-106.
    Plaintiff Violette M0en argues that the District Court
    committed reversible error when it excluded, as inadmissible
    hearsay, her testimony that Mike Moen called her the night
    before his heart attack, and told her he had to stay in
    Decker Saturday to steam clean.     This evidence conflicts
    with Bradway's testimony that he did not ask Mike Moen to
    steam clean until Saturday morning, after he noticed Moen's
    truck still parked by Moen's trailer.     Plaintiff's sole
    purpose in introducing this evidence is to impeach the
    credibility of Delmar Bradway as to other matters.     There
    is no causal connection between the time Bradway asked Mike
    Moen to work overtime and Mike Moen's heart attack and
    death, nor does plaintiff allege that there is.
    We do not find the District Court erred in excluding
    Violette Moen's testimony.     One cannot impeach a witness on
    a collateral matter.     State v. Harvey (1979),     Mont.
    -
    -
    , 
    603 P.2d 661
    , 666, 36 St.Rep. 2035, 2040; Tigh v.
    College Park Realty Co. (1967), 
    149 Mont. 358
    , 364, 
    427 P.2d 57
    , 61; McCormick, Handbook - - - -of Evidence, S 47 at
    of the Law
    98-99 (2d ed. 1972).      Here, the question of when Bradway
    asked Mike Moen to work overtime is neither relevant nor
    material to the issue in controversy, - whether Kiewit,
    viz.,
    through Bradway, negligently failed to provide help to a
    worker stricken by a heart attack.
    Furthermore, as Kiewit points out, the impeachment
    value of Violette Noen's testimony depends upon the jury
    believing the truth, not of Violette Moen's claim that her
    husband had called and said he had to work Saturday, but of
    Mike Moen's statement that he had been told on Friday that
    he had to work Saturday.     The testimony clearly - hearsay
    is
    under Rule 801(c), M.R.Evid.      The testimony is not saved by
    being a statement of Mike Moen's state of mind, his intent,
    and hence an exception to the hearsay rule under Rule 803 (3),
    M.R.Evid.     Mike Moen's state of mind was irrelevant to the
    matter in controversy, the alleged negligence of Kiewit.
    When intention or state of mind is nct at issue, the hearsay
    exception does not apply.     See Ross v. Industrial Accident
    Board (1938), 
    106 Mont. 486
    , 495-496, 
    80 P.2d 362
    , 364-365.
    The District Court properly refused to allow plaintiff's
    hearsay evidence in support of plaintiff's attempted impeach-
    ment of Bradway on a collateral matter.
    Plaintiff Moen also charges that the District Court
    erroneously permitted James McCarthy to testify as to what
    Mike Moen did not do and did not say during the time he
    later claimed to be suffering the heart attack.     Mike Moen
    stopped at the Decker store after leaving work Saturday
    afternoon at a b o ~ t4:00 P.M.   He spoke with his close friend,
    James McCarthy, first suggesting he and McCarthy go to town
    together, then, about an hour iater, asking McCarthy to
    drive him to town.    McCarthy testified that Mike Moen had
    never stated anything was the matter with him, although he
    was pale and "didn't look like the regular Mike full of vir.
    and vigor."
    Plaintiff Moen argues that McCarthy's testimony was
    introduced "for the purpose of proving that if Moen made no
    complaint to McCarthy, then there was nothing wrong with him
    at the time."    She argues that Mike Moen's silence was
    treated as an admission without certain foundational require-
    ments having been met.     Plaintiff Moen relies upcn In Re
    Neilson's Estate (1962), 
    57 Cal. 2d 733
    , 
    371 P.2d 745
    , 
    22 Cal. Rptr. 1
    , in which the court held that, before a person's
    failure to respond to a statement could be offered as an
    implied admission, the offeror must establish that:     (a)
    the statement must be one which would normally have elicited
    a reply; (b) the person who would normally reply must be
    shown to have understood the statements; (c) it must be
    rational to infer that the person's silence indicated his
    acceptance of the statement as an admission.
    We do not find that McCarthy's testimony implies an
    admission by Mike Moen that he was not ill.    Nor do we find
    the situation in the case at bar mandates the exclusi~nof
    McCarthy's testimony.   There was no statement by McCarthy
    for Mike Moen to admit or deny; nor was the evidence of
    Noen's silence intended as proof that he was not ill.
    Cardiac experts testified that a man suffering a heart
    attack would not necessarily be incapable of moving about,
    talking or driving a vehicle.   McCarthy's testimony was
    significant only insofar as it tended to prove, not that Mike
    Moen was - suffering a heart attack, but that he was
    not
    keeping it to himself, and that, by implication, he may have
    done so at the Decker mine as well.   This evidence is consistent
    with Bradway's testimony that Moen neither complained of
    pain nor appeared ill, and tends to absolve Kiewit of a duty
    to render direct aid to Mike Moen.
    This Court has consistently held that the question of
    admissibility of evidence in every case must be left largely
    to the sound discretion of the trial court, subject to
    review only in case of manifest abuse.   Cech v. State (1979),
    Mont.     , 
    604 P.2d 97
    , 102, 36 St.Rep. 2185, 2192;
    Gunderson v. Brewster (1970), 
    154 Mont. 405
    , 
    466 P.2d 589
    .
    We find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    allowing James McCarthy's testimony into evidence.
    Finally, plaintiff Moen maintains that the trial court
    erred in refusing several of her offered instructions.
    The court rejected Moen's instruction that violation of
    ~ertainfederal laws regarding arrangements fcr medical
    assistance constituted negligence per-
    - se, but that there was
    no liability unless the violation was a legal cause of
    plaintiff's injury.    A separate instruction stating the laws
    was given.   The court also rejected plaintiff's instruction
    that federal law requires that a worker not be left alone in
    a hazardous area.     Plaintiff relies upon language in an old
    case, Daniels v. Granite Bi-Metallic Consolidated Mining Co.
    (1919), 
    56 Mont. 284
    , 
    184 P. 836
    , for the rule that violation
    of mining rules and regulations renders defendant liable for
    "damages proxinately caused by the unauthorized act    . . ."
    Daniels is not applicable here, where there is not
    sufficient evidence to suggest any rational connection
    between alleged violations of mining regulations by Kiewit
    and Mike Moen's death.    Bradway's uncontradicted testimony
    establishes that he was with Moen from 1:00 to 3:30 P.M.,
    Saturday afternoon; Moen told the physicians in Sheridan his
    chest pain began at 2:00 p.m.    The fact that Moen worked by
    himself in an arguably hazardous area within a couple of
    hundred yards of others during the morning hours may establish
    a violation of a regulation.    It does not suggest any connection
    with Moen's fatal heart attack later in the day.    Si~tilarly,
    although Bradway may have contravened union rules by steam
    cleaning the scraper batteries and radiators hinself in the
    afternoon, while Moen drove the truck, there is nc automatic
    causal relation between the viclation and Moen's heart
    attack.   Plaintiff would have this Court find that the
    evidence that Bradway steam cleaned while Ploen drove the
    truck in the afternoon is sufficient to warrant the instruction.
    The implication plaintiff seeks to pull from the testimony
    is that Bradway knew Moen was ill, but refused to treat him
    or let him seek treatment until the scrapers were finished,
    and that such neglect contributed to Moen's death by delaying
    his treatment.    We do not find that the evidence supports
    the implication.
    In the first place, Bradway's co-workers testified
    Bradway was, if anything, overcautious, a "sweater," not a
    person to deal casually with an emergency.    Bradway himself
    was trained in first aid and qualified to drive the ambulance.
    Bradway's testimony established that weekly safety meetings
    (sone of which Moen attended) stressed the need for employees
    to report illness or injury to supervisors, and indicated
    the constant availability of ambulance and driver, s h ~ u l d
    they be needed.    It was obviously cormon knowledge at the
    Decker mine that the ambulance could be rcanned at any time
    for emergency transportation to the hospital and that
    November 1, 1975, was no exception.    Yet, the record shows
    that for over an hour from the time he himself claimed his
    pain beqan, Moen continued to work with Bradway without
    reporting his ccndition.   He signed himself out after work,
    indicating no injury on shift, and drove to the Decker stcre
    to seek McCarthyls company going to Sheridan, rather than
    requesting an ambulance from Kiewit at the Decker mine.     The
    only evidence that Moen may have believed aid was unavail-
    able was plaintiff's testimony that Mike Moen told her over
    the telephone from the Sheridan hospital that there had been
    no one around to help him.
    W e f i n d t h a t t h e D i s t r i c t C o u r t committed no e r r o r i n
    r e f u s i n g t h e above i n s t r u c t i o n s ; t h e r e was i n s u f f i c i e n t
    evidence t o r e q u i r e t h e i r inclusion.                    Furthermore, t h e
    d i f f e r e n c e between t h e " l e g a l c a u s e " r e f e r r e d t o i n t h e
    o f f e r e d i n s t r u c t i o n , and t h e " p r o x i m a t e c a u s e " r e f e r r e d t o
    i n D a n i e l s , s u p r a , c o u l d have c o n f u s e d and m i s l e d t h e j u r y .
    P l a i n t i f f Moen a l s o u r g e s t h i s C o u r t t o f i n d r e v e r s i b l e
    e r r o r i n t h e D i s t r i c t Court's r e j e c t i o n of h e r i n s t r u c t i o n s
    on "chance o f s u r v i v a l " and " l e g a l c a u s e . "
    I n b o t h c a s e s r e l i e d upon by p l a i n t i f f t o s u p p o r t h e r
    "chance of s u r v i v a l " i n s t r u c t i o n argument, t h e r e w a s e v i d e n c e
    t h a t t h e d e f e n d a n t had f a i l e d t o r e c o g n i z e o r t o t a l l y d i s -
    r e g a r d e d a known d u t y and by h i s " n e g l i g e n t a c t i o n o r i n a c t i o n "
    d e s t r o y e d whatever chance t h e d e c e d e n t might have had t o
    survive.         See Hicks v. U n i t e d S t a t e s ( 4 t h C i r . 1 9 6 6 ) , 
    368 F.2d 626
    ( s u r g e o n ' s n e g l i g e n t f a i l u r e t o i d e n k i f y and remove
    a bowel o b s t r u c t i o n ) ; Gardner v. N a t i o n a l Bulk C a r r i e r s ,
    Inc.     ( 4 t h C i r . 1 9 6 2 ) , 
    310 F.2d 284
    , c e r t . d e n .          
    372 U.S. 913
    ,
    
    83 S. Ct. 728
    , 
    9 L. Ed. 2d 721
    ( r e f u s a l o f s h i p ' s m a s t e r t o
    a l t e r course t o search f o r missing seaman).
    The D i s t r i c t C o u r t a l s o r e j e c t e d p l a i n t i f f ' s o f f e r e d
    i n s t r u c t i o n no. 19:
    "A l e g a l c a u s e of an i n j u r y i s a c a u s e which i s
    a s u b s t a n t i a l f a c t o r i n bringing about t h e in-
    jury. "
    T h i s i n s t r u c t i o n h a s been a d o p t e d i n C a l i f o r n i a .      See C a l i f o r n i a
    J u r y I n s t r u c t i o n s C i v i l , B A J I No. 3.76        ( 6 t h ed. 1 3 7 7 ) ; W.
    P r o s s e r , Sandbook - -e- -o f T o r t s
    o f t h Law                           §    4 1 ( 4 t h ed.    1971).
    P l a i n t i f f u r g e s i t s a d o p t i o n by t h i s C o u r t .
    W e do n o t f i n d t h a t e i t h e r "chance o f s u r v i v a l " i n s t r u c t i o n s
    o r " l e g a l c a u s e " i n s t r u c t i o n s a r e improper i n Montana.                 But
    we do f i n d t h a t n e i t h e r i n s t r u c t i o n was a p p r o p r i a t e under t h e
    facts of this case, and the District Court did not err in
    rejecting them.   Both instructions depend upon plaintiff's
    allegation that Kiewit neglected a duty to Mike Moen, either
    to recognize his condition and provide direct aid or to have
    personnel available to render aid if Moen himself sought it.
    There is simply not sufficient evidence, or, in fact, any
    substantial evidence to support these allegations.     The
    record strongly supports defendant's pssition that Moen was
    not left alone in the afternoon, that he did not make his
    condition known to and seek help from Bradway, who was
    trained in first aid and would have helped him, or from
    anyone else at the Decker mine.     Plaintiff's theory of the
    case is not supported by evidence sufficient to give force
    to her argument that the disputed instructions should have
    been adopted.
    There was no error in the District Court's rejection of
    the "chance of survival" instruction and the "legal cause"
    instruction offered by plaintiff.
    Kiewit cross-appeals from the District Court's denial of
    its motions for directed verdict.
    When a defendant moves for a directed verdict the trial
    court must consider only the evidence introduced by the
    plaintiff, in the light most favorable to plaintiff, and may
    not withdraw the case from the jury unless a recovery cannot
    be had upon any view that can be drawn reasonably from the
    facts the evidence tends to establish.     Pickett v. Kyger
    (1968), 
    151 Mont. 87
    , 99, 
    439 P.2d 57
    , 63.    Plaintiff's
    case depedds primarily upon the evidence that Rradway, not
    Moen, did the steam cleaning in the afternoon and that Moen
    told his wife there was no one at work to help him when he
    suffered his heart attack.   While that evidence is weak,
    a jury could conceivably have fou~ldthe evidence established
    K i e w i t ' s negligence.         Therefore, t h e D i s t r i c t Court properly
    r e j e c t e d K i e w i t ' s motions f o r d i r e c t e d v e r d i c t .
    Affirmed.
    W e Concur:
    Chief J u s t i c e