What follows is an opinion from a United States Court of Appeals.
Intervenors who participated as parties at the courts of appeals should be counted as either appellants or respondents when it can be determined whose position they supported. For example, if there were two plaintiffs who lost in district court, appealed, and were joined by four intervenors who also asked the court of appeals to reverse the district court, the number of appellants should be coded as six.
When coding the detailed nature of participants, use your personal knowledge about the participants, if you are completely confident of the accuracy of your knowledge, even if the specific information is not in the opinion. For example, if "IBM" is listed as the appellant it could be classified as "clearly national or international in scope" even if the opinion did not indicate the scope of the business. 
Your task is to determine the nature of the second listed appellant. If there are more than two appellants and at least one of the additional appellants has a different general category from the first appellant, then consider the first appellant with a different general category to be the second appellant.

Opinion:
WHICHER v. PHINNEY et al.
No. 3699.
Circuit Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Jan. 13, 1942.
Laurence I. Duncan, of Concord, N. H. (John H. Sanders, Robert W. Upton, and George P. Cofran, all of Concord, N. H., on the brief), for appellant.
Alexander Murchie, of Concord, N. H: (Murchie & Murchie, of Concord, N. H., on the brief), for appellee Phinney.
Winthrop Wadleigh, of Manchester, N. H. (Wyman, Starr, Booth, Wadleigh & Langdell, of Manchester, N. H., on the brief), for appellee Postage Meter Co.-
Before MAGRUDER, MAHONEY, and WOODBURY, JJ.
WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from judgments entered for the defendants upon verdicts returned for them by a jury, (the verdict for the defendant Postage Meter Company was by direction and order of the court), in an action brought under Public Laws of New Hampshire, 1926, c. 302, §§ 11-14 for negligently causing the death of the plaintiff’s intestate.
Jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship and an amount in controversy, exclusive of interest and costs, in excess of $3,000.
The decedent died as a result of injuries received when he was run over by an automobile operated by the defendant Phinney who at the time was acting within the scope of his employment by the defendant Postage Meter Company. The accident happened in the following way. About dusk, that is between sunset and complete darkness, on the evening of October 11, 1938, the decedent and one Braley were riding on a two-horse lumber wagon in a generally north easterly direction along U. S. Route 3, called the Daniel Webster Highway, toward Concord, New Hampshire. The platform body of their vehicle had been removed, and the decedent sat facing forward on boards nailed across the reaches just in front of the rear axle. Braley, who drove, sat on boards similarly nailed across the forward ends of the reaches.
At a point on the highway about two miles from the business district of Concord an automobile operated by one Humphrey approached them from the rear. Apparently Humphrey did not see the horse-drawn vehicle until too late to avoid striking it, because, although just before impact he swung sharply to his left, the right side of his car collided with the left rear wheel of the wagon. Humphrey then drove on by without further contact with either the vehicle, its occupants, or the team. The force of the collision, however, threw the decedent forward and to his left behind the Humphrey car, and while he lay in the road beside the vehicle upon which he had been riding he was run over by the Phinney car which was following in Humphrey’s wake.
At the trial in the District Court the defendant Phinney, who for convenience will be referred to hereafter simply as the defendant, seasonably moved for a directed verdict on the ground, among others, that “There is no evidence from which it can be found that (he) negligently or carelessly ran into or over the decedent Which-er”. This motion was denied and he excepted. Before us, “Invoking the familiar rule that the successful party below is entitled, on appeal by the other party, to urge in support of the judgment or decree as rendered any legal grounds appearing in the record” (Cochran v. M & M Transportation Co., 1 Cir., 110 F.2d 519, 520), he argues that from the evidence “no conclusion can be drawn other than when (he) became aware of the danger he had no time for anything but instinctive action”, and therefore that the judgment in his favor should stand under the rule that “Instinctive action, when there is no time at all to think and choose, cannot be said to be careless, unless the actor is shown to be unfit to act in an emergency calling for such action”. Collette v. Boston & M. Railroad, 83 N.H. 210, 217, 140 A. 176, 181.
Turning to the record we find that this contention, as stated, is sustained. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the defendant was in any way unfit to act in an emergency, and it appears that the first notice which he received, or could have received, that there was trouble ahead was when the Humphrey car swung sharply to its left disclosing the horse-drawn vehicle ahead. That car was then within ten feet of the rear of the wagon, and the defendant’s car, travelling between thirty and thirty-five miles per hour, was between fifty and sixty feet behind Humphrey. Simple calculations based upon these data indicate that the defendant had at the most not over two seconds in which to act after he became aware of the danger. The New Hampshire cases establish that in such a short interval of time there is opportunity only for instinctive action, and that such action, without proof of unfitness to act in an emergency, does not provide a basis for a finding of negligence. See Miller v. Daniels, 86 N.H. 193, 196, 166 A. 30; Ramsdell v. John B. Varick Company, 86 N.H. 457, 462, 170 A. 12; Praded v. Magown, 88 N.H. 405, 408, 190 A. 287; Kardasinski v. Koford, 88 N.H. 444, 446, 190 A. 702, 111 A.L.R. 1017; Morin v. Morin, 89 N.H. 206, 208, 209, 195 A. 665.
But this is not the end of the case as the defendant seems to assume. Since “this quality of instinctive action inheres in the emergency doctrine” (Kardasinski v. Koford, supra [88 N.H. 444, 190 A. 703, 111 A.L.R. 1017]), and since the emergency doctrine cannot be invoked by one who himself negligently caused the emergency to exist (Cutler v. Young, 90 N.H. 203, 206, 6 A.2d 162), we must examine the record to see whether or not the defendant could be found to have been negligent in placing himself in such a position that when he first became aware of danger he had time only to act instinctively.
It appears that the defendant came up behind Humphrey a little less than a mile from the scene of the accident. From that point on he made no attempt to pass but instead reduced his speed to Humphrey’s and followed fifty or sixty feet behind him. Both cars proceeded at a speed of thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. The highway over which the defendant drove in the way just described is straight and approximately level except that about five hundred feet east of the place where the accident occurred it begins to slope gradually down grade. A civil engineer testified that the paved portion of the highway near the scene of the accident was between thirty-three and thirty-four feet wide. He described it as “a hard surface black top road with what I would call a fairly high crown. The edges of it are somewhat irregular but in general they are straight and on either side of the road is a shallow gutter.”
The section of the highway under discussion runs through sparsely wooded country. Some houses and other buildings border it at irregular intervals, but none of them is set close together. There are no intersecting highways, the only intersection in the vicinity being at approximately the point where the accident occurred.
Clearly reasonable men might find from the facts outlined above that the defendant might have used greater care than he did, but that is not the question. In cases of this sort the question is whether or not such men could find that the defendant, in acting as he did, used as much care as the ordinary man of average prudence would have used under the circumstances. Racette v. Sunlight Baking Company, 85 N.H. 171, 155 A. 254.
The defendant had the right to suppose that traffic would move as it had a right to, that is, in a reasonable way (Rouleau v. Blotner, 84 N.H. 539, 152 A. 916), and although he was not entitled to assume that the conduct of other users of the highway would be perfect (Himmel v. Finkelstein, 90 N.H. 78, 4 A.2d 657), it was not negligent for him to assume, there being nothing to indicate the contrary, that others would do their dpty and drive with due care. Piateck v. Swindell, 84 N.H. 402, 151 A. 262; Jackson v. Smart, 90 N.H. 153, 5 A.2d 713. It was his duty to drive in sueh a way that he would have time to cope with any danger “likely to be encountered” but “he is not to be held careless because he did not look out for dangers he had no occasion to anticipate.” Piateck v. Swindell, supra; see, also, Loughlin v. Johnson, 89 N.H. 191, 193, 195 A. 685. The question then is whether or not reasonable men could find on the testimony in the record that the defendant, as he approached the scene of the accident, ought as a reasonable man to have anticipated that something might occur ahead so suddenly that he would have time only for instinctive action and so that he should have left a greater interval between his car and Humphrey’s. We think this question should be answered in the negative.
To say that situations calling for instant action may confront any automobile driver at any time is to state the obvious, but it does not follow that due care requires every automobile driver to drive in the constant expectation that such a situation is likely to arise. Ordinary men of average prudence do not so drive. For instance, there is far greater likelihood for a call for immediate action when driving on a busy city street on a rainy evening than there is when driving in broad daylight over a straight highway traversing flat, open, uninhabited country.
Clearly the defendant as he approached the scene of the accident ought to have driven in the expectation that Humphrey might slow down, turn out around some slow moving vehicle or pedestrian, turn off the highway, or even come to an ordinary stop, any of which manoeuvers he could have met with considered action, but we do not think due care required him to drive in anticipation that some person or animal would dash out in front of him or Humphrey or that Humphrey would fail to see an obstruction in the highway ahead and, instead of avoiding it, run into it. In short, in view of the nature - of the highway arid the character of the country through which it ran, in view of the clear weather .and good visibility, in spite of the time of day when the accident occurred, and in view of the apparent care with which Humphrey was driving, we fail to see how reasonable men could find that the defendant failed in his legal duty by not driving in anticipation of the likelihood of the occurrence of an emergency so sudden that only instinctive action was possible.
The judgments of the District Court are affirmed, without costs.

Question: What is the nature of the second listed appellant whose detailed code is not identical to the code for the first listed appellant?

Choices:
private business (including criminal enterprises)
private organization or association
federal government (including DC)
sub-state government (e.g., county, local, special district)
state government (includes territories & commonwealths)
government - level not ascertained
natural person (excludes persons named in their official capacity or who appear because of a role in a private organization)
miscellaneous
not ascertained

Answer: 8