No, we were laying down, and he was only holding the rifle by its forend while adjusting his jacket at his shoulder with his trigger hand... Butt was resting on the ground...
Was the safety on?...............I personally never remove the rifle from safe until it's time to slip my finger in the trigger guard and touch off, with the critter in my crosshairs. Too easy for a trigger to get touched, bumped, hooked by a button, whatever. I honestly wonder how many mech failure discharges are actually some jacka$$ who refuses to admit he screwed up, so let's blame Remington 'cause everybody knows all Remingtons go off just stored in the safe!!
Remington did have an issue a while back with triggers disengaging when the safety was flipped from "on safe" to "fire" positions, I have experienced this with 2 Rems after I adjusted the triggers a touch too fine. Both were in the shop while testing and were then readjusted, never happened to me in the field.
I realize not all hunters are experienced riflemen, but isn't a full wring out of equipment, at the range, a mandatory prerequisite before going affield? It's like taking off in your plane and running out of fuel 20 mins out and blaming the refueller who was supposed to have fuelled the plane. Standard proceedures dictates it's the pilots responsibility to check fuel before take off. Is it not the same onus of responsibility for the hunter/rifleman to check his equipment before heading affield?
Buying a namebrand rifle does not preclude it from having flaws, these firearms are made by people just like me and you, and I don't know about you, but I make mistakes as do quality control people at Remington, Winchester, Ruger, Tikka etc...etc...etc...I may be the only person who thinks this way, but I believe the final responsibility for ALL my equipment lies with me, and any flaws or failures should have been wrung out long before going affield. What about a 10 year old rifle that develops a malfunction, is that still the manufacturers fault?
I have spent literally thousands of days affield with many different Remington rifles and have harvested thousands of head of large and small game with Remington rifles and not ONCE has my equipment misbehaved or failed on me. One would think if this stuff happens with the frequency alluded to by some people, it certainly should have happened several times to me.............
Then there's the whole issue of unsafe gun handling, which I believe personally, happens with much greater frequency than true equipment failures............
I hunted for many years with my 700 in 300 Wby with a Canjar trigger without a safety, a shell never went in the chamber until I was in position with full focus on my quarry........never had an AD with this set-up either and that trigger was 12 oz let off. I think we all need to take more responsibility for our gun handling and less blaming the manufacturers. After all it isn't the manufacturers who put a cartridge in the chamber and wander about the forests.............so who is responsible for that firearm at that point.