Adams v. Corona Coal & Iron Co.

62 So. 536 | Ala. | 1913

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

— The plaintiff, while at work as a shift leader in a hallway of a coal mine of the defendant coal and iron company, sustained a dangerous and painful injury to his person. The plaintiff, acting upon the theory that his injuries were due to the actionble negligence of the defendant, or of an agent or servant of the defendant having superintendence intrusted to him, brought this suit to recover the damages which he sustained by reason of such personal injuries so received by him.

1. The plaintiff, at the time he received his injuries, was clearing a hallway of loose rock. This hallway was used by the various employees of the defendant in going to and from the mine. The hallway, at one time, con*129tained. a seam of coal, but the coal had been taken out, and it was the duty of the plaintiff, as shift leader, to clear the bottom of the hallway of loose rock, and to remove from the top of the hallway all loose rock that could be removed therefrom, and to prop up such loose rock as could not be removed from- the top. The plaintiff’s duty, therefore, ivas to prepare the hallway so that it could be conveniently and safely used by the other servants of the defendant. The manner in which the plaintiff received his injuries is thus stated by the plaintiff : “I went to my place then and pulled down all of the loose rock that I could detect, and sounded the place I was to work under. It was my duty to square up that rock. It was my duty to examine the place where I was at work, and to take down or prop all the loose rock that I could find. It Avas my duty to examine the roof. I sounded the roof either Avith an ax or hammer. I examined the roof, and discovered some loose rock around the edge of the brush, but not any under the brushing. I Avas looking for loose rock Avken I examined the roof, but did not know as much about it, as some miners do. It Avas my duty to remove the loose rock that was left there by the day shift and to gob it on the right side. It was my duty to remove all the rock in that eight-foot space. I Avas Avorking on up toward the face of the coal, Avith the purpose of making this haulageway a sufficient height so that the men and mules could pass through. I sounded the rock that fell on me before I went to work under it, and it sounded safe. I detected nothing about it that indicated danger. The corner of the rock that fell on me Avas resting on a prop. There was a double row of props between the haulageway and the gob place. Rafe was on the opposite side of the rock from Avhere I was when I went to work. Rafe was someAvhere about the rock pile Avhen I Avent over to *130knock that prop ont. The hammer that I used to knock the prop out would weigh, in my judgment, four or five pounds. The handle to the hammer was in my judgment about 15 or 18 inches long. The reason I wanted .to knock that prop down was to give myself room to throw that rock back and gob it. The space between the props was about 12 or 18 inches. After I had knocked the prop out, I would have had a space of 30 or 36 inches. The second prop next to the right rib was directly behind the one that I undertook to knock out. The coal had been taken out from under the rock. I don’t know just what the height of the roof was there; we could use about 3 ft. and 10 in. timbers. I was under the rock that fell on me when I hit the prop with the hammer, the prop moved an inch or two and the rock fell on me. The prop fell out from under the rock about the time the rock fell on me. I fell with my head facing toward the gob side. The whole piece of rock fell on me. It did not break before it fell, it broke as it hit me when it fell. It was necessary to take that rock down in order to make the haulageway the necessary height, when we got to it. After I had cleaned up that gob I would have had to take that rock down or shoot it down. That was what I was there for, to pull down rock. I was considered over Rafe Agnew, my helper, and he was subject to my instructions. It would have taken myself and Rafe Agnew about two hours to have removed the rock from the roof that fell on me. After I got the rock gobbed it ivas my duty to take down the rock. That would have been the next rock for me to have taken down.”

The evidence in the bill of exceptions tends to show that it was the duty of the bank boss to examine and see that the roofs of the hallways were in a reasonably safe condition, but the evidence of the plaintiff affirm*131atively shows that the rock which fell on him when he knocked the prop from under it, when sounclecl by him, gave no evidence of being loose or of being otherwise unsafe. In fact the plaintiff was there that night, to remore that particular rock, whether loose or otherwise, and the knocking of the support from the rock was the cause of the fall. The duty of the plaintiff, on the occasion named, was to remove the rock which fell on him, and through the plaintiff, as shift leader, the defendant was, at the time of the plaintiff’s injury, performing the duty which the law cast upon it, viz., to provide a safe place in which its employees could work. According to the plaintiff’s own testimony if the rock was loose it was his duty to have discovered that it was loose. If it was not loose, then the bank boss could not have been negligent.

Under the evidence in this case the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. As in no event can the plaintiff prevail in this litigation, we do not consider any of the questions presented by the pleadings. “It is settled here that an appellant can never have a reversal for special errors committed on the trial from the judgment on which he appeals if in no event he could prevail in the litigation.” — America Merriweather, as Adm’x, etc., v. Sayre Mining & Manufacturing Co., 182 Ala. 665, 62 South. 70; Bienville Co. v. City of Mobile, 125 Ala. 178, 27 South. 781.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.

All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.