134 P. 888 | Utah | 1913
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, an employee of tbe defendant, brought this action in tbe district court at Ogden to recover damages for-alleged injuries sustained by him in tbe defendant’s coal mine at Frontier, Wyo. His complaint is in two counts: One-based on a Wyoming statute; tbe other on tbe common law-
In the first count is alleged:
(1) A failure to employ a competent mine boss and one who had passed an examination and had a certificate of competency as by the statute required; (2) failure to see that overhead loose coal, slate, and rock along a traveled way at the place of the accident had been secured against falling; (3) failure of the mine boss to visit and examine the underground workings where the accident happened; (4) failure to timber the place; (5) permitting the plaintiff to work at a dangerous and unsafe place, alleging the defendant had, but the plaintiff had not, knowledge or notice of the danger, and
In the second count it is alleged that independently of the ■statute it was the duty of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff a safe place to work, to take down' all loose; overhanging ■coal, rock, and slate along “traveled ways” in its mine, and to properly brace and timber them; that those duties had not keen discharged; and that the defendant negligently suffered and permitted loose, overhanging coal and rock, unprotected and unsupported, to project and hang from the roof or rib of the entry where the plaintiff was directed to clean it up, by reason of which, and while he was loading dirt and rock on cars, the loose coal and rock fell from the roof or rib of the ■entry and injured him as in the first count alleged.
The defendant pleaded the Wyoming statute at length and parts of the Wyoming Constitution with which, as alleged, the statute was in conflict and hence was void. It denied the ■charged negligence of both counts and that the injury was the result thereof, and averred that the work performed by the plaintiff was in the discharge of duties and services making the place safe. It further pleaded, in defense of both counts, assumption of risk, negligence of fellow servants, and contributory negligence. . .
The case was tried to the court and jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals, with an assignment of over one hundred* alleged errors raising about ■every question pertaining to the law of negligence. They involve the validity of the Wyoming statute, its construction and application, assumption of risk, negligence of fellow servants, contributory negligence, sufficiency of the evidence, portions of the charge, rulings relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence, and misconduct of counsel.
The defendant was operating a coal mine at or near Frontier, Wyo. The plaintiff had been in its employ for more-than two years. ITe is a Finlander and at the time of the-accident was about forty-five years of age and had been in this country twenty-three years and for that length of time had been an experienced coal miner and had done all kinds-of work in a coal mine. He was familiar with all parts of the defendant’s mine and there worked at digging coal, putting up brattices, cleaning up entries, performing services as-a powder man, and had done and knew how to do all kinds-of work about a coal mine. The defendant’s mine' had two-openings or slopes. Entries and tunnels were prosecuted from them, one where the accident happened, called the-ninth north entry or tunnel, which at the time was being extended from the ninth entry. That work by blasting and; digging was done by miners on a yardage and tonnage basis.. The coal extracted was loaded on cars operated on a small track in the entry and hauled to the surface. The rock and dirt (the waste) was by the miners thrown to one side between the tracks and the wall or rib of the entry. The roof along the entry at the place of the accident was slanting. On one (the north) side the height from the floor to the roof of’ the entry was about seven feet; on the south it was less. The-wall or rib on the north side was also slanting; the entry being wider at the bottom or floor than at the top or roof..
The dirt and rock referred to by the witnesses as debris,, or “gob,” and thrown by the miners between the track and the north wall, extended on a slope from the track to the roof on the north side or wall, as testified to by some witnesses, and within a foot or two, as testified to by others. Witnesses testified that about fifty feet from the face of the entry at the top of the north wall or rib and near the roof (about in the corner of the roof and the top. of the north wall) they (some of them for a week, others for two weeks) noticed a lump of loose coal projecting and hanging from the rib but said nothing to the pláintiff about it, nor to the mine boss, nor made any report whatever of it. Others testified
On the ^morning of the day of the accident the plaintiff •and another, Charles Budzicki, spoken of as day men (company’s men) were sent by the assistant boss to clean up> the ■entry and to shovel and load the gob on cars and haul it out. They began work about thirty or forty feet from the face of the entry and worked out frapi the face. They worked there all the forenoon and loaded and hauled out four or five car loads. In the afternoon about one-thirty o’clock, they reached the place of the projecting coal. There they removed and loaded the gob within about two feet of the floor of the entry. While engaged in loading gob at that place, a chunk of coal, Variously estimated by the witnesses from two to five feet long, ten inches to a foot wide, eight inches to a foot thick, weighing from fifty to one hundred •and fifty pounds, fell from or near the top of the north rib (near the comer of the roof and the rib) and struck the plaintiff on the back and legs. With respect to this several propositions are established: The slanting north wall or rib was coal with seams of clay and “bones”; the roof and underground workings along the entry were of such eharac--fcer as not to require timbering or support; whether the gob •extended to the roof, or within two feet of it, no one was in danger of the hanging or projecting coal until the gob was taken away; and no prop or support could have been placed there to support the loose coal until the gob had been removed. Here arises a crucial question widely dividing the ■parties. Gn behalf of the plaintiff it is contended that it was the duty of the mine boss, a vice principal, to see that all loose coal and rod? was removed from the roof and rib along the entry before the plaintiff was sent in it to remove and load the gob; by the defendant that the plaintiff and his companion were sent to the entry for that very purpose, to take out the gob, take down all loose coal and rock, to clean up the entry, and hence were engaged in making the place safe. With respect to this and the questions of assumption of risk and contributory negligence, the plaintiff testified that
Plaintiff’s companion testified that tbe coal fell from about tbe comer of tbe roof and rib; “it stuck on tbe rib,, stuck a little on top., on tbe roof and on tbe rib;” that tbe gob extended to tbe roof, nearly touched tbe roof, and covered or bid tbe coal which was not observable, and did not fall until tbe gob bad been removed; and that tbe coal fell about one hour after tbe gob bad been taken away by them.
With respect to tbe defendant’s charged negligence, tbe court submitted tbe case to tbe jury on both counts, except as to tbe alleged negligence of an incompetent mine boss and one not having a certificate of competency as by tbe statute required. That issue was withheld' for want of evidence. Tbe court also, as to both counts, withheld from tbe jury all questions of negligence of a fellow servant. It submitted the question of contributory negligence as to both counts. • It
“To maintain the defense of assumption of risk you must find by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the dangers of the plaintiff’s getting injured were open and apparent and known to him; that is, that the danger of getting injured in the manner and from the cause that he was injured was so open, obvious and apparent that a man of ordinary care and prudence, with the same knowledge and experience as plaintiff has, surrounded by similar conditions, would not have taken the chance or risk of such injury. In determining this question, as well as all the other acts of the plaintiff, you must decide it by the standard of what an ordinarily careful and prudent man of similar knowledge and experience and under similar conditions and surroundings would do.”
The court also charged (No. 21) :
“You are instructed that, where a servant is injured in the performance of some act in obedience to orders of the master, he is not chargeable with contributory negligence unless the act commanded involves danger so obvious and so imminent that no reasonably prudent person, in his situation and with the knowledge of the danger, would undertake it, and you are further instructed that a servant, acting under the commands of a master, does not assume the risk incident to the act commanded to be done, unless the danger incurred is fully appreciated by him and is such that no person of ordinary prudence would consent to encounter it; and the mere fact that the servant might know that there was some danger will not defeat his right to recover, if, in obeying the master in the performance of his work, the servant acts with ordinary care under the circumstances. In other words, if the danger is not so absolute and so imminent that injury must ■almost necessarily result from obedience to the master’s commands, and the servant obeys, the master will not after-*354 wards be allowed to defend bimself on tbe ground that the servant ought not to have obeyed the order.”
In the case of Maki v. Union Pacific Coal Co., 187 Fed. 389, 109 C. C. A. 221, where this very statute was considered, the Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, held that the defense of assumption of risk was not abrogated but “is still available to the master.” We are also cited to a decision of the Wyoming court (Carney Coal Co., v. Benedict [Wyo.] 129 Pac. 1024) where it is claimed the same result was reached by that court. In the latter the plaintiff, an employee in an action against his employer, was denied recovery on the ground of assumption of risk. But it is not made to appear that the action was based on the statute. It appears to be founded solely on the common law independently of the statute; and hence the statute was not presented to nor considered by the court. We think that case can hardly be regarded as determining the effect and meaning of the statute in this particular or as giving it the same construction as was given it by the Maid Case. We have been referred to no other case from the Wyoming courts construing the statute in such particular. In the absence of a construction of the statute by that court, we are of the opinion that the defense of assumption of risk was not entirely abrogated by that statute; but we are not prepared to go to the extent of the Maid Case, which, in effect, holds that, notwithstanding the statute, the servant nevertheless not only assumes all the usual and ordinary risks incident to the employment, but also the risk of the effect of the master’s negligence with respect to breaches and violations of positive statutory duties imposed on the master, and of which breaches and violations
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial. Costs to appellant.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. I think, however, that the appellant was also prejudiced by the misconduct of counsel for the respondent in his argument to the juiy relative to the conduct of appellant in producing a certain witness. The criticisms of counsel for respondent in that regard were not only not justified by any act or omission on the part of appellant or its counsel, but they were highly improper and in my judgment were very prejudicial. It may be that, standing alone, the misconduct might not be sufficient to require a reversal of the judgment, yet, in view that the cause must be remanded for a new trial upon other ground's, counsel should be admonished against such practices, and the district court should be directed not to pass them by without reproof and without cautioning the jury not to be influenced thereby.