238 F. 332 | 4th Cir. | 1916
The parties will be described as they were below; that is, the plaintiff in error will be called the defendant, and the defendant in error the plaintiff. The latter sought to recover for the death of her son. He was a boy of 17, but appeared to those who worked with him to be a year or two younger.
At the time of his death, and for not exceeding 10 days before, he had been employed in defendant’s coal mine. He was a member of what is called the “slate gang.” He worked under the immediate direction of a man who was called the “slate boss,” and whose duties, according to the. evidence, included the inspection of the mine. Defendant’s employes had been engaged in getting out the coal contained in the pillars which had originally been left to support the weight of the earth and rocks above them. As a consequence, in the part of the mine in which the pillars had been so robbed, to use the mining term, there had been some settling; that is, in miners’ vernacular, a “squeeze” had taken place. For some while before the day of the accident this squeeze had apparently stopped of its own accord. In order to get at a pillar or stump in this part of the mine, so as to take out the coal contained in it, the slate gang, on the day preceding the death of plaintiff’s intestate, had been set to work to* clear out the loose débris which in earlier operations had been thrown in front of the pillar.
In the afternoon of the day upon which the crack was discovered, the slate boss summoned the deceased from wherever else in the mine he had been engaged, and put him 'to work at the place in which some three or four hours later he met his death. It does not appear that his attention was called to the crack, or that he ever knew of its existence. About 5:25 that afternoon a large piece of rock fell upon and killed him. It came from the place at which the crack had been se.en. These facts the plaintiff, apparently with some difficulty, extracted from two of the fivé men who made up the slate gang with whom, at the time of his death, deceased was working.
It is earnestly argued that by the Virginia statute the duty of seeing that'the mine is safe is imposed upon the “mine foreman,” or “hoss,” or his assistants, and that there is not sufficient evidence that the foreman of the slate gang was any one of these. Conceding, but by no means deciding, that the jury might not have been entitled to find that he was, the defendant is in no better case. There is no evidence whatever that, before putting this boy of 17 to work in that portion of the mine in which it was known a squeeze had taken place, *the mine foreman, or any one other than the slate boss and some members of his gang, had ever inspected the roof, to see what the condition was. If, as the defendant apparently contends, such inspection could properly be made by no other than the mine foreman or his assistant, and the slate boss was neither, the jury would have been justified in finding that the plaintiff’s intestate came- to his death because of the failure of the defendant to have the proper inspection made. The mining law of Virginia differs from that of West Virginia and Pennsylvania in a vitally important respect. It expressly declares that nothing in it shall be “so construed as to relieve mine owners or operators from seeing that all of” its “provisions are strictly complied with, nor from the duty imposed at common law to secure the reasonable safety of their employés, and in the performance of those duties that are npnassignable at common law, as well as those duties required by” the act, “the mine foreman, boss or fire boss, and their assistants, shall be considered as acting for the mine owner or operator as a vice principal.”
We find no error in the instructions actually granted by the court. They fairly and fully stated the law. A number of.those asked for by defendant were inconsistent with the law applicable to the facts, and were properly refused. Such of them as were unobjectionable were sufficiently covered by the instructions actually given.
Finding no error, it follows that the judgment below must be affirmed.
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