47 Ind. App. 354 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
— Appellant brought this action against appellee in the Sullivan Circuit Court, to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by him while at work in appellee’s mine. Appellee filed a demurrer to the
Then also follows an allegation that the miners furnished their own tools, and when they were not immediately used they were kept back a safe distance from the face of the entries in break throughs and room necks. And finally, appellant avers that “a fellow miner, working in a room turned off of said entry four south, asked plaintiff for the use of his cartridge pin, and said he would return it to the breakthrough, which was located thirty-five or forty feet in the rear of the face of said entry three south; that said pin was not returned by said fellow miner to the breakthrough before it was needed by plaintiff in prosecuting the work he had been assigned to do, and which work could not be prosecuted without said pin; that from the face of said entry, where plaintiff and his coworker Turney were ready to load and shoot, plaintiff went back to the breakthrough to get said cartridge pin, and not finding it there passed out of entry four south, and started through said entry to the fourth room neck, and went into said room neck a distance of six or eight feet, obtained the pin, and started back to his work, which was some distance away, when a large piece of slate fell and injured him.”
The complaint is fatally defective. There is no actionable negligence charged against appellee. There is no rule of pleading more firmly established than the one which re
The complaint further shows that the injuries which were received by appellant were received when returing from his journey to obtain the cartridge pin so loaned by him; that in so doing he was not engaged in the performance of any duty he owed to appellee by reason of his contract of employment, but instead was returning to the place of his labor after he had gone therefrom without any direction from, or even notice on the part of, appellee, and the purpose of his leaving his place of work was to recover the cartridge pin which he had loaned to accommodate some other workman in the mine.
The case just quoted from is almost identical with this case. We are seldom able to find cases so much alike in all their essential averments.
In the ease of Elsworth v. Metheney (1900), 104 Fed. 119, 44 C. C. A. 484, 51 L. R. A. 389, it was held that a coal miner going through a passageway, during the noon hour, to another part of the mine to visit another workman, is not engaged in the performance of the duties of his employment, and while thus injured he could not hold the employer liable for any injury. The court said: “He was not engaged in the business of his employer at the time of the injury, but came to his death at the noon hour, while returning from a visit undertaken, upon his own volition, outside the part of the mine in which he was employed. ’ ’
In the case of Wright v. Rawson (1879), 52 Iowa 329, 3
These cases all seem to be very much in point, and clearly support the decision of the trial court in the case before us. Other interesting eases pertinent to the same matter might be cited. Reference is made to the following cases and textbook: Brown v. Byroads (1874), 47 Ind. 435; Evansville, etc., R. Co. v. Griffin (1885), 100 Ind. 221, 50 Am. Rep. 783; 1 Thompson, Negligence 308; Zoebisch v. Tarbell (1865), 10 Allen 385, 87 Am. Dec. 660; Murray v. McLean (1870), 57 Ill. 378; Schmidt v. Bauer (1889), 80 Cal. 565, 22 Pac. 256, 5 L. R. A. 580.
Judgment affirmed.