143 Iowa 662 | Iowa | 1909
The defendant, a coal mining corporation, was engaged in the wort of sinking a shaft for mining purposes near the city of Des Moines. The deceased was not a miner by occupation, but had for a short time been employed by the. defendant doing work at and about the top of the shaft. After a few weeks’ of this service, he was put in charge of an engine used in hoisting the excavated material. This engine was not inclosed by any building; the only shelter for the engineer being a small roof or canopy not affording protection against severe storms. The boiler and engine stood north of the shaft, and about sixty feet farther to the north and west was a small frame shanty or building about ten feet square in which was a telephone connected with the city system. ' It was also used as a place where the workmen left their coats and tools, where they sometimes gathered at lunch time and found shelter from the storms. In it the defendants also deposited powder and dynamite supplied from time to time for use in blasting. The work
Early in the morning of July 10, 1905, and before the night shift of' workmen had been relieved, there occurred a violent rainstorm, accompanied by thunder and lightning, during which the dynamite and powder in the shanty exploded, instantly killing Brown' and his four fellow workmen constituting the entire force then on the work. It is supposed that some, if not all, of the number had gathered in the shanty for shelter from the storm, and that the explosives were ignited by a stroke .of lightning. There is no living witness of any of the immediate circumstances of this calamitous occurrence, except a woman who from a distance of a mile and a half noticed the lightning stream down in the direction o'f the shanty and saw the explosion follow almost instantaneously. The nearest neighbor first upon the scene after the explosion and while the storm 'was still in progress, found the
The defendant is charged with negligence in failing to provide the deceased with a safe place to work, in storing and keeping powder, dynamite, and caps in the building which was‘the only place provided for the workmen to deposit their tools, clothing, and lunch, and in bringing into said shanty where such explosives were kept a telephone connected with wires upon which electric currents were admitted or liable to be conducted, without due regard to the danger of such wires becoming overcharged and causing an explosion such as did in fact result. To this claim the defendant interposes a denial of all negligence on its part. It also pleads that the deceased had been at work in said employment for a considerable period and was familiar with the conditions there prevailing, and with such knowledge had voluntarily
At the close of plaintiff’s testimony in chief, the defendant moved for a directed verdict in its favor on the grounds: (1) Of an entire failure of evidence to show negligence on the part of the defendant; (2) failure of the evidence to show that defendant’s negligence, if any, . was the proximate cause of the intestate’s death; and (3) failure of evidence to show that said intestate was himself free from negligence contributory to his death. This motion being overruled, the defendant offered evidence tending to show the general manner in which the work at and about the shaft had been carried on during the time deceased was in its service, the use to which the shanty was ordinarily put, and the knowledge and notice which deceased had of the conditions there prevailing. The motion for a directed verdict was thereupon renewed and again overruled. Certain requests for instructions to the jury were also submitted to the court and refused. After verdict had been returned for the plaintiff, the defendant moved for a new trial, assigning as grounds therefor alleged errors of the trial court in its rulings and instructions and insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a 'recovery of damages. This motion being denied and judgment entered on the verdict, the defendant appeals.
The negligence charged in this case is not founded upon the use of explosives in the prosecution of the defendant’s work, but in the alleged lack of care in keeping and storing them. This, under all ordinary circumstances, is a question of fact. Nor the court to say as a matter of law that storing powder, dynamite, and dynamite caps in dangerous quantities in the same and only room provided for the use of the workmen for refuge from the storm and keeping their tools, clothing, and lunches, the defendant exercised the full measure of its duty in the premises, would in our judgment be a very serious encroachment upon the time-honored province of the jury. It is no answer to this, charge that there was no other convenient place to keep these explosives. The construction of a sufficient shelter or receptacle for that purpose, detached from the assembling place of the workmen, was a matter of but few moments, or at the most, few hours work and very slight expense, and, to say the very least, the question whether reasonable care did not require such precaution was a fair one for the consideration of the triers of fact. Nor is negligence negatived by the fact that the explosion was an unusual or extra.
In most cases the relation between cause and effect is a matter of inference only, but the conclusion is none the less satisfactory to the reasonable mind. A finding that the life of the deceased in this case was destroyed by the explosion of the powder and dynamite, and not by the lightning stroke, has ample support in the record. The place where the body was found and the manner in which it was dismembered point unmistakably to the explosion as an all-sufficient explanation of the cause of his death, while there is not the slightest circumstance to support the theory that he was killed by lightning. In Brownfield v. Railroad Co., 107 Iowa, 258, we stated the rule to be that: “When a cause is shown which might produce an accident in a certain way, and an accident happens in that manner, it is a warrantable presumption, in the absence of showing of other cause, that the one known was the operative agency in bringing about the result.” It is here shown without dispute that the explosives were in the shanty, that they were discharged wrecking the building, and that the persons first coming to the scene of destruction found the bodies, or the remnants of the bodies, of the five workmen scattered in and about the ruins. No other efficient cause for such results is shown, and to argue the possibility that these men were stricken dead by lightning is to indulge in conjecture pure and simple.
It is to be observed, in this connection, that plaintiff charges the defendant not only with negligence in keeping the explosives in the shanty, but also alleges that it negligently increased the hazard thus created by establishing a telephone in. the same room with connecting wire or wires, upon which in case of storms an overchai’ge of electricity was liable to be conducted causing the ignition of the powder, dynamite, or caps. The fact of installing and connecting the telephone as alleged is not denied, but it is said there is no evidence that this condition had anything to do with the accident. No witness testifies— none can testify — that lightning did strike the building, or that electricity in dangerous force did enter it over the wire; but proof of a condition which rendered such results possible was a material circumstance with reference to the safety of the place. See Jackson v. Telephone Co., supra. The liability of telephone wires to be surcharged with electricity during violent storms is well known to all persons familiar with their use. It is shown by plaintiff’s witnesses that the broken end of this particular wire continued to emit sparks for some time after the explosion, indicating that by reason of the condition of the atmosphere, or because of contact with other conductors carrying heavy currents, electricity in quantities capable of doing the alleged mischief was being brought into the immediate vicinity where the explosives had been stored; but we think -it is not incumbent upon the plaintiff to point out or demonstrate the manner in which the explosives were ignited. Indeed it would not necessarily be a defense to the action, even if the record should demonstrate beyond all doubt that the immediate cause of the explosion was not chargeable to the negligence of any person. If the defendant was1 negligent in depositing the powder and dynamite in a place where their accidental ignition would
V. Other questions argued by counsel are incidental or subsidiary to those already considered, and we shall not attempt their minute consideration. It is urged, and for the purposes of the ease it may be conceded, that defendant is not necessarily chargeable with' negligence because it kept dynamite near the shaft, or because it installed the telephone in the shanty for the conveniences of its business; but it does not follow from this concession that the use of a single small room for the installation of the telephone, for the deposit of the explosives, and for the general convenience and shelter of the workmen, did not together constitute a dangerous combination which due care would have avoided.
No ground for setting aside the verdict being shown, the judgment of the district court is therefore affirmed.