delivered the opinion of the court:
Mary Brunnworth, surviving widow of Charles Brunnworth, brought an action under the Mining act against the Kerens-Donnewald Coal Company to recover damages for the death of her husband. She recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Madison county for $4090. Upon an appeal to the Appellate Court for the Fourth District the judgment was affirmed. The record has been brought to this court for further review as a return to a writ of certiorari.
The declaration contained four counts, all of which charged a willful failure to comply with certain provisions of sefction 28 of the Mines and Miners act of 1899. Two of the counts charged a failure to comply with sub-section (a) and the other two alleged a willful failure to comply with sub-section (b) of section 28 of the act of 1899. Subsections (a) and (b) are as follows:
“(a) At every shaft operated by steam power, the operator must station at the top and at the bottom of such shaft a competent man charged with the duty of attending to signals, preserving order and enforcing the rules governing the carriage of men on cages. Said top man and bottom man shall be at their respective posts of duty at least a half hour before the hoisting of coal begins in the morning, and remain for half an hour after hoisting ceases for the day.
“(b) Whenever the hoisting or lowering of men occurs before daylight or аfter dark, or when the landing at which men take or leave the cage is at all obscured by steam or otherwise, there must always be maintained at such landing a light sufficient to show the landing and surrounding objects distinctly. Likewise, as long as there are men underground in any mine the operator shall maintain a good and sufficient light at the bottom of the shaft thereof so that persons coming to the bottom may clearly discern the cage and objects in the vicinity.”
There is but little conflict in the testimony, and the facts which it establishes are in substance as follows: On January 8, 1910, the time when the injury occurred, the plaintiff in error was operating a coal mine at Worden, Madison county, and employed a day and night shift of men. The day shift quit work at 3 :3o o’clock in the afternoon and the night shift began work an hour later. All hoisting of coal was done while the day shift was at work, and the hoisting ceased at 3 :3o o’clock, when the day shift quit work. On the day of the accident the day shift quit work at the regular time and all of the men came out of the mine immediately thereafter, except the boss driver and the man who feeds the mules, these two remaining in the mine. • About 3 :5o o’clock P. M., deceased, with three other men who worked on the night shift, (Swain; Schneider and Schmidt,) went down into the mine for the purpose of going to work. W. E. Anderson, plaintiff in error’s electrician, had a chain to deliver at thе bottom of the shaft and went down in the same cage with the men above named. On the way down deceased stated that he had forgotten his cap and lamp .and would have to return to the top for them. It was suggested by someone on the cage that he return with Anderson, who was going up'as soon as he disposed of the chain. When they reached the bottom of the shaft they found that the man who' was stationed there to attend the signals and govern the loading of the cages as the men on the day shift ascended, liad come out of the mine and the lights had been turned off, the only light there being that given by the lamps on the caps of the men, a lantern some twelve or fоurteen feet away from the shaft, and a light belonging to the boss driver, who was then in the washroom near the cage, with the door open. The men left the cage and walked a few feet from the shaft. Schmidt and Schneider stopped a short distance from the shaft to fix their lamps. Anderson disposed of the chain, returned to the cage and signaled the engineer that there was a man to hoist. The engineer answered the signal, and Anderson, after signaling him to go ahead, stepped upon the cage. These signals were made by ringing a bell and could not be given while on the cage. When deceased left the cage he walked a short distance away, laid down his wraps and started back to the cage. It seems that Schmidt and Schneider had beard the signals given by Anderson and the engineer and knew the cage was ready to ascend. As deceased passed them on his return to the cage they called to him to wait, but he did not stop. As he approached tíre cage Anderson said, “For God’s salce, keep off! The cage is belled away!” Brunnworth placed one foot on the cage as it started to rise, reached over and grabbed the car rails on the cage, and in that position was carried up about seven feet, where the cage entered the casing of the shaft. The casing struck him on the back and he was crushed between it and the cage. His body rolled between the casing and cage, and as it did so Anderson grabbed him by the arm and held to him until they reached the top. When he was removed he was dead.
The evidence further shows that plaintiff in error’s mine was lighted by electricity, but the electric lights around the bottom of the shaft had been turned off when the eager, or bottom man, left the bottom of the mine and ascended to the top. There were two cages in use in this mine. One was known as the “north cage” and the other as the “south cage.” They were operated by a steam hoisting engine located on top. The cages were operated by means of bells, one of which was located at the top and the other at the bottom of the shaft. The bells were operated by air, and were so adjusted that the ringing of one would simultaneously produce the same sound) at the other bell. The bell at the bottom was located on the partition between the two shafts and could not be operated by a person on the cage. It was the duty of the eager, or bottom man, to give the signals, and his position was between the cages, near the bell. It also appears from the testimony that when the bottom man is in his proper position -to reach the bell he can stop the cage after it has bеen belled away by giving a stop signal to the engineer, and that this was often done.
The evidence is clear and uncontradicted that plaintiff in error violated both clauses of section 28 of the Mines act, upon which the declaration is based.
At the close of defendant in error’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence, plaintiff in error made a motion for a directed verdict, which was, overruled by the trial court. Plaintiff in error’s principal reliance in this court for a reversal is the alleged error in the court’s refusal to direct a verdict in its favor. If there was any competent evidence fairly tending to sustain the declaration there was no error in overruling plaintiff in error’s motion and submitting the case to the jury.
Plaintiff in error earnestly contends that the violation of the statute was not the proximate cause of the injury. It is argued, since the evidence shows that the deceased was warned by his associates, and by Anderson, who was on the cage, that the cage had been belled away, that the deceased had all the protection that could have been afforded him had the eager been in his position at the bell, and that, inasmuch as the evidence shows there were two miners’ lamps and a lantern in the vicinity of the bottom of the shaft, the absence of a light' such as the statute requires could not have been the proximate cause of the accident. It must be borne in mind that the bell could not be operated from the cage. It was for this reason that Anderson had to give the hoisting signal and get upon the cage afterward. If the eager had been at the bell he could easily have seen the deceased approaching the cage, especially if the statute had been complied with in regard to lights. If the eager had known the deceased intended to go up on the cage it would have been his duty to have waited until deceased was on the cage before he belled it away, and it is fair to assume the еager would have discharged his duty. If, on the other hand, he did not know anyone was going up except Anderson and had belled the cage away, he could have stopped it when he saw the deceased in the act of getting upon it. The evidence is that the cage had risen some fifteen or twenty inches when the deceased attempted to get upon it. The witnesses Brown,. Schmidt and Schneider all testify that they had seen the cage stopped by signals from the eager after it had been belled away and started. If it be granted that a eager could have done no more to prevent deceased from getting on the cage than to warn him that it had been belled away, still he could have stopped the cage when he saw, as he necessarily would have seen, the perilous position in which the deceased had placed himself. Again, it is by no means certain that Brunnworth knew the cage had been belled away when he attempted to get upon it. The evidence shows that the deceased’s hearing was defective. His associates testify that they had to talk very loud to him and often had to repeat their statements before he would hear them. None of the witnesses who were present are able to say that the deceased heard the warnings that were given, him. One of the witnesses testifies that when the deceased was within a few feet of the cage he seemed to stop and hesitate for a second or two and then proceeded toward the cage. But even if it be conceded that the deceased heard the warning, still it was only the warning of persons not in authority and whose orders the deceased was under no obligation to obey. It can hardly be said, simply because the deceased relied on 'his own judgment'and observation rather than that of his fellow-workmen, that he would have disregarded a like order had it proceeded from the eager, whose duty it is, under the law, to maintain order and enforce the rules governing the carriage of men on the cages.
Again, we do not agree with plaintiff in error that the absence of sufficient light at the bottom of the shaft was not a cause proximately contributing to the accident, and especially when it is considered. in connection with the absence of the eager from his position. The evidence shows that it was about five minutes from the time the deceased got off the cage until the accident. As the cage was being lowered he remarked to some of his associates that he had left his cap and lamp on top and would have to go back after them. He was told then that he could return with Anderson, who was only going to the bottom tо leave a chain. The evidence of several witnesses who were employed in this mine is to the effect that when one went suddenly from the top down into the mine it required two or three minutes for the, eye to become adjusted to the changed conditions, and that one cannot see, immediately upon being lowered into the mine, as well as he can after he has been in the mine for a few minutes. This condition prevails when the miners are suddenly lowered from the light on top to the darkness below. Of course, this trouble is not experienced when there is a‘good light maintained at the bottom. The deceased, upon getting off the cage at the bottom, immediаtely began to make preparations to go up with Anderson. He walked a few steps away from the shaft and left the articles he had taken with him and then turned to go back to the cage. The witnesses agree that the whole time the cage remained at the bottom did not exceed five minutes. Had there been a sufficient light to reveal all the objects in the vicinity of the shaft, it is not at all unreasonable to conclude that the deceased could have deposited his belongings and returned to the cage in time to have gotten upon it before it was belled away, but being required to move around in the dark his movements were necessarily slower than they wоuld have been had there been ample light at the bottom. Again, had the light been such as to have shown the position of the cage and all objects in that vicinity, the deceased could have known when the cage started and could not have been misled as to its exact position at the time he attempted to get upon it. We think, under the evidence, that it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether the violation of the statute in failing to have a eager at the bottom, and sufficient light, were the proximate causes of the injury.
If contributory negligence were available as a defense to actions under the Mining act there would be a basis in the evidence here for urging that defense, but it is established by numerous decisions of this court that contributory negligence cannot be invoked as a defense against an action based upon the willful violation of the statute. The statute is designed to protect employees in coal mines not only from the inherent dangers of the business, but also to protect them from the result of their own negligent or inconsiderate action. In cases like the one at bar, where there is proof both of a violation of the statute by the operator and contributory negligence on the part of the employee, it is often difficult to determine whether the violation of the statute or negligence of the injured party is the proximate cause of the injury. The rale of the common law is, that if an injury result from the negligent act of another, it is no defense that the negligence of a third person or an inevitable accident or some inanimate thing also contributed to cause the injury, if the negligence charged against the wrongdoer was an efficient cause and without which -the injury would not have occurred. (City of Joliet v. Shufeldt,
Kellyville Coal Co. v. Strine,
Davis v. Illinois Collieries Co.
Mertens v. Southern Coal Co.
Peebles v. O’Gara Coal Co.
In Waschow v. Kelly Coal Co.
The foregoing are only a few of the later cases in which unsuccessful efforts were made to invoke the contributory negligence of the injured employee as a defense by insisting that such negligence was the proximate cause of the injury. The result of all the cases is to establish the following propositions: (i) In actions based on a willful violation of the Mining act the contributory negligence of the injured party is not a defense; (2) whether the alleged violation of the statute is the proximate cause of the injury is ordinarily a question of fact; (3) where the injury is the result of the violation of the statute and the negligence of a third person, inevitable accident or some inanimate thing, the company is liable; (4) where the evidence is not in conflict and the state of proof is such that all reasonable minds must agree that the alleged violation of the statute had nothing to do with the injury complained of, then the question of proximate cause becomes one of law, which may be reviewed by this court. In support of proposition 4 see Cook v. Big Muddy-Carterville Mining Co.
< Under the rules of law established by the foregoing decisions, and under the evidencе found in this record, our conclusion is that this case falls within the rules announced in numerous cases, that whether the violation of the statute alleged was the proximate cause of the injury is a question of fact for the jury, and that, granting that the deceased was guilty of contributory negligence in attempting to get upon the cage at the time and in the manner shown by the proofs, his conduct in so doing was, at most, only contributory negligence, which, as we have seen, cannot be a defense in cases of this kind. There is no additional vitality imparted to such defense by viewing it from another angle and discussing it under the head of proximate cause. There was no error in submitting the question of proximate cause to-the jury.
Plaintiff in error makes the further contention that at the time of the accident it owed no duty to the deceased to maintain a bottom man and a sufficient light at the bottom of the shaft, as required by the statute. Plaintiff in error insists that the provision of the statute requiring a man to be stationed at the bottom of the shaft for a half hour after the hoisting ceased, applies in this case only to the day shift, and deceased not being employed on that shift and having descended into the mine more than a half hour before his shift began work, it was not required to keep a man stationed at the bottom of the shaft after the men belonging to that shift came out of the mine. An instruction embodying that theory of the law was offered by plaintiff in error but was refused by the court. Plaintiff in error earnestly insists that the refusal of the court to give this instruction is reversible error.
Defendant in error having rested her right to recover upon the violation of the statute, it is necessary that the proof should show that at the time of the injury and death of her intestate he belonged to the class of persons for whose protection and benefit the statute was enacted. Statutes imposing duties upon persons and corporations in the nature of police regulations may be for the purpose of giving to the general public some protection not provided by the common law, or such duties may be imposed for the benefit of a particular class or of any member of the public who may be in a particular place or situation or engaged in a particular line of employment. Statutes which impose duties for the health, safety and general welfare of the public or some particular class may be intended to accomplish any one or more of these purposes, though none of them are expressly stated. When the statute is silent as to the class of persons designed to be protected and who may be damnified by a failure to observe the duties imposеd, the application of the statute to one invoking its protection must be determined from a careful consideration of the various provisions of the statute and of the end it was manifestly intended to accomplish. (Cooley on Torts,—3d ed.—1395-) It is not enough, to sustain an action for a breach of a statutory duty, to prove the violation and a resulting injury, unless the statute is a general police regulation designed to protect the public at large. To illustrate: We have a statute requiring a railroad company to give certain warnings or signals upon approaching a public highway which crosses its tracks, but this duty is imposed for the protection of pеrsons and their property who may be crossing the railroad upon the highway, and does not apply to a trespasser who is walking longitudinally along the railroad. (Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Co. v. Eininger,
Section 29 of article 4 of the constitution of 1870 declares that “it shall be the duty of the General Assembly to pass such laws as may be necessary for the protection of operative miners, by providing for ventilation, when the same may be required, and the construction of escapement shafts, or such other appliances- as may secure safety in all coal mines, and to provide for the enforcement of said laws by such penalties and punishments as may be deemed proper.” In compliance with its constitutional duty the legislature passed the act upon which this suit is based, which is entitled “An act to revise the law in relation to coal mines and subjects relating thereto, and providing for the health and safety of persons employed therein.” Subsection 28a imposed the duty upon plaintiff in error to station at the bottom of the shaft “a competent man charged with the duty of attending to signals, preserving order and enforcing the rules governing the carriage of men on cages,” and required the bottom man to be at his post of duty half an hour before the hoisting of coal begins in the morning and to remain fоr half an hour after the hoisting ceases for the day. The evidence is undisputed that the bottom man had left his station at the bottom of the shaft before the expiration of the half hour after the hoisting had ceased for the day. At the time plaintiff’s intestate reached the bottom of the shaft the law required the bottom man to be at his post of duty “preserving order and enforcing the rules governing the carriage of men on cages.” Plaintiff’s intestate was not a trespasser on plaintiff in error’s premises. At the time of his injury he was a member of that class of persons for whose health and safety the Mining act was passed. He was an employee of plaintiff in error at the time he lost his life. The mere fact that he descended the shaft before he was required to do so did not render him a trespasser or deprive him of the protection of the statute.
Bartlett Coal and Mining Co. v. Roach,
To hold that the bottom man on the day shift owed no duty to any employee of the plaintiff in error except those employed on the day shift would be to place a construction on the statute so narrow and restricted as to defeat in a great measure the purposes sought to be accomplished by this legislation. There was no error in refusing the instruction complained of.
It is further argued that there is a variance between the proof and the allegations of the declaration. No assignment of error covers this point and we find nothing in the record indicating that the question was raised on the trial. To preserve such a question for review it must be presented in the trial court and a ruling obtained thereon. Parmelee Co. v. Wheelock,
It is further insisted by plaintiff in error that two of the instructions given on behalf of defendant in error were misleading, in that they failed to tell the jury what the pecuniary loss to the defendant in error rested upon, and did not limit it to the allegations of the declaration. The instructions in question on this point were substantially the same as instructions which have heretofore been sustained by this court. Bonato v. Peabody Coal Co.
The objection to defendant in error’s instruction No. 3 has already been disposed of by our holding that under the sections of the mining statute in question plaintiff in error owed a duty to the deceased even though he entered the mine before 4:00 P. M.
We have examined the questions raised by plaintiff in error as to the improper admission of evidence on behalf of defendant in error and the undue restriction of the cross-examination of some of her witnesses, and are of the opinion that the court committed no reversible error on these points.
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
