104 S.W. 593 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1907
(after stating the facts as above). Plaintiff in error has filed six assignments of error, as follows:
“First. The court erred in giving to the jury, upon request of the defendant, the instruction embodied in plaintiff’s first original assignment of error, to wit: T will say this, gentlemen of the jury, if you find from the testimony that the deceased did his own timbering and propping and that after undertaking to timber and prop his own room he failed to do that sufficiently or if he did it in an unskillful way and the injury occurred, then, of course, the defendant would not be liable under those circumstances.’
“Second. The court should have given to the jury, as requested by the plaintiff, the instruction embodied in the second original assignment of error, to wit: ' ‘On the question of the deceased’s knowledge of the condition of the situation, you are instructed that if you find from the testimony in this case that the deceased was an ordinary miner, without experience in watching or caring for roofs in slopes and entries and passageways in mines, the fact that he might have seen, or the fact that he knew, that there were defects in the roof of the mine where he was killed, will not defeat plaintiff’s ight to recover, unless a reasonably prudent and intelligent*215 man, under circumstances like those surrounding the deceased, would have known and realized and appreciated the dangers which those defects indicated.'
“Third. The court should have given to the jury, as requested by plaintiff, the instruction covered' by plaintiff's third original assignment of error, to wit: ‘The court instructs you that if you find from the evidence .in this case that the deceased was engaged as a coal digger in the defendant’s mine, whatever may have been the deceased’s duty with reference to timbering the roof of the rooms and chambers from which he removed the coal, it was the defendant’s duty, after the mine was once opened up and timbered, to exercise ordinary care and diligence to see that the timbers were properly set, and to keep them in proper condition and repair, and for this purpose it was the defendant’s duty to exercise ordinary care and diligence to provide a competent inspector to make timely inspections of the timbers, walls, and roof of the mine, to the end that the deceased might not be injured by defects or dangers which a competent inspector would discover and remove.’
“Fourth. The court should have given to the jury, upon plaintiff’s request, the instruction covered by plaintiff’s sixth original assignment of error, to wit: ‘It is contended by the defendant that the proof shows that the deceased negligently erected the timbers supporting the roof of the mine at the place where he was killed, and that he thereby became the author of his own misfortune. As to that feature of the case, the court instructs you that even though the deceased did negligently erect such timbers, should you -find that he did, if you find that the defendant knew or could, by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence, have known of such negligence on the part of the deceased, and if you find that the defendant, after it knew or ought to have known of the negligent manner in which such timbers' had been erected, could, by the exercise of ordinary care and precaution, have*216 avoided the injurious consequences of the deceased’s negligence, then such negligence on the part of the deceased will not defeat plaintiff’s right to recover in this action.’
“Fifth. The court should have given to the jury, upon plaintiff’s request, the instruction covered by plaintiff’s seventh original assignment of error, to wit: 'In this case the plaintiff, to recover of the defendant the loss that has been sustained by the deceased’s widow and next of kin, charges the defendant with having negligently failed to. perform its duties in the matter of providing and maintaining for the deceased a reasonably safe place to work, and the defendant, to. defeat the action, says that the deceased, in going into the place, and continuing to work therein, with the knowledge which he had acquired of the condition of the roof at and about the mouth of his room, failed to exercise that care for his own safety that an ordinarily prudent and intelligent man, as a miner, .under similar circumstances, and in a like situation, would have used. So there are in this case a charge and a countercharge of negligence. Negligence, the court instructs you, is a relative term. What could and should be regarded as gross negligence in one person would not be even negligence in another. The conduct of a certain individual in doing a certain thing, or in going into a certain place, might, without question, be regarded as negligence, while the same conduct of a different individual in doing the same thing, or in going into the same place, w'ould be negligence, the difference arising from the inequality of the competency of the two individuals to know and to understand and to appreciate the condition of the situation. Then, in your efforts to determine whether or not the defendant and the deceased, or either of them, were negligent in the discharge of their respective duties in and about the place where the deceased was killed, it will be your duty to consider their respective capacities to know and to understand and to appreciate the condition of the roof of the mine*217 where the accident happened. Was the defendant’s conduct, with regard to the place in its mine where the deceased was killed, such conduct as an ordinarily prudent and intelligent employer would have had, having the knowledge which the defendant had of the condition of the roof in its mine, and having the experience which the defendant had had in the operation of the same? And did the deceased, by going into the place, and by continuing to work therein, after having acquired the knowledge which he had of the condition of the roof, thereby commit an act which an ordinarily prudent and intelligent miner, in a like situation, and under similar circumstances, would have refrained from doing? These are questions for you to answer.’
“Sixth. The court should have given to the jury, upon the request of the plaintiff, the instruction covered by plaintiff’s eighth assignment of error, to wit: ‘The court instructs you that if you find from the evidence in this case that the deceased recklessly and heedlessly exposed himself to a known danger, the plaintiff cannot recover; but you are instructed that the dangers from the roof at the place where he was killed, and not the defects merely, must have been so obvious and threatening that a reasonably prudent man, as a miner, in a like situation, and under similar circumstances, would have avoided them in order to charge the deceased with such negligence as would defeat this action. And in this same connection, if you find that the deceased was an ordinary miner, without experience in watching and caring for roofs in mines, the court instructs you that in your deliberations to determine whether or not the conduct of the deceased in going into the place where he was killed, and in continuing to work therein, was such as to defeat the action, it will be your duty to consider the inequality between the competency of a man skilled and experienced in caring for and watching roofs in mines and the competency of a man with only the*218 experience of an ordinary miner. A skillful and competent inspector or mine foreman, such as the defendant was required to provide for the proper inspection and care of the roof in its mines, would realize and apprehend and foresee great and unusual dangers from a defective place in the roof, while an ordinary miner, without such experience and 'competency, might not know and appreciate the dangers entailed in such defects.’ ”
The first error assigned is the charge of the court given upon request of defendant, and which plaintiff in error says is his “principal and most serious complaint,” because “knowledge, or want of knowledge, is one of the things that make negligence a relative term. Knowledge, or the want of it, is one of the distinguishing marks used in the determination of the question of negligence.” This is discarded by the instruction, as “it declared, in effect, that the deceased’s act of once making repairs in the place as a precautionary step to protect himself from danger constituted him, and he should forever afterwards remain, the absolute guarantor of his own safety. It stood without any qualification as to what knowledge the deceased or others had or might have had of the condition of the place after the repairs had been made.” The court, in ■ giving that charge, “quit the realm of negligence, and told the jury, in effect, that, if the deceased did the work of propping and timbering, and that if after undertaking to do it he failed to do it ‘sufficiently’ or failed to do it in a ‘skillful way,’ such failure on his part would prevent for all time to come a recovery for an injury befalling him at that place. These are terms that have not yet been adopted by the courts and made applicable- to the law of negligence or of contributory negligence. The term ‘sufficient’ is absolute. The term ‘negligence’ is relative. It has a flexible nature. Acting upon the requested instruction, which if given would have been clearly erroneous, the jury could probably have gotten to
There can be no doubt that the real question in the case is one of negligence, and, further, that in the first instance the burden of proving negligence rests upon the plaintiff; and, if the plaintiff fails to establish any negligence, it is unquestionably the duty of the court not to submit the case to the jury at all, but to direct a verdict for the defendant. In Patton vs T. & P. Ry. Co., 179 U. S. 658, 21 Sup. Ct. 275, 45 L. Ed. 361, Judge Brewer, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “That there are times when it is proper for a court to direct a verdict is clear. 'It is well settled that the court may withdraw a case from them altogether, and direct a verdict for the plaintiff or the defendant, as the one or the other may be proper, where the evidence is undisputed, or is of such conclusive character that the court, in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, would be compelled to set aside a verdict returned in opposition to it. Phoenix Ins. Co. vs Doster, 106 U. S. 30, 32, 1 Sup. Ct. 18, 27 L. Ed. 65; Griggs vs Houston, 104 U. S. 553, 26 L. Ed. 840; Randall vs Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 109 U. S. 478, 482, 3 Sup. Ct. 322, 27 L. Ed. 1003; Anderson County Commissioners vs Beal, 113 U. S. 227, 241, 5 Sup. Ct. 433, 28 L. Ed. 966; Schofield vs Chicago & St. Paul Railway Co., 114 U. S. 615, 618, 5 Sup. Ct. 1125, 29 L. Ed. 224.’ Delaware, etc., Railroad vs Converse, 139 U. S. 469, 472, 11 Sup. Ct. 569, 35 L. Ed. 213. See, also, Aerkfetz vs Humphreys, 145 U. S. 418, 12 Sup. Ct. 835, 36 L. Ed. 758; Elliott vs Chicago, Milwaukee, etc., Railway, 150 U. S. 245, 14 Sup. Ct. 85, 37 L. Ed. 1068.” The court says that cases are not to be lightly taken from the jury; “hence it is seldom
Before examining the evidence, let us see what duties and obligations under the law were imposed upon the defendant in this case. In Western Coal & Mining Co. vs Ingraham, 70 Fed. 219, 17 C. C. A. 71, from the Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, the court said: “The issue was whether the defendant had discharged its duty to the plaintiff in furnishing him with a reasonably safe place in which to work. The mine had been timbered long before the plaintiff went to work therein, and the accident resulted from a defect in that timbering.
J. W. Alexander testified: “Q. State whether or not you knew Louis Gamerro? A. I knew him when I saw him. I was not personally acquainted with the man. Q. State whether or not you and he were in the same entry? A. He worked on the same entry that I worked in. Q. What entry was that? A. It was the fifth south. Q. What did Louis Gamerro do, if you know? A. He dug coal. * * * Q. State, to the court and to the jury whether or not you remember the incident of a fall from the roof at the mouth of that room prior to the time of the accident in which he was killed? A. There was a fall of top coal, or what they term 'boney,’ that was on the entry, that fell prior to his being killed. Q. Do you remember the incident? Do you remember seeing the coal, the boney, there? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. Did you say anything to the deceased Gamerro about the place before he died? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was it after the fall? A. Yes, sir; I was there the morning when the top coal fell. , Q. • Yom saw him? A. Yes, sir, Q. Tell
Joe Buendi testified: “Q. State whether or not you had passed through that place before. A. I worked right close to him, next room. I passed there three or four times every day. Q. What did you do, Joe? A. Digging coal. * * * Q. The room that he was killed in is the room that he'-had turned off, and was the next one to yours? A. Yes, sir. Q. You got there first, you got the first room, he got there next and he got the second room? A. I got there first, he got there next. * * * Q. He would go into your room sometimes? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you help him put that timber in the neck of his room? A. I hold. He put the braces. Q. You held up the brace while he put it in? A. Yes, sir. Q. That was a good prop you put in there? A. Yes, sir; it was an awful big prop. Q. He had put a prop under one end of it, had he? A. Yes, sir. Q. And cut the other so it would go into the coal on the lower side? A. Yes, sir; because the prop was not long‘enough. * * * Q. He knew how to put in props and to dig coal? A. And kept the room in good shape. Q. He understood that kind of work and put that prop'in there in good shape? A. Yes, sir; I am sure it was, good. Q. You saw it done, saw him do it? A. Yes, sir. Q. When the coal diggers put these bars and props in, they get — was it 33 cents apiece for putting them in? A. Yes, sir; they get that much now. I don’t remember if he got the pay at that time or not. Q. That was the rule, when the miners put them in themselves, they got 33 cents apiece for them? A. Yes, sir.- * * * By the Court: Q. Before
Frank Buendi testified: “Q. Did you know Louis Gamerro during his lifetime? A. Yes; I knew him about five years ago in Colorado. Q. What kind of work he did? A. Digging coal like me too.”
William Cameron testified: “Q. What is your official position? A. United States Mine Inspector. Q. How long have you held that position? A. About three years and a half. * * * Q. Were you at the room, the place where he ¡Gamerro] was killed? A. I was two days afterwards. Q. Did you examine the condition of the mouth at that point? A. Yes. Q. Mr. Cameron, just state what you found in regard to how it occurred, and what indications there would be prior to the_ occurrence of it. A. I found that a large rock had fallen out, leaving a cavity in the roof on each side, on the upper side, and lower side of that rock there were two slits running in a V-shape and the condition previous to that I couldn’t see, because I hadn’t examined it, but the condition might be that that would be examined, and it would be impossible to discover these slits which caused the rock to fall. Q. The slits had commenced at the bottom the way it appeared, and came. together in a V-shape? A. Yes; one had commenced in the entry and the other right inside of the neck of the room probably 18 inches or 2 feet, and the two met probably 2j4 feet high, and this large rock being relieved by these two slits it fell out. Q. You don’t know from the fall of th^t, and an examination from the surface prior to the falling would not have developed or would not have enabled a person to discover the falling? A. It might not. Those things occur on many occasions
A. B. Cameron testified: “Q. What were you doing at that time for the company? A. I was mine foreman. * * * Q. Was there anything there to prevent the fall at that particular place? A. Yes, sir; there was one nine-foot prop. Q. Who put the prop in there? A. Gamerro himself. Q. He was a practical miner, was he? A. Yes, sir; he was a good average miner, Gamerro was. * * * Q. As foreman of the mine what did you have to do with reference to inspecting the rooms? A. To see that they were properly timbered. Q. You noticed that timber there did you? A. Yes, sir; when I paid for it. Q. You paid Gamerro for putting it in there? A. Yes, sir. Q. State now whether it was put in there properly? A. The bar was put up in a proper workmanlike manner. Q. In inspecting did you notice to see if the rooms.were properly timbered? What did you do, would you notice the roof? A. First thing is to take into consideration what kind of a room you have got and what props you require. All the roof is not alike. Q. Where this bar was in as I understand it is where this fall occurred. Now when you inspected that, was there anything to indicate there that a fall was likely to occur? ' A. When we put up that bar, the roof was a little loose. Q. Is that why the bar was.put up there? A. Yes, sir. Q: After the bar was put up there, did that make that in a safe condition? A. Yes, sir, it made it in a safe condition as far as we could determine. * * * Q. Were you there the day before the accident? A. I would judge from the dates that I was certainly in that man’s place and room two days previous to his death. Q. Now, at that time, did you notice his room at the time? A. Yes, sir; I noticed all the rooms. Q. Did it appear to be in perfect condition? A. Appeared to be in perfect condition, the roof. Q. The
G. W. Easter testified: “Q. Were you there the day before? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you notice the room? A.
From the foregoing testimony, it is difficult to locate any negligence on the part of either the plaintiff or defendant. Gamerro had turned off the room himself in which he was working, and after the fall of the substance called “boney” he placed a bar at that point to support the roof, and the testimony of every witness is that it was thereafter reasonably safe, and the timbers were placed in a good and workmanlike manner. The miner had the option to place such timbers as were needed, and receive pay for the same, or to call upon the timberman to put up the timbers. Cameron, the foreman, inspected the room, and the timbering of Gamerro, and says it was properly, sufficiently, and adequately timbered. The timberman examined the place the day before the accident, and it was free from any sign of weakness. We cannot discover any negligence on the part of the defendant, neither was there any contributory negligence by tile plaintiff, shown by the proof, and all argument and citation of authorities about contributory negligence or assumption of risk is mere speculation. We have no doubt the jury, in returning a verdict for the defendant, took that view, and that the unfortunate accident resulting in Gamerro's death was one that human foresight could not guard against, and no negligence could be attributed to any one.
In our judgment the court, under the proof, should have directed a verdict for defendant, and that, therefore, it is not necessary to consider the other assignments of error. Hence, as the jury has decided for the defendant, let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.