163 Iowa 194 | Iowa | 1913
The deceased was a miner eighteen years of age. He was killed on May 12, 1911, by the fall of slate estimated to have been eight or nine feet wide by nine to fifteen feet long, ten or twelve inches thick, from the roof of the seventh west entry of the defendant’s coal mine No. 6, at the point where the cars were switched to room No. 10. He and his father had been mining in this room three months, but, during the two weeks previous, his brother, Mike Carnego, Jr., and George Katko had been working with them; the four dividing earnings when received. This entry off the back south entry had been driven about fifty-eight feet and then turned in a northerly direction into room No. 10. The room after being driven had been widened to about twenty feet, and the persons mentioned were engaged in robbing the pillar between it and room No. 9. According to their testimony, they had worked at this about a week and had “just cracked through the pillar.” The pillar between this room and room No. 11 had not been removed, and according to the testimony of Michael Carnego, Jr., none of
After we ceased prosecuting the entries forward and the rooms, then these miners would start to pull the pillars back. . . . The pillars had been taken out back within twenty-four feet of the fall of slate. I measured it. Forty feet of the pillars had been taken out on one side and twenty-five feet on the other side. . . . Room No. 10 had been excavated and room No. 11 was excavated and pillars were standing between 10 and 11. The coal was all taken out of 8 and 9 clear through that entry more than three hundred feet. They were driven in about ninety feet.
He also testified that he had been in the room four days before the accident; that everything looked “all right then”; and that, upon entering it after the accident, he noticed that:
She was squeezing, squeezing the small pillars that were left right down into the bottom, and ‘busting’ them and carrying right down the entry. , The entries were going to a raise of 15 degrees, and the weight coming on would naturally push it down the hill, and it would crush and smash one pillar, and as soon as it would smash that pillar it would ride over onto the other and smash it down. It was extending over when I examined it within an hour or two after the boy was injured. The coal had the appearance of being crushed or crumbled. I could hear the coal cracking. That was on account of the weight going onto the coal. We sometimes call it a squeeze or break. . . . This condition is caused by taking out the coal, taking out all the supports from under it. . . . It fell tight on Tuesday or Wednesday; . . . completely caved in. . . . It fell in ninety feet down the entry toward the shaft. . . . These men were engaged in pulling the two entry pillars here, one on each side of the entry,
Two other witnesses testified that, according to custom and usage, the miners took eare of all of the roof from the place or switch where they get cars to the face of the coal where they are at work when robbing the pillars.
As said, the men associated with deceased testified that they were working at the pillar between rooms 9 and 10, had been removing no other, and that there was no “squeezing” or breaking of the roof generally prior to the fall of slate at the switch. Whether shooting off the powder at the face of the pillar where the miners were loading coal would affect the roof at the switch was in dispute, but there was no controversy as to the duty of the miners to take the ears at that place. The deceased had heard the approach of Boberts, the driver, with cars and at the instance of his brother left the face of the pillar for the switch and as he reached that point was crushed by the falling slate.
In the fifteenth instruction the jury were told that ‘ ‘ before the plaintiff can recover it is necessary that he show by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence in the respect substantially alleged.” The allegations had been construed by the court and their significance defined, and negligence in that respect had reference thereto. If the jury considered the instructions as a whole, there was no escape from passing on the issues whether the defendant was in control of the entry and required to make it reasonably safe for the use of the miners, whether it so did, and whether decedent was in the exercise of reasonable care. Though the practice of stating the allegations of a petition and then construing them or of enumerating grounds of negligence in support of which there is no evidence is not to be approved, we think there was no prejudice. It is enough ordinarily to state the issues to be submitted for determination, and the jury has no concern with those which for any reason are withheld therefrom.
VII. In the twenty-first instruction the court told the jury that:
The defendant interposed no such claim but insisted that deceased and his associates were rightly engaged in removing pillars. The defendant did claim that the work they were doing (i. e., removing pillars) caused the roof to weigh down heavily at and about the place they were working, and that they were negligent in view of the work being done in not giving the roof in question attention. Even if defendant did so claim, the burden was not on it to establish their negligence by the greater weight of evidence but merely to meet that adduced by plaintiff by showing this to have-been as probable as the cause alleged by him. But it is not perceived wherein the instruction could have been prejudicial. It was negative in character, telling the jury that, if the work of removing the pillars caused the falling of the slate, there could be no recovery. Though a contention not urged by defendant was stated, the instruction as a whole was favorable to defendant and did not constitute reversible error.
Other instructions are criticised, but the charge as a whole fairly stated the law applicable to. the issues. The instructions refused, in so far as correct, were included in those given. The amount awarded was not excessive.
The judgment is Affirmed.