117 Mo. App. 412 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
The plaintiff was injured by the explosion of powder used in blasting in a mine. He charges that the defendant, as master, furnished him an unsafe appliance for tamping the powder in the hole preparatory to a blast. He recovered judgment in the circuit court.
The evidence shows that plaintiff and one Whittaker were fellow-servants working at night in defendant’s mine. That a hole had been drilled and they were engaged in .what was called “squib” blasting at the bottom of the hole; the object being to make a “pocket” or larger space at the bottom so that it would receive a sufficient charge of explosive to make an effective blast. The implement, or appliance, which is alleged to have been unsafe was a “tamping bar,” made of ordinary three-quarter-inch iron gaspipe, eleven or twelve feet long, with a wooden plug driven in one end and protruding out about twelve inches; and the only complaint is that this plug was permitted to become worn too small at the end. The hole had been drilled to a depth of nearly eleven feet and some squibs had been exploded at the bottom. Whittaker then began to “load
The day shift at this mine had a mine foreman, but the night shift had none. It was the duty of the foreman to inspect the tools and to see that they were kept in reasonable state of repair. The tamping bar in question was used by the day shift and left in the mine to be used by the night shift. The evidence shows, as already stated, that the wooden plug stuck out of the end of the iron bar twelve inches when first driven in, but it also appeared that these plugs would be used until half worn off, sometimes a little more, being thus reduced in length to between five and six inches. They would then be taken out and a new one driven in. Plaintiff stated in his testimony that if the plug came out or was broken off, Whittaker, his fellow-servant, would send it out, when a new one would immediately be put in. He gave further testimony from which it would seem to have been the duty of one or the other to send it out when worn too short.
The stick.of powder, which they were trying to push by the obstruction, was about one inch and a quarter
The thing most certainly appearing from the record presented is that plaintiff did not make out his case. Everything in the case vital to his right to recover is involved in doubt, conjecture and uncertainty. He himself stated he did not know what caused the explosion. His charge in the petition is that it was caused by the unsafe wooden plug in the end of the tamping bar. Of the several means, which might have caused the explosion, we regard that as the least likely. It may have been caused by Whittaker using the reverse end of the tamping bar, as he was seen to be using that end when last noticed. Plaintiff stated that he did not know which end was being used, nor what caused the explosion. It may have been caused by the fuse exploding the cap; or, it may be, that the powder being lodged against the obstruction, the cap probably resting against or near to it, was exploded by the last, evidently impatient, push-which Whittaker gave when he made the exclamation above noted.
But the wooden plug in the end of the tamping bar, to which plaintiff’s petition ties his case, could scarcely, by possibility, have been the cause. Possibility is perhaps too broad a word; but when it is considered how near the stick of powder itself came to filling the hole and the size of the wooden plug, which plaintiff gave as great as his forefinger, the thick, heavy oil paper folded over at the end, we are not very far out of the way in using so extreme a word.
When the injury, of which complaint is made, may have resulted from either of several causes, for only one
It is not necessary to enter upon a discussion of further points made against the plaintiff’s case; but we will add that we believe, with defendant, that whatever of negligence finds place in the case was the negligence of plaintiff and his fellow-servant Whittaker, in not sending out the bar for a new plug if the one then in it was too dangerous to use. The evidence as given by plaintiff himself shows, when properly analyzed, that such should have been done. [Livengood v. Lead & Zinc Co., 179 Mo. 229.]
The judgment is reversed.