6 Colo. App. 255 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The accident by which Carpita met his death killed George Lamb. It is completely detailed in the statement made in
The action was brought in the names of the father and the mother, whose relationship was stated, and their right of action based on this fact. The defendant demurred on the general ground of a failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, but it did not demur because of a misjoinder of parties plaintiff. This question was sought to be raised by answer. That part of their plea was stricken out on motion, to which an exception was saved. When the plaintiffs started to put in their proof, the defendant objected on the ground of a misjoinder, still insisting that the plaintiffs could not sue jointly. Whether this would be true under the coal mining act we do not decide. The objection to the misjoinder is quite easily disposed of by reference to the code, which requires this question to be raised by de
The circumstances pertaining to Lamb’s death do not show such contributory negligence on his part as to enable us to say, as a matter of law, that his negligence contributed to the injury. He was probably at work, doing what his duties required, and we are unable to conclude his death resulted from his temporary suspension of work while conversing with Carpita, who was killed at the same time. This question of the negligence of the deceased was submitted to the jury under apt instructions, which correctly stated the law of contributory negligence, so far as it was applicable to the present case, and the finding of the jury concludes this question. There is much more difficulty respecting the instructions covering the question of the duty of the company with respect to the roof. As abstrabt propositions of law, the court’s statements would not be subject to very much criticism, but as applied to the present case, they do not serve to enlighten the jury respecting the duty of the company, and what, as a matter of law, would be negligence on its part in this regard. From the commencement, the case seems to have been tried on an erroneous hypothesis. The complaint, and the evidence offered to support its allegations, confused the general duty of the defendant respecting the care of its mine with its particular duty which it was attempting to discharge when Lamb was killed. The plaintiff was permitted to prove the general condition of the roof antecedent to the accident, and on this evidence the jury were instructed as to the 'Company’s duty to keep the mine in a safe condition for the protection of the workmen. The trouble probably arose from the difficulty of deciding what may be taken as the proximate cause of the injury and those remoter matters
It would not serve a useful purpose to cite the numerous cases which are illustrative of this general doctrine. They all agree the defendant is responsible only for the natural and probable consequences of a wrongful act. The judicial labor is always spent in the search for what the learned jurists call “the causa causans,” rather than the “causa sine qua non.” It is especially difficult for the ordinary juryman to disregard what appears to be the causes, however remote, which have some sort of apparent connection with the actual thing which occasioned the injury. When the plaintiff was permitted to prove the antecedent condition of the roof, and
Another question fairly presented calls for some additional statement to precede the general discussion of the principle. Robert Allen was the mine boss appointed under the statute. He was a man of many years’ experience, and his competency was not attacked by any of the plaintiffs’ witnesses. It was he who directed the placing of the prop and cap under the roof to support it while they were removing the first fall, and getting the timber sets ready for a permanent support. Lamb had no connection with Carpita, except as a fellow laborer in the mine, engaged in a different employment. He was a driver occupied in hauling coal to the mouth of the pit. He was engaged in the work of removal when the second fall came and killed him. The exact duties of a mine boss, aside from those described by the coal mining act of 1885, are not disclosed. It was not shown that the boss had any control over the men in the mine, other than what must necessarily come to him from the discharge of his statutory duties. Whether he had power to employ or discharge them is not a matter of evidence, nor is his authority either over the mine or over the men established. It must, however, be coincident
The large and constant increase in the mining, manufacturing and business interests of this and other commercial countries has occasioned a corresponding growth of aggre
This exception to the general doctrine-is not based on any
The Pennsylvania cases undoubtedly hold the mining boss to be a fellow servant with the other laborers in the mine. They do not permit any recovery by the injured person where the case shows the injury was occasioned by the negligence of the mine boss. The court rests these cases on the coal mining act, which in Pennsylvania, as in Colorado, has much to do with the duties and responsibilities of mine owners and employees. Lehigh Valley Coal Co. v. Jones, 86 Pa. St. 432; Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Carroll, 89 Pa. St. 374; Reese et al. v. Biddle, 112 Pa. St. 72; Redstone Coke Co. v. Roby, 115 Pa. St. 364.
Thus far the Pennsylvania cases do not infringe the rule respecting the liabilityof a master for the negligence of a fellow servant, because those are cases which grew out of the performance of his work by the fellow servant. It was the manner in which the work was done which occasioned the injury complained of in the Lineoski Case, and in this respect it is analogous to the one at bar. Lineoski v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 167 Pa. St. 153.
There the evidence tended to show there had been a good deal of leakage for some months in the roof of the mine, indicating a large collection of water at some point immediately contiguous to the roof. According to the evidence, the roof was very much disturbed and shaky, and it ultimately fell, flooded the mine, and killed a great many miners. The case tended to show notice of this condition had been given to various persons in charge of the property and the mine boss, but he had neglected to make the repairs which were neces
There is another principle which, to our minds, is of great and governing importance in this regard. There is a wide difference between providing a safe place for the servants to work in and putting a place already found to be insecure in condition for the resumption of labor. If it happened to be true the entry was insufficiently timbered and insecure, according to the judgment of the jury, when the first fall occurred, and nobody had been injured, the master must undoubtedly have had the right to put the place in shape for the resumption of labor. He had the right to put an insecure place into a safe condition. Laborers who were employed to aid in this effort took upon themselves whatever of added risk might have come from the then situation of the entry. It is a most undoubted principle that where a piece of property is out of repair, the men who are employed in making it safe take upon themselves whatever of added risk comes from the existing condition of the place or the work. Kennedy v. Spring, 160 Mass. 203; Armour v. Hahn, 111 U. S. 313; Porter v. The Silver Creek & Morris Coal Co., 84 Wis. 418; Carlson v. Oregon Short Line Ry. Co., 21 Ore. 450; Fraser v. Red River Lumber Co., 47 N. W. Rep. 785.
Under these circumstances, it is plain if Lamb was employed to assist in the work of making the roof safe for the miners, he took upon himself the risk which might accrue from the circumstances. With respect to the negligence or the care, the judgment or the imprudence of the mine boss in propping the roof up, he was as to him a coservant, and even though the jury might have been satisfied that the mine boss was negligent and failed to use proper care, the plaintiff could not recover.
A ruling made by the court respecting the introduction of testimony calls for attention. Whether, standing alone, it would be enough to reverse the case, we do not decide; but if is clearly a rule of evidence, and is noted to prevent the
Another matter to which our attention is directed, and on which error is predicated, springs from the proof which the plaintiff offered respecting what he insisted were the possibilities of promotion and advancément for his deceased son. The company promptly objected, but the court permitted the plaintiff to prove the different classes of employés which ordinarily work in a coal mine, and the usual wages which they receive. Such proof is altogether too problematical and uncertain as a basis of damages. There are always possibilities of promotion and advancement for every person. Whether any given person will reap the harvest depends on his personal qualities, his industry, his zeal, and the duration of his life. It is impossible, in the nature of things, for proof to be introduced which shall cover the various elements in the problem. As courts have held in similar cases, all evidence of this description is entirely inadmissible. Richmond & Danville R. R. Co. v. Elliott, 149 U. S. 266.
Only one other matter remains to be considei-ed in order to dispose of all the important propositions which have been suggested, and to guide the lower court in the subsequent trial. This relates to the measure of damages. It will be
The difficulty experienced respects the proof offered to show the pecuniary injury. It is not generally laid down that tables recognized as authority by which to settle the expectancy of the lives of the plaintiff and the deceased must be introduced in order to give the data on which to compute the loss, and furnish some basis on which the jury can rest their calculation. It is often slender and generally unsatisfactory. When the age of the respective parties is established, the earnings given, the contributions which have been theretofore made stated, or any proof offered of an existing practice of contribution, enough has been laid before the jury to warrant them in computing, according to their own judgment, the loss which has been suffered. This data was furnished in the present case. The evidence tended to show that the son had contributed his wages to the general fund
All of the various errors complained of have been considered, and we conclude the case was not properly tried. The judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.