184 P. 836 | Mont. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant, Granite Bi-Metallic Consolidated Mining Company, owned and operated the Granite mine, near Phillipsburg,
It is charged in the complaint that the defendant, by its engineer, was guilty of negligence in moving the cage before the signal was completed, and that this negligence proximately caused the injury. By its answer defendant denied any negligence on the part of the engineer, and alleged that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in that *he stood with one foot on the cage and the other on the floor of the station while giving the signal to hoist. In his reply plaintiff admitted that he stood with one foot on the cage and the other on the floor of the station, but denied that he was guilty of negligence in so doing.
The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, and from the judgment entered thereon and from an order denying it a new trial defendant appealed.
For the purpose of this case it is immaterial whether plaintiff
Plaintiff and McDonald testified that plaintiff had given one
The engineer based his conclusion that the signal was complete upon the fact that he observed the bell cord slacken, and not upon the fact that he waited a reasonable time to ascertain whether the bell would be sounded again. The rules and regulations of the mining inspector were binding upon defendant and its engineer (see. 1724, Bev. Codes), and for damages proximately caused by the unauthorized act of the engineer, in substituting a code of his own, the defendant is liable (5 Labatt on Master & Servant, sec. 1888). In other words, a violation of the prescribed code constituted legal negligence. (Melville v. Butte-Balaklava Copper Co., 47 Mont. 1, 130 Pac. 441.)
It is not seriously contended, however, that the evidence is insufficient to prove negligence on the part of the engineer. The principal contention is that the admission in the reply and
The evidence introduced by plaintiff was to the effect that the position assumed by him while giving the signal (one foot on the cage and the other on the floor of the station) was the position assumed by careful, prudent, experienced miners generally while performing that task in the Granite mine. There is a conflict in the evidence upon this subject, but that conflict it was the peculiar province of the jury to resolve.
It is said by appellant that the position assumed by plaintiff was fraught with danger, while there was available to him another method of performing the service, which was safe, or at least less dangerous than the method which he pursued. It will not do to say that because plaintiff placed himself in a position of danger he may not recover in this action. All under-) ground mining operations are dangerous. If, however, the
In the application of the rule of choice of ways, and
The rule is well established, in reason and authority, that
Error is predicated uporn the refusal of the court to give defendant’s offered instructions I, K and L. The subject matter of I and K (choice of ways) was fully covered by instructions 13 and 14, given by the court. There are also objections to the phraseology employed in each of these offered instructions.
While we may agree with counsel that the slightest want of ordinary care on the part of plaintiff would constitute negligence, we do not agree with the conclusion presumably to be
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.