212 F. 628 | 6th Cir. | 1914
Plaintiff brought suit to recover for injuries suffered by him while engaged with another workman in taking out “bottom” coal in an entry of defendant’s mine, the injury being caused by the fall from the roof of a “pot” of slate or soapstone weighing several hundred pounds. The defendant was alleged to be negligent in failing to prop up or support the roof of the mine in any way.
Section 6871 of the Revised Statutes of Ohio, then in force, provided that:
"Any miner or other person, employed in any mine governed by the statute, who intentionally and willfully neglects or refuses to securely prop the roof of any working place under his control, * * * for fifteen feet back from the face of his working place, * * * shall be Shed not less than fifty dollars, or imprisoned in the county jail not more than thirty days, or both. The owner, agent, or operator of every coal mine shall keep a supply of timber constantly on hand, and shall deliver the same to the working place of the miner, and no miner shall be held responsible for accidents which may occur in mines where the provisions of this section have not been complied with by the owner, agent, or operator thereof.”
The Supreme Court of Ohio has held that the statutory policy established by section 6871 and related sections imposes the duty to prop the roof of a “room” upon the miner in control thereof; that this duty cannot be shifted to another; and that failure to observe the duty defeats recovery (Coal & Mining Co. v. Administrator of Clay, 51 Ohio St. 542, 555, 38 N. E. 610, 25 L. R. A. 848; Coal Co. v. Donley, 73 Ohio St. 298, 302, 76 N. E. 945); and that, if two miners are equally “in control,” the fact that one is distinguished as “timberman” does not relieve the other of liability (Coal, etc., Co. v. Administrator of Clay, supra, 51 Ohio St. at pages 542, 556, 38 N. E. 610, 25 L. R. A. 848). The state Supreme Court has, however, held that the statute does not apply to “entries”; that, notwithstanding the statute, it is the duty of the owner or the operator to furnish reasonably safe entries for ingress and egress of employés; and that the miners may presume that this duty has been performed (Wellston Coal Co. v. Smith, 65 Ohio St. 70, 82, 61 N. E. 143, 55 L. R. A. 99, 87 Am. St. Rep. 547; Davis v. Turner, 69 Ohio St. 102, 119, 68 N. E. 819).
At the conclusion of the 'testimony, the District Court held that, as matter of law, the place where plaintiff was at work was not an “entry,” but was a “room”; that the room was under plaintiff’s control, within the meaning of the statute; that the place of the accident was within 15 feet from the face of the coal; that it was accordingly the plaintiff’s duty to prop the roof, and he having thus, disobeyed the
Turning first to the relative duties of the parties in the absence of statute: The evidence construed most favorably to plaintiff, as it must be on motion to direct verdict, would sustain findings of fact substantially as follows: In carrying forward the entry the cutting had been done by a machine operated by the company, and the “shooting down,” loading, and removal done by the “fillers,” whose work (which was done by the ton) had been completed, as respects the extension in question, at least a few days previous to the accident. The machine does not cut quite down to the underlying fire clay; when the thickness of coal left is not more than four inches it is the duty of the fillers to remove it, when the thickness is greater the company has to do it. The “bottom” coal in this case was 12 to 15 inches thick, and had to be removed before the machine could be used in further extending the entry. Plaintiff had been for about a year in defendant’s employ, working by the day as electrical wire hanger and general repairman. He had had considerable experience, at intervals extending over a number of years, in various kinds of coal-mining work, although mining seems, not to have been his principal business. He had never done any mining for the defendant company or in the mine in question. On the morning of the accident, the mine foreman (who was overseer of all inside mining operations) met plaintiff near the mouth of the mine, ascertained that he had probably nothing to do that day, and asked how he would like to go with one Andrews to take out bottom coal in the entry in question. Plaintiff assented. The foreman, Andrews, and plaintiff went together into the entry, where the foreman pointed out the coal which he directed to be taken up, suggesting that the best way to get it out was to first cut a trench on each side of the entry through to the fire clay, and then take out the intervening bottom by sledge and wedge. The foreman remained until the work of cutting the trenches wás well under way and then left, telling Andrews, “when you get this done, come down to the mouth of this entry,” but giving no further instructions to plaintiff. The foreman did not return until after the accident. After plaintiff and Andrews had worked an hour or more, the “pot” fell and struck plaintiff. Andrews’ ordinary employment was that of timberman, whose duties are to “take down loose slate if he finds it or timber it up if he finds it needs to be timbered.” In the regular process of mining the posting and timbering up is done before the coal is shot down. The entry at the place where the work was being done was not timbered, no suggestion of timbering was made, nor was there testimony of any custom that those taking our bottom coal were to assume the duty of timbering. Plaintiff was permitted to show that when bottom coal is being taken out more than 15 or 16 feet back from where mining had been going on the overseer should test the
In the McFarland Case, supra, the decedent, while shoveling out ore, was killed by the falling of rock and slate from the roof, which seems to have been previously held in place by the accumulated body of ore; the fall resulting from the removal of the support thereby occasioned. It was held that the doctrine of a safe place to work was applicable, for the reason that the decedent “was not employed to do work which necessarily changed the character of the place for safety. The evidence discloses no conscious employment of that kind.” There, in fact, the work seems to have changed the character
Returning then to the statute; Unless the working place in ques
The case of Ashland Coal, etc., Co. v. Wallace, supra, involved a statute of Kentucky, which imposed a fine on “any person employed in any mine governed by this statute, who intentionally or willfully neglects or refuses to securely prop the roof of any working place under his control.” The Court of Appeals of Kentucky construed this statute as “specially intended to refer to those persons actually engaged as miners, in taking out coal, and thereby removing the natural props of the roof, and that it has no application to persons who are specially employed, as was the plaintiff in this case, to perform duties which had no connection in any way with the weakening or removal of these natural supports.” We do not decide whether the distinctively criminal Ohio statute should be similarly construed, as plaintiff in error has not raised the question. As the case must be tried again, we content ourselves with saying that taking into account the nature of plaintiff’s usual employment at the mine, the circumstances under which he was assigned to this particular work, the extent to which the room had already been completed, the specific directions given by the foreman, and the latter’s connection with the work, the defense that plaintiff was in control of the room in the statutory sense presented, at the most, a question of fact for the jury.
In view of these conclusions, we find it unnecessary to discuss the other questions which have been argued.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.