Elkton Consolidated Mining & Milling Co. v. Sullivan

41 Colo. 241 | Colo. | 1907

Mr. Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellees, plaintiffs below, brought suit against tbe appellant, as defendant, to recover damages for tbe death of tbeir son, alleged to bave been caused by tbe negligence of defendant. Tbe deceased was *244in the employ of defendant, and had been for nearly two years, part of the time as a trammer under ground, and on' the surface, and for about one-third of that period part of his duties had been to gather up drills, or steel, in the several levels of the mine, and assist in bringing the same to the surface, to be sharpened. For a considerable period prior to the day of his death, one of his duties had been to bring up steel of the character mentioned, some of the witnesses stating that he had been so employed for five days, and others, for about a month prior to his death. In performing these duties he rode on a cage operated through the shaft on the property of the defendant. This shaft was divided into three compartments, separated from each other by timbers. In two of these compartments cages were maintained, the one in the middle compartment being the larger. This cage consisted of two decks, seven feet apart. There was no inclosure or railing around it, except the braces and uprights holding it together, so that, practically, each deck was an uninclosed platform. Bunning up- and down each side of the compartment in which this cage worked were guides, along which shoes attached to the cage ran, the top of the shoes being about six feet above the floor of the upper deck.

On the day of his injury deceased entered the upper deck of this cage on the fourth level, with several drills which he held in his arms. One of these pieces of steel fell and caught in the plates or timbers of the shaft in which the cage was operated, whereby he was thrown against the wall of the shaft, crushed by the cage, and fell to the bottom. The injuries thus received caused his death.

The negligence upon which plaintiffs relied to establish their cause of action, as stated in their complaint, was substantially as follows:

*245(1) The horizontal plates in the shaft in which the cage was operated- were next to the cage and wholly uncovered, so that anything protruding from the cage, while ascending, could catch under and against these plates.

(2) That the partition between the two compartments in which the cages were operated was similarly constructed,

(3) As stated in the complaint: “At a point about midway between the fourth level of said mine and the surface thereof, there was, on said day, a rough jog, bend, or misplaced joint, in the guides of said cage and shaft, which caused a jar or jerk to said cage, in passing over said jog, bend or joint.”

(4) That about thirty days prior to the day when deceased was injured, the defendant negligently disconnected the electric bell apparatus, then in operation on the cage, and by means of - which the eager, when this appliance was in order, could instantly signal the engineer, and instantly cause the cage to stop when ascending, and thereafter negligently caused the eager to use a rope signal, which was insufficient with which to signal the engineer, and which it was difficult, and next to impossible, for the eager to- reach when the cage-was ascending.

(5) That long prior to the date when deceased was killed, the defendant had failed and neglected to promulgate and enforce rules providing for ordinary care and safety in the handling of steel and drills on the cage, but, on the contrary, through its officers, had for a long time prior consented, permitted and directed that drills or steel might be carried upon the cage unlashed.

The complaint then recites that the deceased, while attending to his duties as a trammer, was directed to gather up drills in the several levels of the mine, and assist in bringing them to the surface, *246and in performing this service, entered the cage at the fourth level, with several drills or pieces of steel which he held in his arms, as directed by appellant; “that thereupon the said eager directed said cage to he hoisted to the surface of said mine, and that at or about the said jog, bend or misplaced joint, the said cage was shaken or jarred, and which, as these plaintiffs are informed and believe, thereby caused a piece of steel to slip from the grasp of Sullivan, and catch in or against one of said exposed horizontal plates or timbers, of said defective shaft,” whereby, in connection with the other acts of negligence charged, the deceased was thrown and caught between the shaft timbers and the cage, and killed.

The answer admitted that deceased was in the employ of defendant; that he entered the cage with several pieces of steel unlashed; that while he was ascending in the cage he was killed; that the horizontal plates to which the timber lining the shaft was fastened were inside, and next to the cage; that there were maintained between the compartments of the shaft horizontal timbers set about five feet apart; and that the electric bell apparatus was disconnected, and a rope signal substituted therefor. All other allegations in the complaint were denied, and defendants alleged contributory negligence and assumption of risk on the part of the deceased.

At the close of the evidence for plaintiffs, and again after all the evidence was in, the defendant moved the court to direct a verdict for the defendant, both of which motions were overruled. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs, upon which judgment was rendered. From this judgment the defendant appeals. Errors are assigned on the rulings of the court denying the motions for a directed verdict, and also on the reception and rejection of testimony, and on instructions given and refused.

*247The first act of negligence charged related to the manner of lining the shaft in which the cage in question was operated. Counsel for defendant contend that there is not a scintilla of evidence- showing, or in the remotest degree tending to show, that the shaft was negligently lined, and challenged counsel for plaintiffs to point out anything in the record that contradicts this statement. In their brief counsel for plaintiffs fail to notice this contention, and we must, therefore, assume that the claim of counsel for defendant is correct.

The next allegation of negligence relates to' the failure to provide a suitable partition between the compartments of the shaft. Evidently there was no evidence to support this allegation, for it was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury by an instruction to that effect.

The important question presented for determination is the one with respect to the jog in the guides along which the shoes attached to the cage ran, because, it is contended by counsel for plaintiffs, it was the jar of the cage, caused by this jog, which threw the steel from the grasp of deceased. That there was a jog in the guides we think is clearly established from the testimony, or, at least, there was sufficient on that subject to justify submitting that question to the jury, provided it appears that it so jarred the cage in its ascent that it could be said such jar caused the steel to fall from the arms of the deceased. Its location, therefore, is important. Several witnesses testified that it was located somewhere between the four-hundred and the one-hundred-foot- levels; others that it was between the three-hundred and the one-hundred-foot levels. It will be observed .that it was alleged in the complaint that it was located about midway between the fourth level of the mine and the surface thereof. This would place it, approximately, *248at the two-hundred-foot level. The only witnesses who located it definitely say it was right at the floor of that level. From this résumé of the testimony bearing on the subject, we think it appears beyond dispute that the jog mentioned in the complaint was located at the floor of the two-hundred-foot level.

The next important question is the point in the shaft where the wreck of the cage occurred. It appears from the testimony, without dispute, that the steel which fell from the arms of deceased and wrecked the cage, or threw him against the walls of the shaft so that he was crushed and fell to the bottom, caught in the timbers of the shaft between twenty and thirty feet below the floor of the two-hundred-foot level. This is established by witnesses who testified that shortly after the wreck they examined the timbers and found marks thereon made by the steel at about that point in the shaft. The eager, whu was on the same platform with deceased, says that immediately after the steel fell, it caught in the timbers, and that at the time it fell the cage was not jarred or jerked, but was running smoothly. Tt also appears from the testimony that the cage was stopped with the deck upon which the eager and deceased stood about one foot above the floor of the two-hundred-foot level. The shoes attached to the cage which ran in the guides were about six feet above the floor of the upper deck. Clearly, then, this jog could not have caused the casualty, because of the fact that the steel fell from the grasps of deceased when the cáge, in its ascent, was so far below it that it could not have occasioned any jar of the cage. It appears, then, that the acts of negligence charged in the complaint, so far considered, were not proved; consequently, no cause of action based thereon was established.

The mere fact that deceased was killed while in *249the discharge of his duties does not raise the presumption that the negligence of his employer was the cause of.his death. In other words, where the evidence leaves the cause of an injury unproved, it cannot be attributed to defendant’s negligence or fault.—Borden v. Del., L. & W. R. Co., 131 N. Y. 671; Sauer v. Union Oil Co., 9 Southern (La.) 566; Sorensen, Admr., v. The Menasha Paper & Pulp Co., 56 Wis. 338; Wintuska’s Admr. v. L. & M. R. Co., 20 S. W. (Ky.) 819.

It is suggested by counsel for plaintiffs that the location of the cage in the shaft at the two-hundred-foot level ma.y be accounted for by the fact that it dropped back after being stopped by the engineer. The cage weighed something over a ton, and there is no proof that its momentum was so great at the time of the casualty that after the power by which it was being raised was shut off, the mechanism by which it was hoisted was such that it would continue to ascend for a distance and then drop back. A fact will not be presumed which there is no testimony to establish. Mere conjecture cannot be resorted to, to supply the place of either direct or inferential proof.

It is also argued by counsel for plaintiffs that because witnesses testified they noticed that the cage was jarred in ascending or descending somewhere between the four-hundred-foot level and the surface, that, therefore, it might be inferred that the jog which we have said the testimony establishes was located at the two-hundred-foot level may have caused the cage to jar above or below that point. There are two reasons why this contention is not tenable: (1) The jog referred to was caused by the timbers to which the guide plates were attached slipping at or near the floor of the two-hundred-foot level. This displacement did not affect the cage guides either above or below the jog. Then, again, the testimony is un*250disputed that at the time the steel fell from the arms of deceased, the cage was running smoothly.' (2) The effect of the jog, as alleged in the complaint, was to cause a jar or jerk of the cage in passing over the jog, and not to cause it to jar or jerk at any other point. •

In an action for negligence, the plaintiff must be confined to the acts of negligence alleged, and the results thereof, whereby injury was caused, as stated in his complaint.

It appears that the defendant had installed an electric bell with appliances whereby the engineer could be signalled by the eager when upon the cage; that in addition, there was a bell which could be operated by the eager when the cage was in motion, by means of a rope suspended in the shaft. It appears that a signal to the engineer could be given more, quickly by means of the electric apparatus than the rope. It was not in working order on the day the deceased was injured, and for this reason it is urged that the defendant was guilty of negligence. We do not deem it necessary to enter into a discussion of the question of whether or not, in a proper case, the defendant might be regarded as guilty of negligence in not having the electric bell in condition for the eager to signal the engineer, because, whatever might be the conclusion on that point, it is immaterial in the present case. It is manifest that the inability of the eager to signal the engineer by means of the electric bell did not, in the slightest degree, contribute to the injury of the deceased. According to the undisputed testimony, the steel which fell from his arms immediately caught in the lining of the shaft, and that the shock thus caused instantly communicated to the engineer the information that something was wrong, who thereupon stopped the cage as soon as it was possible for him to do go. So that he was in*251formed by the shock caused from.the steel catching-in the timbers, that the cage should be stopped just as quickly as though that information had been conveyed by means of an electric signal, and acted accordingly.

Failure of an employer to- exercise reasonable care to- provide reasonably safe appliances to guard against injury to his employees is not actionable unless it appears that such failure was the cause of an injury.

For some time prior to the date deceased was killed, the defendant had promulgated a rule with respect to carrying steel in the cage. This rule was as follows: “All mining tools must be in ears or lashed on the cage. Men must not carry them loose in their arms.” The negligence upon which plaintiffs rely with respect to this matter is, that the company failed to enforce the rule. There is a conflict in the testimony as to the extent this rule was enforced, it being the contention of counsel for plaintiffs, that it had been abrogated, while on behalf of defendant counsel contend that it had not. It does appear that for a time after the rule was first posted it was implicitly obeyed. We do not think it is necessary, however, to enter upon a discussion of what the evidence may disclose with respect to- the enforcement of the rule, because that question cannot affect the rights of either of the parties- to this action. Neither shall we undertake to determine whether the failure of deceased to observe the rule was contributory negligence, as contended by counsel for defendant. The rule with respect to the manner in which tools should be carried in the cage was posted so conspicuously that employees could not fail to have noticed it. This, of itself, was a warning- to them that to carry steel in the cage other than in the manner designated by the rule was dangerous. A rope for *252the purpose of lashing it had been provided by the defendant, and placed in the cage, and was there at the time the deceased entered the cage with the steel in his arms. The danger of carrying steel in the cage, except it was secured, was obvious to any person of reasonable intelligence. It was apparent that if steel being carried in the cage caught in the lining or timbers of the shaft, the result would be to wreck the cage, and probably injure its occupants. The deceased was a young man, twenty-one years of age. He had been employed in the mine of defendant, as we have stated, nearly two years, and for a considerable period prior to his injury, his duties were to collect and carry steel on the cage from the workings of the mine to the surface. An employee assumes the ordinary risks and dangers incident to the employment upon which he enters, and in which he continues, which are known to him, or which he might have ascertained as a person of ordinary prudence in his situation, by the exercise of ordinary care upon his part.—Denver Tramway Co. v. Nesbitt, 22 Colo. 408; Iowa G. M. Co. v. Diefenthaler, 32 Colo. 391; St. L. Cordage Co. v. Miller, 126 Fed. 595.

It is urged by counsel for plaintiffs that the manner in which deceased carried the steel should not excuse the defendant company, because the eager was a- vice-principal, and it was his duty to warn the deceased that this particular method of carrying the steel was dangerous, or was not a proper method to carry it, and that it was also his duty to see that the rule requiring steel to be lashed to the cage was enforced. This contention is without merit. Prom the record before us, it must be presumed that deceased was aware of the danger of carrying the steel unlashed. It is apparent from the record that the eager had no control over the deceased, nor did *253he attempt to exercise any. Neither does it appear that he had any authority to control his acts.

It is not necessary to determine the other errors assigned by counsel for the defendant, because it appears from the record that the death of plaintiffs ’ son was not caused by negligence of the defendant. For this reason the judgment of the district court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, and it is so ordered, with leave to plaintiffs to amend their complaint, if so advised.

Reversed and remanded.

Chief Justice Steele and Mr. Justice Maxwell concur.