220 F. 813 | 4th Cir. | 1915
This is an action for personal injuries received by the plaintiff in error (plaintiff below) as the result of a singular accident. The defendant operates a coal mine on Cabin creek, Kanawha county, W. Va., the opening of which is on a steep
On the day of the accident, the plaintiff, who had been at work only a week, and a man by the name of Stover, were directed by the mine boss to go- up on this tramroad to get a barrel of oil and take it up to the top of the hill to the mine. It appears that this barrel of oil had rolled off the car, while being taken up* the day before, and had lodged on the ground near the tramroad about 25 yards from its top. Two other men, Green and Adams, were sent from the drum-house, at the head of the other incline, to assist in loading the barrel, and for that purpose took from a stock of car timber at the drum-house an oak plank, about 12 feet long, 12 inches wide, and 2 inches thick, which they carried on their shoulders some 75 yards around the hillside to the head of the incline in question, intending to take it down on the car to the barrel and then roll the barrel on it up onto the car. Just as they got to the head of this incline, one of the men slipped, and the other being unable to hold the plank, which is said to have weighed about 96 pounds, it escaped from their control and went “tearing down the hill” towards the ascending car, on which the plaintiff and Stover were seated. The car had gone about half way up to the top when the plank began its swift descent down the incline. When the plank fell, one of the men who had been carrying it gave out a warning cry, and the man at the hoisthouse, seeing the plank coming, put on the brake to stop the car. It seems that at or about the same moment the plank was seen by the men on the car, and Stover called to the plaintiff to jump. Both of them jumped when the plank was 30 to 50 feet away, Stover first and the plaintiff immediately afterwards. The plank had been coming down on or between the rails, 'but presently took a different course, probably because the sudden stopping of the car jerked up the cable, which threw the plank off the track, and kept on its downward flight alongside the tramroad. It happened to hit the plaintiff, either as he was jumping or about the instant he struck the ground, and he was severely injured; one of his legs being so badly broken as to require amputation above the knee.
There is no sustainable basis for this contention. All that appeared about the plank was its material and dimensions," and the fact that two men carried it on their shoulders some 75 yards from the drumhouse to the point where they unfortunately let it fall. But this proof would not warrant' the inference that the plank was unsuitable for the work to be done. Indeed, the presumption would seem to be the other way, when account is taken of the weight of this barrel of oil and the place from which it was to be extricated. Moreover, it was not shown that the mine boss directed the use of the plank, or had any knowledge that it was taken by the men sent to get the barrel. The most that can be said about it, if anything, is that they made an error of judgment; but, even if this be assumed, it was a mistake for which the defendant is not liable.
Taking the entire testimony, as we do, in the aspect most favorable to the plaintiff, we think it clear that nothing was shown which permitted an inference of negligence on the part of the defendant. Indeed, we do not perceive any ground upon which Green and Adams, fellow servants of the plaintiff, could be deemed at fault; and, if they were not negligent, the defendant surely cannot be held responsible because they failed to keep the plank from falling down the incline.. We have examined all the authorities cited in the brief of plaintiff’s counsel, including those referred to in his supplemental memorandum; but none of them goes to the extent of upholding a recovery upon the facts which the plaintiff proved or offered to prove in this case. With the sympathy which his disabled condition naturally excites, we have scrutinized the record, with especial care, but are impelled to the conclusion that he failed to make out a case which would warrant a jury in finding the defendant guilty of negligence, and we are therefore of opinion that the verdict in its favor was properly directed. The rule of law which is believed to have controlling application to the facts here presented is stated in 26 Cyc. 1092, as follows:
The record discloses no reversible error, and the judgment appealed from will therefore be affirmed.