67 F. 507 | 8th Cir. | 1895
Lead Opinion
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
In granting the motion of the mining company to direct a verdict in its favor, Judge Hallett, who tried this case in the court below, declared that it was immaterial in his opinion whether the foreman was or was not a vice principal of the company, and that if he had been its president there would have been no evidence of negligence in
It is tbe general rule that it is the duty of the master to exercise •ordinary care to provide a reasonably safe place in which the servant may perform his service. Railway Co. v. Jarvi, 53 Fed. 65, 3 C. C. A. 433, 10 U. S. App. 439. But this rule cannot be justly applied to cases in which the very work the servants are employed to do consists in making a dangerous place safe, or in constantly changing the character of the place for safety as the work progresses. The duty of the master does not extend to keeping such a place safe at «very moment of time as the work progresses. The servant assumes the ordinary risks and dangers of his employment that are known to him, and those that might be known to him by tbe exercise of ordinary care and foreseight. When he engages in the work of making a place that is known to be dangerous, safe, or in a work that in its progress necessarily changes the character for safety of the place in which it is performed as the work progresses, the hazard of the dangerous place and the increased hazard of the place made dangerous by the work are the ordinary and known dangers of such a place, and by bis acceptance of the employment the servant necessarily assumes them. Armour v. Hahn, 111 U. S. 313, 318, 4 Sup. Ct. 433; City of Minneapolis v. Lundin, 58 Fed. 525, 529, 7 C. C. A. 344, 19 U. S. App. 245; Railway Co. v. Jackson, 12 C. C. A. 507, 65 Fed. 48. In Armour v. Hahn, supra, the foreman of the carpenters at work upon a building in process of erection directed two of them to push a joist out to the end of timbers which rested upon and projected 16 inches beyond , the wall of tbe building. One of the carpenters in obeying this order stepped on the projecting part of one of tbe timbers, which tipped up, and he fell, and was injured. Mr. Justice Gray, in delivering the opinion of the supreme court, said:
“There is no evidence tending to prove any negligence on the part of the firm of which the defendant was a member, or of their superintendent, or of the foreman of the gang of carpenters. Tbe obligation of a master to provide reasonably safe places and structures for his servants to work upon does not impose upon him the duty, as towards them, of keeping a building, which they are employed in erecting, in a safe condition at every moment of their work, so far as its safety depends upon the due performance of that work by them and their fellows.”
In City of Minneapolis v. Lundin, supra, a servant was hurt while at work in the construction of a sewer, because tbe place in which he was injured had been made dangerous by tbe prosecution of the work. This court declared that:
“The comparative safety of the place where each man worked was necessarily constantly varied by the progress of tbe work, and tbe duty of tbe master did not extend to keeping every place where each workman labored safe at every moment of its progress.”
And in Railway Co. v. Jackson, supra, a servant was employed by a railroad company to assist in taking up and removing a railroad
“It frequently happens that, men are employed to tear down buildings or other structures, or to repair them after they have become insecure, or, it may be, that the work undertaken by the employé is of a kind that is calculated to render the premises or place of performance for the time being to some extent insecure. In cases such as these the servant undoubtedly assumes the increased hazard growing ont of the defective or insecure condition of the place where he is required to exercise his calling, and the doctrine above stated cannot be properly applied.”
These cases warrant the instruction given by the court below. Austin and Pinalyson were engaged in sloping ont ore and timbering the space opened by tbe sloping. The Wasting necessarily made the place opened by it insecure. There was constant danger of the fall o f material loosened by the blast. The mass which fell was not visible or dangerous until the morning blast disclosed it. Not only this, but it was probably the very work of making this place safe, that Pinalyson himself performed, that was the immediate cause of the accident. The gouge had resisted the efforts of woxkmen with picks, but it was doubtless loosened from its place by tbe jarring of the foot wall apon which it rested by Pinalyson’s drilling. It was not the negligence of the company or its foreman, but the necessary progress of ibis work, that made the place dangerous, and the dangers from the fall of these loosened materials, which some one must take in order that the timber should be placed in the mine at all, Pinalyson voluntarily assumed when he entered upon this employment.
The case of Railway Co. v. Jarvi, 3 C. C. A. 433, 53 Fed. 65, 70, cited by appellant, was not of this character. In that case a miner, who was working about a hundred yards from the place in which lie was injured, went out through a passageway to get a car, and was injured by a rock which fell from the roof of the slope as he was passing under it. It was necessary for him to pass under this roof to get his cars and to go to and from Ms work. The railway company knew that this roof was composed of treacherous rock, and that it was a roof that might possibly fall and that needed watching. The only way such a roof could be properly tested was by sounding it with the hand or with a pick or cane, and there was no evidence that this roof had been so tested for weeks. Upon this state of facts this court held that there was some evidence of negligence on the part of the company, and applied to the case the rule of “safe place.” Bui the roof which fell in that case had long been completed by the rail way company, and was furnished to Jarvi as a safe cover for a way through which Ms duties required him to pass. He had no work to perform in making it safe, or in changing the character for safety in
There is another reason wrky this case is not ruled by the Jarvi Case, and it is that this record discloses no evidence of negligence of the company or its foreman that would warrant a verdict. The negligence which charged the railway company in the Jarvi Case was its failure to inspect and sound with the hand or with a pick or cane the roof of a finished way through which its employés were constantly passing. There was no such negligence in the case at bar. Both the foreman and the man who was engaged in blasting tested with a pick the mass which fell upon Finalyson, and strove vigorously but in vain to bring it down, within an hour of the accident that befell him. It is only an injury that could have been foreseen and reasonably anticipated as the natural and probable result of an act of negligence that is actionable. Railway Co. v. Elliott, 5 C. C. A. 347, 55 Fed. 949; Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469; Hoag v. Railroad Co., 85 Pa. St. 293, 298, 299.
Who that had tried with a pick to break off from the foot wall and bring down this 1,200 pounds of earth, and had tried in vain, could have reasonably anticipated that it would fall of its own weight within an hour? It is true that one witness, Austin, says that he was not satisfied with the trial, and thought it might fall at any time, but he testifies that he did not after the trial make this statement to the foreman nor to Finalyson. The following is a portion of his cross-examination :
“Q. From tlie time you went there, one o’clock to two o’clock, what were you doing? A. I was picking down the shot. Q. Trying to get this mass down, and did not succeed? A. Yes; and Mr. Talbert. Q. How long did Mr. Talbert work at it trying to get it down? A. A minuto or so. Q. And could he get it down? A. No, sir. Q. What did Mr. Talbert say about it, now? A. He says, ‘There is lots of time; if we shoot that we lose this smelting ore that is alongside of it.’ Q. What else? A. Then we started. Q. I mean is that all he said then? A. That is all he said then. Q. Didn’t you and he discuss the question whether it was likely to fall or not? A. No, sir.- Q. Nothing said about it? A. No, sir; not to my knowledge. Q. After you had tried it that way, you were both satisfied it was not likely to fall, was not you? A. No, sir; I was not satisfied, because I thought it might fall any time. Q. Did you think it was dangerous, and likely to fall then? A. Yes, sir; if I did not I would not want to put this hole in. Q. You went and sat right*513 down where it could fall on your body? A. Yes, sir; afterwards. Q. Although you thought at that time, it was liable to fall any time? A. I was not sitting. Q. You say there was not anything said between you it was no!; likely to fall after you tried it? A. No, sir; not to my knowledge. Q. You wont and stood where it could fall on your body, and Talbert went and stood where it could fall on him, didn’t he? A. Yes, sir.”
Actions speak louder and more truthfully than words, and the acts of Austin and the foreman conclusively prove to our minds that they did not anticipate any such result as ihe fall of this mass of earth. They stationed themselves at work opposite and beneath it, so that if it fell it must strike their bodies, unless they could fortunately jump from under it. Finalyson evidently did not anticipate its fall, if he had, he would not have seated himself beneath it to drill a hole that was aside from it, and that he might have drilled as well from its opposite side, where the falling mass could not have struck Mm. After a careful perusal of all the evidence in this case, we are of the opinion that there is none here that would sustain a verdict that this company or the foreman was guilty of any negligence that a man of ordinary prudence could have reasonably anticipated would result in this injury. The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The majority opinion does not question the fact that Talbert, the foreman of the mine, was a vice principal of the mining company, and upon that question, therefore, there is no difference of opinion.
The first question to be decided is; What duty does a mining company owe its employes who are engaged in carrying on the work of mining, underground? This is not a new question in this court. In the case of Railway Co. v. Jarvi, 3 C. C. A. 433, 53 Fed. 65, a miner was injured by the fall of a rock from the roof of the mine, and, in affirming judgment he had recovered for the injury he received, this court, in defining the duty of a mining company to its employés, said;
“It is the duty of the employer to exercise ordinary care to provide a reasonably safe place in which his employ!) may perform his service. It is his duty to use diligence to keep this.place in a reasonably sale condition, so that his servant may not be exposed to unnecessary and unreasonable risks. The care and diligence required, of the master is such as a reasonably prudent man would exercise under like circumstances in order to protect his servants from injury. It must be commensurate with the character of the service required, and with the dangers that a reasonably prudent man would apprehend under the circumstances of each particular case. Obviously, a far higher degree of care and diligence is demanded of the master who places his servant at work digging coal beneath overhanging masses of rock and earth in a mine than of him who places his employe on the surface of the earth, where danger from superincumbent masses is not to be apprehended. A reasonably prudent man would exercise greater care and watchfulness in the former than in the latter case, and, throughout all the varied occupations of mankind, the greater the danger that a reasonably intelligent and prudent man would apprehend, the higher is the degree of care and diligence the law requires of the master in the protection of the servant. For a failure to exercise this care, resulting in the injury of the employé, the employer is liable; and this duty and liability extend, not only to the unreasonable and unnecessary risks that are known to the employer, but to such as a reasonably prudent man in the exercise of ordinary' diligence— diligence proportionate to the occasion—would have known and apprehended. Cook v. Railroad Co., 34 Minn. 45, 24 N. W. 311; Hayden v. Manufacturing Co., 29 Conn. 548; Noyes v. Smith, 28 Vt. 59; Gibson v. Railroad*514 Co., 46 Mo. 163; Nadau v. Lumber Co. (Wis.) 43 N. W. 1135, 1137; Hutchinson v. Railroad Co., 5 Exch. 343; Huddleston v. Machine Shop, 106 Mass. 282; Snow v. Railroad Co., 8 Allen, 441; Sullivan v. Manufacturing Co., 113 Mass. 396; Ryan v. Fowler, 24 N. Y. 410; Patterson v. Railway Co., 76 Pa. St. 389; Swoboda v. Ward, 40 Mich. 420.”
And after stating that it is the duty of the servant to exercise that degree of care which a reasonably prudent person would employ under like circumstances in order to protect himself from injury, the opinion proceeds:
“But the degrees of care in the use of a place in which work is to be done, or in the use of other instrumentalities for its performance, required of the master and servant in a particular case, may be, and generally are, widely different. Each is required to exercise that degree of care in the performance of his duty which a reasonably prudent person would use under like circumstances; but the circumstances in which the master is placed are generally so widely different from those surrounding the servant, and the primary duty of using care to furnish a reasonably safe place for others is so much higher than the duty of the servant to use reasonable care to protect himself in a ease where the primary duty of providing a safe place or safe machinery rests on the master that a reasonably prudent person would ordinarily use a higher degree of care to keep the place of work reasonably safe if placed in the position of the master who furnishes it than if placed in that of the servant who occupies it. Of the master is required a care and diligence in the preparation and subsequent inspection of such a place as a room in a mine that is not, in the first instance, demanded of the servant. The former must watch, inspect, and care for the slopes through which and in which the servants work as a person charged with the duty of keeping them reasonably safe would do. The latter has a right to presume, when directed to work in a particular place, that the master has performed his duty, and to proceed with his work in reliance upon this assumption, unless a reasonably prudent and intelligent man, in the performance of his work as a miner, would have learned facts from which he would have apprehended danger to himself. Russell v. Railway Co., 32 Minn. 230, 20 N. W. 147; Hutchinson v. Railroad Co., 5 Exch. 343; Gibson v. Railroad Co., 46 Mo. 163; Cook v. Railroad Co., 34 Minn. 47, 24 N. W. 311.”
The sound' doctrine on this subject is comprehensively and forcibly stated by Mr. Justice Field in delivering the unanimous judgment of the supreme court in the recent case of Mather v. Rillston, 15 Sup. Ct. 464. That was an action to recover damages for injuries sustained by the plaintiff from the explosion of powder and caps in an iron mine at Ironwood in Michigan, stored in a room in which the plaintiff was working. Expressing the duties and obligations that mine owners owed their employés, the court said:
“All occupations producing articles or works of necessity, utility, or convenience may undoubtedly be carried on, and competent persons, familiar with the business and having sufficient skill therein, may properly be employed upon them; but in, such cases, where the occupation is attended with danger to life, body, or limb, it is incumbent on the promoters thereof, and the employers of others thereon, to take all reasonable and needed precautions to secure safety to the persons engaged in their prosecution; and for any negligence in this respect, from which injury follows to the persons engaged, the promoters or the employers may be held responsible and mulcted to the extent of the injury inflicted. The explosive nature of the materials used in this case, and the constant danger of their explosion from heat or collision, as already explained, was well known to the employers, and was a continuing admonition to them to take every precaution to guard against explosions. Occupations, however important, which cannot be conducted without necessary danger to life, body, or limb, should not be prosecuted at all without all reasonable precautions against such*515 dangers afforded by science. The necessary danger attending them should operate as a prohibition to their pursuit without such safeguards. Indeed, we think it may be laid down as a legal principle that in all occupations which are attended with gréat and unusual danger there must be used all appliances readily attainable known to science l'or the prevention of accidents, and that the neglect to provide such readily attainable appliances will be regarded as proof of culpable negligence. If an occupation attended with danger can be prosecuted by proper precautions without fatal results, such precautions must be taken by the promoters of the pursuit or employers of laborers thereon. .Liability for injuries following a disregard of such precautions will otherwise be incurred, and this fact, should not be lost sight of. So, too, if persons engaged in dangerous occupations are not. informed of the accompanying dangers by the promoters thereof, or by the employeis of laborers thereon, and such laborers remain in ignorance of the dangers and suffer in consequence, the employers will also be chargeable for the injuries sustained. Both of these positions should be borne constantly in mind by those who engage laborers or agents in dangerous occupations, and by the laborers themselves as reminders of the duty owing to them. These two conditions of liability of parties employing laborers in hazardous occupations are of the highest importance, -and should be in all cases strictly enforced.”
The doctrine that a mining company can send its empioyés into the bowels of the earth to conduct its mining operations without making any provision for the proper supervision and inspection of the mine for the security and protection of the miners and the mine is unsupported by authority, is opposed to sound public policy, and is cruel and inhuman. Miners do undoubtedly take upon themselves all the usual and ordinary risks of the business; but what are these ordinary risks? They are the risks incident to the business when it is conducted by the mine owner according to the customary and approved methods and with due regard to the safety of the miners. The neglect of the mine owner to discharge his duty in this regard is not one of the risks assumed by the miner, but is a negligent act on the part of the mine owner which renders him liable in damages to any miner injured thereby. It is the duty of the mine owner to provide a competent foreman or inspector to superintend the working of the mine; it is the duty of this foreman to direct the miners when and where to work; and it is particularly his duty to make timely inspection of the timbers and walls and roof of the mine in order that no- harm may come to the miners from causes which a capable and diligent inspector would discover, and, when discovered, remove or cause to be removed. Where blasts are used in a mine, it is the imperative duty of the foreman to be diligent in discovering the effect of the blast upon the timbers, walls, and roof of the mine, and to point out to the miners any dangerous conditions resulting from the blast, and to cause these conditions to be removed without delay, by proper appliances and with as little danger to the men as practicable. Mining is a necessary and permanent business, and must be conducted in an intelligent, orderly, and systematic manner, not alone for the protection of the miners, but for the preservation of the mine itsfelf. For these reasons, the business must have an intelligent and competent head. The necessity for this is imperative. When properly conducted, there is no pursuit in the country carried on with greater regularity, system, and order, and with a stricter observance of rules intended to se
“In spite, however, of all the dangers to which miners are exposed, they are less likely to be the victims of accident than railway servants, among whom the rate of fatal accidents varies from 2.5 per 1,000 on passenger traffic lines, to 3.5 per 1,000 on lines possessing a heavy goods traffic.”
The error of the majority of the couft in likening the customary work in a mine to the sudden calling out of men to work after night on the brink of a rapidly rising river, whose bank is caving, to save property from destruction by the flood (Railway Co. v. Jackson, 12 C. C. A. 507, 65 Fed. 48), and other like cases, is too obvious to require discussion. Upon the law applicable to this case the majority opinion is in direct and palpable conflict with the opinion of this court in the case of Railway Co. v. Jarvi, supra, and of the supreme court in the case of Mather v. Rillston, supra, both of which were mining cases, and which lay down the rules applicable to the case at bar. In the case of Railway Co. v. Jarvi, supra, the plaintiff was injured by the fall of a rock from the roof of a mine, and this court held it was a question for the jury to determine whether the company was negligent in not discovering by timely inspection the dangerous character of this rock, and removing same, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and this court refused to disturb that verdict.
The facts of this case disclosed by the record, and material to its decision, are not very voluminous, and the material parts of the testimony will be fully set out in the very language of the only witness who was called to testify to the transaction. This is rendered necessary to correct what I conceive to be a total misconception of the facts in the opinion of the majority of the court. At the time and place of the accident there were present only three persons, namely: Finalyson, who was fatally injured by the accident, the miner Austin, and the defendant’s foreman, John Talbert. Finalyson’s voice is hushed in death, and the defendant declined to put its foreman on the stand, so that on the question of the defendant’s negligence, the case rests solely on the testimony of the witness Austin and the attendant circumstances. In his examination in chief Austin testifies as follows:
“Q. You may state what you were doing in that level just the day of the accident. A. Well, in the forenoon I was drilling a hole, and shot it at dinner time. After I come back after dinner, it opened up some gouge. That left it on the footwall, and it remained there that I could not pull it down. Mr. Talbert came along after I had just all my stuff, the quartz, picked down, he come along. I was just about going to get my drills and hammer for to put in a hole in this gouge, when he come along. I says, to him, ‘That is a treacherous looking chunk, Jack.’ John was his name. And I was going to put the hole in, and he says, ‘You get that down.’ I told him— Took the pick, tried it; could not get it down. Well, he says, if we would shoot this down, we would lose this smelting ore; that was*517 above it. I said no more. So within about twenty minutes, I judge, Mr. Finalyson came along, and he says, ‘John, where am I going to cut this hitch, set it along, so as to leave those stulls level with the rest of the level?’ and he says, finally, ‘On the footwall, just about there.’ Mr. Finalyson went to work, and he scraped clown off of this pile of dirt I had shot down, and ho made a kind of a seat for himself so as to sit down to cut this hitch. Pie was working there, and I was sacking np ore, and Mr. Talbert was standing in between the two of us. I was sitting down, and Mr. Finalyson was sitting down, and Mr. Talbert was standing up in between us, pulling the chunks of ore in with his candlestick. I was sitting down at the time the chunk fell on Mr. Finalyson,—the body of it,—and one end of it fell on my knee; hurt me three or four days. The other end he got most of the weight. He got it all; bruised him right down on his knees; and Mr. Finalyson, all he said was, ‘Take mo out of here.' He says, T am killed.’ Q. Who is this Mr. Talbert, or Jack, you refer to? A. That is the foreman,—underground foreman. Q. How long had Finalyson been at tíre point where the fall occurred before the gouge fell? A. Ho was about half an hour.—twenty minutes,—when tile chunk fell on his back. Q. When you spoke of putting in a hole there— In tire first place, what do you put a hole in for? A. 1 put it in to take this chunk down. Q. What is the practical use cf this hole? What is it for? A. To shoot; in order to take this chunk down, to make himself safe. Q. You put in powder in tire hole, is that the idea? A. Yes, sir; after I get it drilled. Q. Why did you want to put in this hole in this particular placo? A. Because it was a chunk of gouge oil tire footwall. A chunk of gouge, as I was standing on this below, might catch, my feet, and as it was liable to smash my legs from my knees down. I thought it might let go, and roll on to my limbs, and break them. Q. At what time would you say that day had this gouge been disclosed; what hour of the day had this gouge shown up? A. Well, ü showed up— 1 shot at dinner, and tallied, as we all do; and after dinner I carne down, and this gouge was shown, up on the footwall. 1 picked all down but this gouge that was on the footwall. I could not get it down with a pick. I was going to shoot it down. Q. And when did you call Mr. Talbert’s attention to it? A. I would judge it would be about'two o’clock, as near as I can judge. Q. What was this gouge? A. Well, it was part of the vein filling. Q. What was it composed of? A. It was composed of soft, sticky mud, and little bits of quartz, and in among it, mixed in among it, they claim it was good mill ore. Q. Why didn’t he (Finalyson) jump out of the way? A. He had his back to it; he didn’t see it come until it ton on him. Q. Was it necessary for him, in order to cut that hitch? A. He had either to sit down or kneel; he could not stand up. Q. What was the purpose of cutting that hitch? A. For to put in the Stull for to lag over; so as to lag the drift over*. Q. What do you mean by lagging over? A. I mean for to cover the drift closed in. Q. Why did they want to lag if over? A. For to make it safe for men to come along in the drift. Q. I will ask you then what he said, if you recall,—what Talbert said to Finalyson when he came there. A. The words he said—Mr. Finalyson says to Mr. Talbert, ‘Where do you want that hitch cut?’ Mr. Talbert sighted along from the rest of Ore stulls, so as to get a level for to have this stull level with the rest of the stulls that he had put in. He showed him the spot, on the footwall, where he had to cut this hitch. That left Mr. Finalyson with his back against this chunk. Q. I understood you to say that he showed him the spot to cut this hitch? A. Yes, sir.”' On the cross-examination he ‘testified as follows: “Q. And when you went back at noon after firing out the shot, you observed this gouge, as you called it, of clay? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was it clay or ore, or clay mixed with ore? A. It was part of the vein. Q. Part of the vein? A. Yes, sir. Q. When yon came back there did you examine to see what the effect of that shot was? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you observe in respect to that gouge? A. I observed that it was a chunk that might drop away from the rest of the body of oro, any minute, and fall on the— Q. What did you do iu respect to it? A. I was going to put in a hole only for Mr. Talbert coming along. Q. I asked you if you did anything in respect to it? A. I tried to take it down, and I corild not. Q. What did you try to take it down with? A. A pick. Q. It would not*518 come down? A. No, sir. Q. Did you observe any seams In it? A. I did not, any more than it was a heavy chunk; it might let go any minute. Q. Your idea being of the chunk that it might let go any minute, you were going to shoot it down? A. Yes, sir. Q. Who came there first, Mr. Finalyson or Talbert? A. Mr. Talbert. Q. What did you say to him, and what did he say to you? A. I says to Mr. Talbert, “That is a treacherous looking chunk, and I was thinking about putting a hole to shoot it down’; showed him where I put the hole. Q. What did Mr. Talbert say in reply? A. He says, ‘You can get that down.’ I told him' X could not, and he tried. ‘Well,’ he says, and he tried it; he could not get it down. Q. Did he try it? A. He tried it. Q. How did he try it? A. Tried it with a pick. Q. Did he try it with anything else? A. No, sir. Q. How long did he work at it to get it down? How long did you work at it? A. I worked quite a little while; got a bit of the comer off myself. Mr. Talbert had not tried very long. He says to me then, ‘There is lots of time.’ Q. How long did Mr. Talbert work at it trying to get it down? A. A minute or so. Q. And could not get it down? A. No, sir. Q. What did Mr. Talbert say about it now? A. He says, ‘There is lots of time; if we shoot that, we lose this smelting ore that is alongside of it.’ Q. After you had tried in that way. you were both satisfied it was not likely to fall, was not you? A. No, sir; I was not satisfied, because I thought it might fall any time. Q. Did you think it was dangerous and likely to fall then? A. Yes, sir; if I did not, I would not want to put this hole in. Q. Finalyson went and sat down? A. Finalyson didn’t try it at all, to my knowledge. Q. How long had he been at work when he was hurt? A. You mean right there? Q. Yes. A. About half an hour. Q. Where was Mr. Talbert all the time? A. Standing right beside of us. Q. Did he stay there the half hour while he was at work? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know whether Mr. Finalyson examined for himself that chunk before he commenced to work? A. No, sir. Q. Do you know whether he and Mr. Talbert discussed the question of the safety-before he commenced to work? A. I don’t think they did. Q. X didn’t ask you what you thought; I asked you whether you knew whether they did or not? A. I didn’t hear it.”
It will be observed that the witness testifies positively, and repeats the statement three different times, that he told the foreman that this gouge was a dangerous chunk, and likely to fall at any time, and should be taken down, and wanted to shoot it down, and would have done so but for the foreman’s interference and orders. The witness says, “I says to him, ‘that’s a treacherous looking chunk.’” Again he says, “I called Mr. Talbert’s attention to it about two o’clock, as near as I can judge”; and a third time he says, “I says to Mr. Talbert, ‘That’s a treacherous looking chunk, and I was thinking about putting a hole to shoot it down.’ ” In the light of this testimony, it is not perceived where the majority of the court finds any sanction for the statement that, while Austin testified he; thought the gouge “might fall at any time,” “he testifies that he did not at the time make this statement to the foreman.” That is precisely what he did do, and he testifies to the fact three times over. He did not make the statement to Finalyson because he came up after Austin and the foreman had their conversation on the subject. It is established by the testimony of an unimpeached witness that this gouge was a treacherous looking chunk, and likely to fall any minute; that this fact was communicated to the foreman; and we have, in addition, the indisputable fact that it did fall in a few minutes. The summary and extraordinary way in which the majority of the court seek to avoid the force and effect of Austin’s testimony is without precedent in an appellate court; “Actions,” say the majority of the
The majority of the court deny that it; is a question of fact for the jury, ami lay it down as a rule of law that the foreman of a mine, having knowledge of a gouge or threatening mass protruding from the wall of a mine, brought out by a blast, is not, required to resort to any other tool or agency than a “pick” to dislodge such threatening mass, and that, if it cannot be dislodged with a pick, then he is not guilty of any negligence by suffering it to remain at. a place where the miners are liable to be injured or killed by its fall. Fortunately for humanity and for miners, this rule of the majority of the court will not be observed by any prudent foreman. A pick is but one, and the least, and most inefficient, of the many agencies and instruments that may be brought into requisition on such occasions. En
s- o Although the facts are undisputed, It Is for the jury, and not for the judges, to determine whether proper care was given, or whether they establish negligence.”
In the case of Jones v. Railroad Co., 128 U. S. 443, 9 Sup. Ct. 118, the circuit court instructed the jury to render a verdict for the defendant upon the ground that the plaintiff had been guilty of contributory negligence, but the supreme court reversed the judgment. The court, speaking by Mr. Justice Miller, said:
“But we think these questions (of negligence) are for the jury to determine. We see no reason, so long as the jury system is the law of the land and the jury is made the tribunal to decide disputed questions of fact, why it should not decide such questions as tills as well as others. * * * Instead of the course here pursued, a due regard for the respective functions of the court and jury would seem to demand that these questions should have been submitted to the jury, accompanied by such instructions from the presiding judge as would have secured a sound verdict.”
In the case of Railway Co. v. Ives, 144 U. S. 409, 417, 12 Sup. Ct. 679, the conrt said:
“It is only where the facts are such that all reasonable men must draw the same conclusions from them that the question of negligence is ever considered one of law for the court.”
See Railroad Co. v. Foley, 3 C. C. A. 589, 53 Fed. 459.
On the question of the defendant’s negligence the opinion of a majority cf the court does not, in my judgment, express the conclusion “all reasonable men,” or any considerable number of such men, would draw from the evidence in the case. The question is one of fact, which neither the majority nor the minority of this court is empowered to decide. The constitutional mode of ascertaining the sense of reasonable men on disputed questions of fact in common-law actions is by the verdict of 12 jurymen, and not by the opinions of the judges. In their deliberations the jury exercise their common sense, and bring to the solution of the questions submitted to them their practical experience and knowledge of human affairs which afford a much better guaranty of a sound conclusion than the technical, subtle, and hair-splitting methods, that notun frequently creep into the administration of the law by the judges. It was because the people knew the judges were poor judges of the facts that they committed their decision to a jury, and every day’s experience confirms the wisdom of their action. The plaintiff has a constitutional right to have the facts of her case tried by a jury. The judgment of the circuit court should be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions t© grant a new trial.