117 P. 86 | Mont. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff commenced this action in the district court of Carbon county to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of the failure of the defendant company to sufficiently timber an entry in a coal mine in which he was working as its employee. A rock fell upon him from the roof of the entry and injured him. It appears from his testimony that he and three other miners had been mining coal by the day and doing such timbering as they were ordered to do. The defendant Good had full charge of the mine. Plaintiff was a man about thirty-two years of age, who had mined coal for twenty years. Sometime in February, 1909, he and his three companions agreed with Good to take out the coal by contract. He then said to Good: “How would it be to give us figures on the timbering 1 ’ ’ Good replied: “Never you mind about the timbering; we will take care of the timbers. You dig the coal out, and we will attend to the rest.” Plaintiff testified: “The only agreement we came to in relation to the timbering was that they were to do it. I agreed to do the work at the schedule price. I went to work under that arrangement, until the eleventh day when I got hurt. The company
Batten testified: “Pot-hole ground is very treacherous ground. I knew it was there because we had plenty of them coming down on us as we were doing the work. I heard Fotheringill asking Mr. Good about that — the roof was pretty bad, and he ought to forepole it. Mr. Good said he thought the ground didn’t need forepoling. I knew the roof was dangerous. Fotheringill and I had examined the roof just before the accident, and I told him to look out for the roof, over the side of the entry, where he was working, as it looked unsafe to me, but he thought it was all right. ’ ’
When the plaintiff rested his case the defendants moved for a nonsuit on several grounds, two of which were as follows:
“ (10) For the reason that it affirmatively appears that plaintiff was an experienced miner, and well knew all of the risks and dangers incident to his employment, and voluntarily assumed all of the same, and he cannot now hold these defendants, or either of them, responsible or accountable for the injuries whereof he complains.
“(11) For the reason that it affirmatively appears that the plaintiff well knew of the dangers incidental to his employment as they existed in said entry and to the roof thereof, in the condition in which the same were at the time he went to work upon the day he was injured, and that he continued to work therein after such full knowledge, and voluntarily assumed whatever risks were incident thereto.” The court sustained the motion and entered judgment for the defendants, from which judgment the plaintiff has appealed.
The learned counsel for the appellant says in his brief: “It is acknowledged at the outset that if the doctrine of assumption of risk is to be applied in all its harshness, unrestrictedly, as it has sometimes and by some courts been announced, there may be ¡no right of recovery here.” And again: “As the rule is commonly stated, it is to the effect that the servant assumes all the
As to the instant cause, we are of opinion that it falls squarely within the conditions of a supposed case set forth on pages 14
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.