34 Mont. 54 | Mont. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial, a motion for nonsuit having been made and granted. Plaintiff sustained personal injuries on August 21, 1903, while employed in the quartz mine of defendant, and the action was brought to recover damages.
The evidence for the plaintiff, which, for present purposes, must be taken as true, shows that plaintiff was employed by the defendant about August 4, 1903, and worked until the time he was injured. On August 20th, the day before he was hurt, the plaintiff, an experienced miner, had worked on the top or fourth floor of the mine at his regular business as miner. On the morning of the day of the accident he was directed by the shift boss to go with another to the third floor and help the shovelers. He had never before been directed to shovel, and he had never before shoveled on the floor below where he had mined. • He obeyed the order, and with three others commenced to shovel on the said floor. While thus at work the floor upon which he was standing was sixteen feet below the roof or “back” of the fourth floor, from which roof the rock fell which injured him. Above his head the roof of the third floor, which constituted the floor of the fourth floor, shut out from his view, and from the view of the men working with him, all the conditions obtaining upon the floor above. He did not at any time on the day on which he was injured go to the floor above, and no one of the men with him went there. The rock fell because
The plaintiff contends that the defendant did not, as in duty bound, use reasonable care, or any care, to furnish a safe place in which he should work. Defendant charges contributory negligence and argues that the spot from which the rock fell was not a “place,” but a place in course of construction, and that the. plaintiff was engaged in co-operation with the miners who were overhead in the construction of said place, and therefore assumed all the risk incident to the making thereof.
The testimony tends to show, and for the purposes of the motion did show, that it was the custom, as well as the duty, of the master to follow closely behind the miners working at the breast and to timber the floor and lag the same in order to protect all parties working in the vicinity.
If, as the evidence also tends to show, the part of the stope from which the rock fell was one in which the mining had been completed, it was the duty of the defendant to timber and lag the same in order that that part of the place, already created, might be kept safe. If the plaintiff had been injured while in the actual work of making a place — and the evidence tends to show that he was not — then he could not recover from the company, for he would assume the obvious risks of his occupa
Objection is made by appellant to a consideration by this court of any evidence on the part of the witnesses of plaintiff tending to show that the duty of the company was in respect of timbering that particular part of the stope. We have examined the evidence, and think that a prima facie ease was made for the plaintiff, and that the court should not have withdrawn the ease from the jury. We are of the opinion that the ease of Kelley v. Fourth of July Min. Co., 16 Mont. 484, 41 Pac. 273, covers the law of the case as presented by the evidence introduced by plaintiff.
The appellant made certain technical objections to the allowance and settlement of the statement on motion for a new trial. These objections were incorporated in the record and are before us. One point is that the document, which we have heretofore called “a statement on motion for new trial,” is denominated by the plaintiff “a statement of the case and bill of exceptions,” and that, as appellant says: “There is no authority in law for combining in one instrument a bill of exceptions and statement on motion for a new trial, and it is impossible to tell whether the plaintiff seeks to settle the bill of exceptions as provided in section 1155 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or statement on motion for a new trial as provided in subdivision 3 of section 1173 of the Code of Civil Procedure.’.’ As to this matter, suffice it to say that it is immaterial what a paper is called. We look to the paper itself to see what it is. This is a statement on motion for a new trial. The manner of settling a bill of exceptions and that of settling a statement on motion for a new trial seem to us to be the same. Moreover, there is not anything in this record to show what steps were taken to procure the settlement, and we must necessarily assume that it was settled according to law.
A further objection made, saved and urged by appellant is, that the statement should not have been settled “because the
So far as the objection that extensive portions of the testimony are reproduced by question and answer is concerned, we find that much of the evidence has been so presented in the statement. Under a rule of this court (Rule VII, subsection 3, 30 Mont, xxxiv, 82 Pac. viii), the testimony contained in the statement on motion for a new trial or the bill of exceptions should be reduced to narrative form, unless the court below order otherwise. Objection, as we have seen, was seasonably made in the court below to the form in which the testimony was produced. The court overruled the objection, and we consider that this is an order by the "court to let it be in the form of question and answer as it appears.
The further technical objection was made and saved that in the statement the lines were not numbered, and that the pages were not numbered after page 45. Under a certain rule of the district court in which the case was tried, the statement was required to be paged and the lines numbered. The purpose of this rule, of course, is to furnish to the party upon whom the statement is served ready means of preparing such amendments as he may see fit to propose, and to aid the court in comparing the same in ease of dispute as to the question of amendments. When the reason of the rule fails, the rule falls. One rule of this court requires transcripts to be indexed; but if a transcript consisted of only one page, we would not listen to an objection that the transcript was not indexed. Counsel in this case submitted fifty-seven amendments, and they were allowed by the court. Neither the counsel nor the court invoked the rule to facilitate labor. Rules of the sort referred to are not made for the purpose of punishing anyone, but to aid counsel who may invoke them for the purpose of avoiding unnecessary labor and to make certain what is done.
Affirmed.