151 Pa. 117 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
This is an important case, and it is for this reason perhaps that its discussion, both at bar and in the paper hooks, has taken an unnecessarily wide range. As we view the case it turns upon a single point.
By the defendant’s fifth point the learned judge below was asked to instruct the jury that if they believed from the evidence in the case, that Andrew G. White was inside foreman or mine boss at Greenback colliery at the time of the accident, and that the plaintiff’s husband lost his life through the negligence of the said Andrew G. White in not properly examining the air-ways and ventilation of the said colliery, and taking the proper precautions to prevent the escape of noxious or poisonous gases from Buck Ridge colliery, or any other source, into Greenback colliery where the plaintiff’s husband was employed, the plaintiff cannot recover because such negligence would be the negligence of a fellow servant, and within the ordinary risks taken into consideration at the time said Patrick Haley became employed as a workman at Greenback colliery. This point was affirmed.
That this ruling was correct is settled by Delaware & Hudson Canal Company v. Carrol, 89 Pa. 374; Reese v. Biddle, 112 Pa. 72, and a number of other cases, in which it was distinctly held that a mine boss is a fellow servant of the miner, and that where an operator of a coal mine has used reasonable care in the selection of a mine boss, he is not responsible to a miner for an injury to him resulting from the negligence of the mine boss.
Aside from this, the negligence of which he was guilty, and which was the cause of the unfortunate accident, was committed by him prior to the day of the transfer, and when there was no dispute as to his being the mine boss. It was his duty to have kept these openings closed, and it was only the rapid generation of gases by the fire in the Buck Ridge colliery, and the subsequent accident, that disclosed his negligence. It was his duty to have kept those openings closed at all times and under all circumstances to prevent just such accidents as this. Neither he nor any one else could tell at what moment foul air might come in from the Buck Ridge mine, nor from what cause. He had a map of the mines and might and ought to have known of the openings. This is a duty cast upon him by the act of assembly. The most important of all his duties is to see to the proper ventilation of the mine, and to guard against the possibility of such an accident as this. The employment of a mine boss is made compulsory upon the mine owner, and there is no allegation that White was not a competent man, much less that his employer knew that he was incompetent. We have repeatedly held, as before stated, that the owner of a mine is not responsible for the negligence of the mine boss, unless
The fact that the defendant company sealed up its mine to smother the fire, has little importance. It was not negligence to do this, and it was not bound to know that the openings had been left open by "White. -And it is more than probable from the evidence that careful inquiries were made as to the condition of the Greenback colliery before the accident occurred.
We are of opinion that the defendant’s first point should have been affirmed without qualification.
Judgment reversed.