39 Mich. 492 | Mich. | 1878
Mrs. Erickson, the defendant in error, recovered a judgment in the court below, as administratrix of her deceased husband Andrew Erickson, who was killed by a falling rock while engaged in working in the mine of the plaintiff in error, July 9, 1877.
It appears that Erickson had been employed the day before his death as one of a mining gang under the management chiefly of Gustav Stenson, who with his partners had taken a contract for mining and hoisting ore at ninety-five cents per ton for ore and twenty-five cents per ton for rock — this contract having been made July 1, 1877, for a month, and similar contracts having been made in previous months from the beginning of April. Erickson was employed by the day at one dollar and fifty cents per day. The pay arrangement was that the company officers were to pay the men on the certificates of the contractors, deducting this pay from the final settlements.
These contracts were all let by Day and McEncroe as officers of the company, who had general charge for the company of the affairs in the mine.
The pit where these contractors were at work had been carried along the lode so as to leave the upper or hanging wall, which was at an angle of sixty-five degrees,
The chief controversy relates to the question whether this rock was previously in a condition which made it so apparently dangerous as to require removal or timbering, and if so, on whom, if any one, was the risk and responsibility. Several collateral questions arose also.
Upon a careful inspection of the record we do not think any questions become material excej)t those which bear on the rights and duties of the various parties in connection with the mine. The other errors assigned do not appear to be founded on sufficient showings in the record. The only one urged by counsel was the rejection of a question put on cross-examination to Stenson asking him whether it was not his business and that of his associates to be on the lookout and watch for dangerous places. "We think that when the terms and conditions of his contract were shown, this was rather a deduction than a fact, and he could not properly be allowed or required to answer it. He was not precluded from explaining fully the mutual understanding of the contracting parties as to what the contract was, or as to usage.
It was claimed on the argument, and this claim is based on the assignments of error, that on the whole case there was no ground of recovery. And as reasons for this "position several legal propositions are advanced which are chiefly as follows: That there could be no recovery if Erickson was in the employ of Stenson as a day laborer; or if he was not under control of the company or its officers and if Stenson and his associates
There was evidence that the rock in question had been considered as dangerous some .time before the contract of July, and that the attention of Day and McEneroe had been called to it. There was evidence of various attempts by sounding it • with an iron bar to ascertain its safety. There.was conflicting evidence as to some of the declarations of .the mining officers on this subject. There was evidence on one side that they expressed themselves decidedly on its safety. There was also evidence to go to the jury that they retained the right to determine what large rocks' should be removed and what timbering or propping should be done. There was also testimony bf the increase of water oozing from the seams, claimed to indicate a gradual loosening. The theory of plaintiff in error was that'the rock had been started by blasts from the winze, and that sufficient care had not been taken to examine it thereafter. It fell about two hours after a blast. Other matters of fact will be referred to in their place.
It is proper first to consider the respective positions of the parties. Day and McEncroe stood in the place of the mining company in making these contracts. There was no employment relation between them and Erickson, who was laboring under the contractors. So . far as this changed the relative liabilities of the parties it must operate in this case. But while there are cases in; which there is no duty or legal privity between principals and the servants of those who contract with them, this lack of privity is not universal and absolute. If, for example, a railway company were to contract with a firm of car-builders to build ears according to given
No doubt the range of the owner’s responsibility is very much less in most cases where contractors are employed and have their own servants at work, than where the servants are employed by the proprietors. The main question in such cases is whether any duty remained which sprang from the proprietor’s own position, and from the violation of which the damage arose. In the present case there are two principal inquiries, which are first, whether the death of Erickson was due to the fault of the mining company in not doing what they were bound to do for the protection of those working in their mines; and second, whether Erickson himself was responsible for running the risk which proved ■ fatal. Of course both of these questions are aside from the third question, whether the death was accidental, and not due to the fault of any one.
The court below told the jury that there could be no recovery in this case if the duty was on Stenson and
We think the coürt was correct in holding that Day and McEncroe represented the company for this purpose. They appear to have had entire control of all the business that is involved in the record. And we think there is no room to question the propriety of these rulings if they were applicable, and not neutralized by other instructions. In this connection it is proper to notice one of the special assignments of error which is calculated to give a wrong impression. The court is represented as telling the jury to inquire whether 'the company used such care and precautions as “relieved them from liability in this suit,” — and it is claimed this left a question of law to the jury. But the next sentence of the ¡charge explained what would or would not make them liable. Isolated sentences cannot be allowed to be considered apart from their context. The instructions were not so separated as to create confusion, but were really but a single and correct ruling.
We think that unless the case was one too plain to go to the jury on that point, it was properly left to them to say whether the accident occurred without any one’s fault or neglect. It is not for us to draw inferences of fact in such cases. There was certainly evidence to go to the jury indicating that there should
We think also that there was properly before them a question whether Erickson himself was guilty of contributory negligence. A great deal of testimony was introduced to show that there was no apparent danger which could be discovered, and that the company was justified in treating the rock as safe. There was also much testimony to the contrary. The place was one not easily examined by the ordinary mining lights. If there was no apparent danger it was not recklessness to work under this rock. If on the other hand there was real danger and Erickson was informed of it on the day he entered the mine, there was nevertheless evidence that those about him who had practical knowledge of the mine in which he was a stranger, acted as if they did not think so, and the guards usually to be expected against danger were absent. The duty of examining such places after a blast, is confined by the testimony to dangerous places, and not made out clearly even there as devolving on Erickson. The jury have necessarily found he was not careless, and there was testimony on which they could lawfully act.
The question next arises whether the responsibility of protecting Erickson from such a danger, if supposed to exist, rested on his immediate employers. This was also dependent on testimony, and involved some inquiry into their relations with the company.
Does it then appear so as to bind the court and jury that the contractors in this particular service had the responsibility confined to them, of guarding their workmen from the probable dangers of their employment? There is no dispute in this case upon the general principle of law that a responsibility lies somewhere to prevent workmen from being exposed, without such protection as is reasonably required in a dangerous business. The law is very clear that it is culpable negligence to avoid
The fact that this rock was considered dangerous and so reported several weeks before the accident, and the further fact if true (and the jury probably believed it) that there was a perceptible increase in the dangerous symptoms, certainly imposed a duty of either removing the real danger or using such means as are generally deemed adequate to determine whether any danger existed. The further fact that the hanging wall was composed of a species of rock whose thickness was not generally found uniform, and which was sometimes thin enough to possess no very great resisting power to shocks or disintegrating agencies was one which could not be left out of view by any prudent calculation. A broad expanse of some twenty-five feet square of rock only supported by its own cohesive power from falling may, according to the testimony, have weak points where it may give way unless propped, or unless the unreliable mass is removed. There was testimony, which it is not our province to pass upon, which indicated, if believed, that no reliable test could be found for determining the solidity of the rock when water was escaping through such seams as existed in this wall.
We think there was a question fairly open whether
If so, the only remaining question is whether the jury had proof before them whereby they could lawfully hold the company to this responsibility.
Under the contracts shown by the proofs, the contractors had nothing to do with planning the mine or selecting their working ground, unless with very small discretionary choice. The shafts and levels and the winze must necessarily have been determined on by the owners of the mine, and the mining gang worked on short contracts. Their business, except in sinking the winze, was merely stripping the lode of its ore, and the winze was apparently, as it must usually be, down the lode. The pay for getting out dead rock was but little beyond one-fourth that of getting out ore, and work in the rock outside of the lode was not contemplated. They testified, and the jury must have believed them, that the company reserved the power of determining when and where dangerous rock in the wall should be removed, if requiring removal by blasting, and of locating the supporting pillars or placing timbers to prop the wall. Such timbering would be expensive, and is not provided for by the contracts which are confined to rock and ore blasting and removal. Either the mine must be unguarded, or else, on this state of facts, the company must guard it.
Under such circumstances it is very plain that the company being the owners of the dangerous property, and inviting men to work on it, their responsibility for its protection cannot be changed by the fact that the work is done by the ton instead of by the day, or by the fact that the men who contract with them have laborers of their own. By employing men to act for them in either way they hold out the assurance that they can work in the mine on the ordinary conditions of safety usually found in such places. They guarantee nothing more than is usual among prudent owners,
If men choose with their eyes open to run into danger they may forfeit claims to redress. But it cannot be considered reckless in men who are in doubt upon a matter which cannot be determined absolutely, to pay some regard to the opinions and assurances of those who are supposed to have, and by their position are bound to have special knowledge (failed for by their larger responsibilities. In the present case the assurances of safety given by the mining agents cannot be disregarded, and were rightly subject to consideration by the jury..
We think the jury were very carefully and correctly instructed concerning their duty, and that there was testimony which warranted their verdict.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs.