230 F. 792 | 2d Cir. | 1916
(after stating the facts as above). The action is brought at common law and under the Mining Act of Pennsylvania. Act No. 177 of the Session of 1891. That statute, among other things, provides that no person shall be allowed to blast coal, unless the mine foreman (a state officer) is satisfied that such person is qualified by experience and judgment to do such work. Article 12, rules 35 and 36. The theory of the plaintiff is that plaintiff was not qualified by experience and judgment to fire a blast; that he had never even received any instructions as to how such work should be done; that the defendant directed him to fire this blast, a dangerous operation, and was negligent in wholly failing to properly and sufficiently instruct him in the preparation and use of dynamite and in failing to acquaint and appraise him of the nature and character of the explosive and to warn him of the dangers to be apprehended from the use thereof. This was the common-law side of the case. Negligence under the statute was charged in violating the rule above referred to by directing plaintiff to charge and fire a blast, knowing that he had no miner’s certificate and had not satisfied the mine foreman that he was qualified to do the work. The common law side of the case only need be considered.
(1) The explosion occurred either because plaintiff did not break! off the hard end of the squib and in pushing the squib down this hard end scratched the fulminate in the bottom of the cap, or because when pressing the cap in to hold the squib in place he squeezed it too close to the fulminate, thereby causing a disturbance of the same, with friction which induced explosion.
(2) Plaintiff had never been instructed by any one how to put these three things, dynamite, cap and squib, together; he had only such information as an ignorant man would have, who had seen others doing it and might in his observation have overlooked some of the details of their methods.
(3) He was not a man qualified by experience to be put to blast; he was an ordinary loader working with a shovel.
(4) He was under the immediate direction of the loader boss, and was to obey his instructions.
(5) There was in that part of the mine, a man, Boyle, the starter, a certified miner, whose duty it was to blast out the coal when it clogged in the chutes. Sometimes word would be sent to him by a boss loader (or some one else) that blasting of clogged coal would be needed at a particular place. If he had the necessary explosives with him (he was furnished usually with several charges) he would go direct to the place and act. If he needed explosives he would go first to the box kept under lock by the boss loader and get some.
(6) Sometimes the boss loader would send a man to Boyle to tell him to go to a battery and blast, and wouid give that man the explosives to take to Boyle.
(7) This practice the assistant mine foreman knew of and tolerated. It is not apparent why he should have stopped it; if the unqualified man was merely carrying to Boyle the separate articles, which were harmless thus separated, there seems to be nothing dangerous about it.
(8) The labor boss Wilson did not know that plaintiff was a man qualified to blast. Nevertheless on the day in question the labor boss gave plaintiff these explosives and told him to go* and blast at the battery. . '
It is unnecessary to consider the few exceptions to the admission of testimony; the evidence introduced under exception was unimportant.
Judgment affirmed.