136 P. 968 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs are, respectively, the surviving children and widow of August Maronen, deceased, and prosecute this action for damages on account of the death of the father and husband by the alleged wrongful act of the defendant. The complaint recites the relationship of the plaintiffs to the deceased and al
The answer admits the employment and the operations of the defendant company through the Mollie Murphy shaft; that while being hoisted through that shaft and at about the 1,000-foot level, and while the cage doors were not closed, Maronen fell from the cage, receiving the injuries from which he died, and that if the doors had been closed he would not have fallen from the cage. All other allegations of the complaint are denied; and in addition the defendant pleaded assumption of risk, negligence of fellow-servants, and that the decedent’s death was due to his own fault, neglect, and disobedience of orders. These affirmative allegations were traversed by reply, and the cause, being at issue, was tried to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for defendant, from which judgment and an order denying them a new trial the plaintiffs prosecute these appeals.
The complaint charges the defendant with violating section 8536, Revised Codes, which makes it unlawful for any person or corporation to carry on mining operations through a vertical shaft more than 300 feet deep, unless the shaft is equipped with a safety cage with steel doors, and said doors “must be closed when lowering or hoisting the men,” except that when sinking
Practically all of appellants’ preliminary hypotheses may be conceded at once, in substance if not in the form in which they are expressed, vis.: That section 8536 is a penal statute and its violation is a crime; that section 6486, Revised Codes, gives to these plaintiffs a right of action against this defendant, provided the defendant’s wrongful act or neglect was a proximate cause of August Maronen’s death; that the fact that a penalty is attached to a violation of section 8536 does not render the defendant immune from civil liability; and that the duty to close the cage doors when men are being lowered or hoisted is an absolute one, in the sense that the employer will not be heard to say that by the exercise of ordinary care he cannot comply with the requirement. The foregoing questions aside, and we are brought to a consideration of the character-of this action and, as an incident thereof, the defenses, if any, which are available.
There is not any contention made that the defendant company had not fully complied with the law in providing and properly equipping the cage in use. The only charge of wrongdoing is in failing to close the cage doors before attempting to hoist employees.
That section 8536 does not create any right of action or destroy any defense available at the time of its enactment are questions set at rest by the former decision of this court. (Osterholm v. Boston & Mont. Con. C. & S. Min. Co., 40 Mont. 508, 107 Pac. 499.) In the absence of some statute creating this right of action, these plaintiffs would be remediless, for it was
The rule of law is, then, settled in this state that, while the right of action given in section 6486 to the heirs or personal representatives is independent of that which the deceased would have had if he had survived his injury, yet it is of the same character and depends upon the same facts; and the inquiry whether a given state of facts constitutes a cause of action in favor of the surviving widow and children depends upon the answer to the inquiry: Would the same facts, if stated by the injured man, constitute a cause of action in his behalf? That the allegations disclosing a breach of a statutory duty charge legal negligence, and that this complaint states a cause of action for damages for negligence, may be conceded even though the word “negligent” or “negligently” is not used.
But the immediate question before us is not whether the complaint states a cause of action, but whether the facts alleged constitute a cause of action, independently of the element of negligence. We might answer this interrogatory by reference to the foregoing decisions of our own court and conclude this discussion upon the evidence but for the earnestness with which
While the common-law forms of action have been abolished in this state, the principles which underlie them have not been changed, and a reference to the forms as well as the principles not infrequently aids in determining the character of a right or a remedy. The Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain in his recent address to the American Bar Association, in referring to the common law with special reference to its growth and development, said: “Its paradox is that in its beginning the forms of action came before the substance. It is in the history of English remedies that we have to study the growth of rights.” If August Maronen had not been killed but only injured and had brought his action for damages against this defendant charging the violation of this same statute as a proximate cause of his injury, would his complaint state a cause of action independently of the element of negligence? At common law the injured party had his remedy in trespass or by an action on the ease, dependent upon the character of the act which caused the injury, but it was immaterial whether the wrongful act amounted to a crime or only a tort. If the injury was the immediate and direct result of the wrongful act, the remedy was sought in trespass; but if the injury was, as to the act complained of, consequential or arose from nonfeasance, then the remedy was by an action on the case. To illustrate: (1) If the defendant had struck Maronen with the cage or had thrown him from it, his form of action would have been trespass, and, if the injury resulted from the defendant’s negligence, the action would not have differed from any other negligence action so far as it affected the defenses available; but, if the injury resulted from
This complaint states a cause of action for damages caused by negligence, but it does not state a cause of action upon any other theory; and,.having set forth facts which disclose legal negligence on the part of the defendant, it was permissible for it to interpose any of the ordinary defenses applicable in negligence cases. Possibly there may be found authorities which dispute this conclusion. The Illinois court has reached a different result, but upon a different penal statute. Aside from the Illinois cases, the decisions cited by counsel for appellants are not in conflict with our conclusion. As we view them, they are not in point in fact or in principle. We do not think there is any analogy between this case and an action for damages caused by dueling, assault and battery, or an abortion. But, whatever may be said of the authorities elsewhere, the decision in Osterholm v. Boston & Mont. Con. C. & S. Min. Co., above, is decisive of the question in this state. In our opinion, however, the determination of this controversy is to be found in the merits as disclosed by the evidence, and it is of little consequence by what name the successful defense is designated. The trial court heard the witnesses, observed their demeanor while upon the witness-stand, and every presumption will now be indulged in favor of the correctness of its conclusions. If-there is substantial evidence to support any of defendant’s special defenses or from
On September 7, 1911, the deceased, with Powers, Conroy, Ryan, and Updegraff, all miners employed by the defendant company, were directed to cement up a leak in a bulkhead in a drift on the 1,200-foot level from the Mollie Murphy shaft where gas was escaping. ' In the course of their operations Updegraff became affected by the gas, and Ryan, Maronen, and Conroy took him upon the cage, and without closing the doors the signal to hoist was given, and when at the 1,000-foot level or thereabouts Maronen fell from the cage and was killed. The evidence given upon the trial is very meager, and there are not any disputed questions of fact. Plaintiffs called Mrs. Maronen, who testified to the relationship existing between them and the deceased, to the habits and earning capacity of the deceased and his contributions to these plaintiffs. Then, upon an admission by the defendant as to the expectancy in life of one of Maronen’s age as shown by the standard tables of mortality and as to the cost of an annuity, plaintiffs rested their case. The defendant called the mine foreman, the shift-boss, and two of the men who were with Maronen when he fell from the cage. At the close of their testimony the cause was submitted without rebuttal. To set forth even a brief abstract of the testimony of defendant’s witnesses would no't serve any purpose, useful or otherwise. We have studied it carefully, and our conclusion is that it tends to prove the following facts: That at the time of this accident, and for some considerable time prior thereto, there were but two men regularly employed on each shift in the Mollie Murphy shaft; and for this reason there were not any station-tenders, but the men on shift or working in the shaft when they were being hoisted or lowered were required to open and close the cage doors themselves; that as to Maronen this duty was imposed by specific instructions given him individually; that the rule required the first man upon the cage to close the door on his side of the cage; that, at the time these men entered the cage for the purpose of bringing Updegraff to the surface, Maronen was
When this safety cage statute in its present form was enacted, the legislature understood that a corporation is an intangible entity, and that the duty to close the cage doors must of necessity be imposed upon some servant of the corporation. If a corporation employed a man whose sole duty it was to open and close the cage doors at a particular station, and such station-tender neglected his duty when he himself was being lowered or hoisted, with the result that he was killed or injured, neither his heirs nor personal representatives in the one instance, nor he himself in the other, could recover, for the very obvious reason that he would be responsible for the result—would be the sole author of his misfortune. We are not called upon in this instance to
At the time this injury occurred there were only two men regularly employed on each shift on the work reached through the Mollie Murphy shaft, and the question for solution is:
Our conclusion is that the trial court was justified in finding that Maronen was to all intents and purposes a station-tender in the sense that it was his duty to close the door when he entered the cage to be hoisted, and that his death resulted from his failure to discharge a duty which could be and was rightfully imposed upon him; and, because he could not have succeeded upon these facts in an action if he had been injured only, neither his heirs nor personal representatives can succeed in this one.
The judgment and order denying plaintiffs a new trial are affirmed.
'Affirmed.