140 P. 235 | Mont. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff while engaged as a coal miner at Klein, Montana, in the “northeast main entry of mine No. 2,” a mine owned and operated by the defendant Republic Coal Company. The defendant Griffin was superintendent in charge of the mine, and defendant Beever, assistant foreman and face boss. Prom a judgment in favor of plaintiff and from an order denying a new trial, the defendants appealed.
There are not any conflicts in the evidence upon material matters. The plaintiff was employed by the defendant coal company, and paid according to a wage scale agreed upon by the mine operators and representatives of the miners of that district. His business was running an entry or tunnel some twelve feet wide through a blanket vein of coal. In height the tunnel was measured by the thickness of the vein — about five feet nine inches. This tunnel had been driven for a considerable distance, and every two weeks or thereabouts the work was measured up and paid for by the company, at the rate of “73 cents per ton, and $3.25 per yard.” In the course o.f the work of driving this tunnel, a pothole in the roof was passed. So much of the rock .in the hole as was loose at the time was taken down, but no timbering or other precautionary measures were resorted to for the purpose of securing it. The roof of the tunnel was considered to be self-supporting, and timbering was not generally employed. At the time of this accident the tunnel had been driven about seventy feet beyond the pothole, and plaintiff had been paid for the work of excavating and mining at that point at least three weeks before the time of the accident. In addition to the work of blasting down the coal, the plaintiff and his coworker were required to load, and the empty cars were usually set out for them at a slant, ninety feet or more from the face of the entry, and the powder for blasting was kept back of the face a distance of about 300 "feet, so that to get empty cars or powder,
1. The first and principal contention of appellants is that they are not responsible for the injury to the plaintiff because the place where he was injured was a part of his “working place,”
When the plaintiff had removed the coal from the tunnel at the pothole and the work had been measured up and paid for, that portion became complete, was turned over to the company, and thereafter was a passage or traveling way, the duty of inspection of which was devolved by the Act upon the company’s foreman by section 71. As to the miner, this traveling-way was an appliance for his use, but not a part of his working place. (3 Labatt on Master and Servant, 2d ed., see. 890.)
2. With this principal, question solved, the contention that the plaintiff failed to make out a cause of actionable negligence requires very little consideration. The rules defining the master’s common-law duty and the extent of the risk assumed by the servant have been iterated and reiterated so often since the decision of Kelley v. Fourth of July Min. Co., 16 Mont. 484, 41 Pac. 273, that further repetition is unnecessary. Indeed, counsel for these respective parties do not disagree at all with reference to them, but only as to their application to the facts of this case. Since it was the master’s duty to exercise reasonable care
3. The court submitted to the jury the question whether the
4. The contention that plaintiff was not a servant of the com-
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.