132 P. 552 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The respondent prosecutes this action as administrator of the estate of J. W. Martin, who died on March 11, 1910, leaving a widow and two children. The complaint, which is against appellant Raven Copper Company and Malcolm McPherson as defendants, details the cause and manner of Martin’s death as follows: He was foreman in the Raven mine, which was being operated by appellant through a shaft, by means of certain hoisting apparatus, including an engine, cable and skip, in charge of Malcolm McPherson as hoisting engineer; while in the performance of his duties as foreman and “on the said 11th day of March, 1911, when the said skip was at rest in said shaft at about the 1,140' station of said shaft, * * * the said J. W. Martin, who had just prior to the time the said skip came to a rest at said station been riding upon the same, attempted to get off the said skip at said station, and while attempting to get off of said skip, and yet not being off the same, the said defendant hoisting engineer Malcolm McPherson, carelessly and negligently, without any signal so to do, raised said skip and negligently caught said J. W. Martin between the said skip and
The affirmative pleas in the answer were denied by the reply, and the cause in due time came on for trial before the court sitting with a jury. It is quite clear from the pleadings that the determinative issues were whether the skip was in motion or- at rest when Martin started to get off; and, if it had stopped and moved again without a signal, whether these events were due to the negligent act or omission of the engineer. The testimony of John Koskinen, an eye-witness to the accident, is distinct and positive that the skip had stopped and was at rest three feet below the proper spot when Martin was getting off and that it moved upward without a signal, catching Martin between the skip and the timbers. Equally distinct and positive was the testimony of the engineer and two other persons that he did not stop the engine by which the movements of the skip were controlled until the proper mark was reached', nor start it again without a signal. There was evidence also to the effect that if the skip did stop before it reached the proper spot it may have been due to the elasticity of the cable in connection with the variations in the descent of the shaft. The value of all this was for the jury; and the verdict was against the appellant Raven
1. The appellant insists that the complaint does not state facts
2. The next serious contention is that the verdict of the jury,
3. Among other instructions the court gave the jury the following: “19a. * * * It is incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove by a preponderance of the evidence, before the plaintiff can recover in this action, that the hoisting engineer, in the exercise of ordinary care, knew or should have known that the deceased intended to get off or would be likely to get off said skip at the place at which he was in jured. ” And: “21a. * * * If from all of the evidence in this case you find that the deceased ordered the hoisting engineer to hoist him on the skip from the 1,300-foot level of the Raven shaft to the place described in the evidence as ‘the 1,140,’ and the hoisting engineer, as a reasonably careful person did not know or should not have anticipated that the deceased would attempt to get off of said skip before it reached the place in said shaft designated as the ‘1,140,’ plaintiff cannot recover and your verdict will be in favor of the defendant. ” It is now urged that the verdict is contrary to these instructions and therefore against law, because the hoisting engineer testified that Martin just before going into the shaft said: “I am going to the 1,300 and I will send up the skip and possibly three skips of water and come up to the 1,140 and pick up John (Koskinen) and take him to the 400,” without expressing any intention to get off or indicating that he had any duties to perform at the 1,140, other than to pick up John. “A verdict is contrary to the law when the condition of the
4. Complaint is made of the court’s refusal to give defendants’ offered instructions Nos. 28a, 10a, 24a and X. "We see no error here. One of the postulates of 28a is that it was the
As to 10a, it was the defendants’ theory that if the skip did stop below the proper spot as claimed by plaintiff, it was due
The refusal of offered instruction 24a was proper, because neither the complaint nor the plaintiff’s evidence was such as to raise the presumption of negligence or of contributory negligence. Hence no burden of exculpation was cast upon him.
Offered instruction X was a flat direction to find for the defendants. The alleged error in refusing this is submitted by counsel “under our discussion upon the question as to the verdict being contrary to instructions 19a and 21a and the failure of plaintiff to present sufficient competent proof of the negligence to the. jury; furthermore, we discuss elsewhere in this brief the insufficiency of the complaint and refer thereto as a part of our argument under this error. ’ ’ The giving of instruction X would not have been justified by any of the considerations suggested.
5. The only remaining errors assigned are those numbered 1, 7, and 8. No. 1 relates to a question asked on cross-examination of the witness, Donald Martin. Whether the question was proper or not, the incident was too trivial to assign as ground for
Concerning assignments 7 and 8 counsel for appellant say: “For tbe reasons hereinbefore presented it necessarily follows that in overruling tbe motion for a new trial and in entering judgment tbe court erred.” We have canvassed all tbe reasons presented and cannot see that any of them would justify a reversal.
Tbe judgment and order appealed from are therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.