delivered the opinion of the court.
On former appeals in this cause the defendant was awarded a. new trial on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to show that its negligence was the efficient cause of the death of Monson, plaintiff’s intestate. (Monson v. La France Copper Co., 39 Mont. 50, 133 Am. St. Rep. 549, 101 Pac. 243.) This trial, had upon the same pleadings, resulted in a judgment for plaintiff. The defendant thereupon moved for a new trial, alleging as grounds therefor insufficiency of the evidence to-justify the verdict, and errors occurring during the trial by which defendant suffered prejudice. The court made a general order sustaining the motion. Plaintiff has appealed. Under
By reference to the statement in the opinion delivered on the-former appeals, it will be found that the negligence alleged was the omission by the defendant of the duty imposed by the statute (Rev. Codes, sec. 8536) to equip properly, with doors or gates, a hoisting cage used by it in a vertical mining shaft, from which,, by reason of the omission, Monson, who was employed as a pumpman, fell and was killed. The defenses upon which defendant relied were general denials and the affirmative defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk by Monson. The evidence adduced, while clearly establishing the omission of duty by the defendant and the death of Monson, was; held insufficient to show that the former was the direct proximate cause of the latter. It appeared that the hoisting cage in
At the second trial other testimony was introduced for the purpose of showing how the death of Monson occurred, as follows:
The witness Holland testified: “I did not make any examination of his body on the surface, not more than handling it, put
Witness Richards: “The shoulders and head were badly crushed. In fact, the head wasn’t any thicker than that [illustrating by placing his hands together, palms inward] when I got it. ”
Dr. McCarthy: “I listened to the testimony of the two last witnesses, the testimony of Michael Holland and the testimony of the witness Richards, the undertaker. In my opinion, as a physician and surgeon, these wounds are sufficient to produce death. ’ ’
The testimony of defendant’s witnesses'is as follows:
Frank, the mine superintendent: “I could see the head very plainly, and it was somewhat swollen. There was, as I remember it, a bad gash across the forehead, and another one, I think, across the face and cheek, extending through the lip. Aside from that, though, from the swelling and these gashes, it looked perfectly normal. It is absolutely not the case that the head was crushed as flat as a man’s two hands. * * * My exam
Orem, the deputy state mine inspector: “I noticed the head, but nothing particularly; looked to be swollen to me. As to the head being crushed as flat as an ordinary man’s two hands, it wasn’t that way when I saw it.” On cross-examination he stated: “I made no physical examination. The man was dead. I noticed a scarred and cut-up head and face, and made no further examination, and didn’t view the body again. I did not examine under his clothes to see what condition his shoulders were in.”
It appeared from the testimony of these witnesses that the lunch bucket was overturned, and that the food it had contained was scattered about the deck of the cage. Incidentally it also appeared that there were a few men at work on the 200-foot level of the mine, and that these and Monson were the only employees in the mine on that shift. The wounds upon Monson’s body, as described by Holland and Richards, would indicate even to a layman that he had been killed either by violence of a fall, or that he had in some way been caught between the cage and the timbers, and crushed to death. The defendant’s witnesses, while
The foregoing discussion disposes of this appeal. Counsel for defendant insist, however, that it was entitled to a new trial as a matter of right, because the court refused to submit to the jury any instruction upon the defense of assumption of risk. This
The duty imposed by the statute is a continuing one. The master engaged in mining as was defendant here is bound to have his cages equipped with doors whenever men are being moved in them, whether up or down. If the employee about to be carried has his choice to continue in the employment or to abandon it when the master habitually omits use of the statutory safeguards, or if upon a particular occasion, on a like omission, he may submit to being carried or not, as he chooses, then it becomes a question whether he knows and appreciates the danger
In the Osterholm Case there was a difference of opinion as'to whether it was safer to use the doors while the work of cutting stations was being prosecuted. The manager of the mine was of the opinion, not only that it was safer to use the cage without the doors while prosecuting this work, but also that this was a part of the work of sinking, and hence that the statute imposed no duty to use the doors. In view of this fact, and the additional fact that the plaintiff might well have entertained the same opinion, and hence, acted of his own choice, it was held that the question whether he assumed the risk should have been submitted to the jury. The circumstances shown by the evidence in this case do not fall within the principle of that case.
The order is affirmed.
■Affirmed.