16 Colo. 438 | Colo. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant’s ownership of the mines, being averred in the complaint and not denied in the answer, must be taken as admitted. But the answer expressly denies that plaintiff was employed by defendant or that he received the alleged injury while engaged in and about defendant’s work; and also denies that the mines were being worked or operated by the defendant in any manner at the time of the alleged injury.
A careful examination of the record fails to disclose any ' substantive evidence that the defendant, the Union Coal Company, was engaged in operating the mines at the time the plaintiff Avas injured. The evidence was practically all one way upon that issue.
Mr. King, Avho was superintending the operation of the mines at the time of the accident, testified, in substance, that he was employed by the Union Pacific Railway Company, and that the Union Pacific Company, not the Union Coal Company, was operating the mines at the time of the alleged injury.
The plaintiff himself testified that he was employed by Mr. King; that Mr. King was in charge of the mines as superintendent, and that the mines were called the “ U. P. Mines.” He gave no testimony to the contrary on this point.
Mr. Orahood, one of the attorneys for the defendant, was called and sworn as a witness for plaintiff; h'e testified to the effect that the mines were being operated by the Union Pacific Railway Company under a coal department, and not by the Union Coal Company.
The testimony of Mr. Stockton, an employee of the Union Pacific Railway Company as foreman boiler maker, tended to corroborate the other witnesses that the- mines were operated by the Union Pacific Raihvay Company, and not by the defendant company. The tendency of Dr. De La Matyr’s testimony was to the same effect. All the above-
To overcome the effect of this proof, the plaintiff identified and introduced in evidence in connection with the testimony of Mr. King certain reports made by him as superintendent of the mines. The heading of most of these reports (not all of them) bore the name of the Union Coal Company. Mr. King explained that these were old blanks which he found when he came to the mines. These reports, though signed by Mr. King as superintendent, were not substantwe evidence in favor of plaintiff in support of his averment that the mines were being operated by the defendant coal company. They were, at most, evidence affecting the credibility of the witness King. See 1 Green-leaf on Evidence, sec. 444 et seq.; also Babcock v. The People, 13 Colo. 519-521, and authorities there cited. The reports were nothing more than the unsworn declarations of the witness King; and, until there was proof of his authority or employment as the agent of the Union Coal Company, such declarations did not bind that company in any manner. That his agency could not be established by such reports alone, is a proposition requiring no discussion. The certificates of Mr. Stockton, as boiler inspector, stand upon the same footing, substantially, as the reports of Mr. King. O. & G. S. & R. Co. v. Tabor, 13 Colo. 46; Scott v. Crane, 1 Conn. 255-260; M. & V. R. R. Co. v. Cocke, 64 Miss. 713.
The issue as to the party actually operating the mines when the injury occurred was not a mere formal issue: it was material to the plaintiff’s case and vital to the defendant’s rights. Though the title of the mines was in the Union Coal Company, yet if that company was not concerned in the working of the mines at the time of the accident, it was not liable for plaintiff’s injuries under the averments of the complaint, and could not justly be made to
It is unnecessary to consider the remaining assignments of error. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.