136 P. 38 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Action by appellant to recover damages for personal injuries caused by an explosion of dynamite in a mine of the respondent company on January 18, 1911. Nonsuited upon the trial, he appeals from the judgment. The allegations of the complaint touching the cause and manner of the accident are as follows: “That on the 18th day of January, 1911, and for some time prior thereto, the defendants negligently stored and kept and thawed in said mine, where said mining operations were carried, on, large quantities of dynamite and other- highly explosive substances, and, as plaintiff is informed and believes, largely in excess of 3,000 pounds, and at a point in said mine about seventy-five feet from said incline shaft, and at said shaft where, in its downward course, it reached the 200-foot ievel, and where, should an explosion of same occur, escape by those working in said mine, in the employ of the defendant company using said incline shaft as a means of egress, would.be cut off, and where, should an explosion of said dynamite occur, the lives of the said employees of said defendant company, working in said mine and near said incline shaft, would be imperiled; * * * that the said defendants so storing and keeping said dynamite and other highly explosive substances, as aforesaid, and at the place designated negligently placed a portion of same in a tight compartment for storage preparatory to use, and, for the purpose of thawing the same and the said dynamite and other explosive substances so placed in said compartment for the purpose of being thawed, the defendants negligently used and caused to be
No special difficulty is presented in the dissection of these allegations; and, for the purpose of determining what proof was admissible under them, and whether a sufficient case was made to go to the jury, we say they fairly and sufficiently allege that the appellant’s injuries, occasioned by the explosion, were due to the negligence of respondents in the following particulars: In having ¡more than 3,000 pounds of explosives in the mine; in having explosives stored at a place in the mine where, should they explode, escape by those in the mine would be cut off; in having explosives stored at and near the shaft where, should they, explode, the lives of the persons working in the shaft would be imperiled; and in the method used for “thawing,” to-wit, the use of electricity in such a manner and to such a degree that the portion of the explosives being thawed became heated to excess. So construing the complaint, we proceed to ascertain the value of the ease made, having in mind the rule that the appellant
The allegation of negligence in storing more than' 3,000
The allegation of negligence in storing the dynamite at a place in the mine where, should it accidentally explode, escape by those working in the mine would be cut off, also charges the violation of a specific duty imposed by section 8546, Revised Codes. Such
But the place of storage presents another aspect under the allegation of negligence in storing the dynamite at a place where,
The appellant also insists that, independently of the foregoing contentions, a sufficient showing was made as to the negligent cause of the explosion, under the allegations of the complaint touching the methods of thawing. According to the testimony,
The respondents argue, however, that since the appellant charges the explosion to have occurred through the overheating of the dynamite, his case has failed, because there is no evidence that heat will explode dynamite, or that the thawer was generating a degree of heat sufficient to effect that result. The witness Boulware distinctly testified that the dynamite could be exploded by heat alone; “getting hot in the sun might explode
Whether, thus overheated, the dynamite exploded spontaneously or because susceptible to some impulse otherwise inadequate, it was not necessary for the appellant to show; but it was his privilege to account for the explosion, if he could, in such a manner as to cut off all escape from liability. In his effort to accomplish this, he was met by many adverse rulings, of which
Appellant also sought to show by several witnesses who were miners, and who had worked in several mines besides the
In another series of questions the appellant sought to elicit the opinions of certain witnesses as to whether, having in view
Other rulings were made adverse to appellant in the course of the examination of witnesses which are assigned as error. As to them we find that whatever error was committed was' cured by the subsequent admission of the testimony, and so they are of no avail on this appeal.
Some space is given in the briefs to the discussion of the ruling admitting, over objection, the testimony of Boulware before the coroner’s jury, and the refusal of the court to strike it out
The final question is whether the ease as presented by the appellant discloses assumption of risk. We think not. The only risk which it is claimed he assumed is that of the explosion
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for retrial.
Reversed amd remanded.