Addington v. Guests River Coal Co.

108 S.E. 695, 130 Va. 584, 1921 Va. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 695 (Addington v. Guests River Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Addington v. Guests River Coal Co., 108 S.E. 695, 130 Va. 584, 1921 Va. LEXIS 178 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Saunders, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries to the plaintiff in error’s intestate.

The defendant company demurred to the evidence, and the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff subject to this demurrer. This demurrer was sustained by the court, and judgment entered for the defendant. Thereupon the plaintiff applied for and secured a writ of error from one of the judges of this court. The action of the trial court sustaining the demurrer to the evidence is assigned as error.

The defendant was the owner and operator of a coal mine near Tacoma, in Wise county, Virginia. Some time during the year 1918, John M. Sparks (plaintiff’s intestate) applied for and secured work as a miner in this mine, his particular assignment being to dig and load coal. While en[587]*587gaged in this work, in August, 1918, a large piece of rock, called draw-slate, fell upon Sparks, inflicting injuries causing his death.

This draw-slate is an intervening rock stratum in the roof or ceiling of a coal mine lying between the coal and the sandstone top. The thickness of this stratum varies in different mines. The quality of this draw-slate also varies. In some mines it is rotten and friable, in others it is tough. The slate in this particular mine was blue slate, “tough slate,” as it is described by one of the witnesses. This overhanging slate stratum is liable to fall from the ceiling when the support of the underlying coal is removed. Hence, as the work of removal proceeds, the draw-slate must be supported by wooden props. Loose, or cracking slate, carries its own indication of danger, and affords a warning that its possible fall must be provided against by suitable props.

Hinton, a colored man who was hauling, or “pulling coal,” for Sparks at the time he was injured, testifies that when he returned to the room, after taking out a car, he found intestate under the rock which had fallen during his absence. This rock the witness describes as “nine or ten feet long, or probably longer.”

The defendant stated the following grounds of demurrer, which will be considered in connection with the evidence.

I. The evidence fails to show that the defendant was guilty of any negligence which was the proximate cause of the injury complained of.

II. The evidence shows that the plaintiff’s decedent, John M. Sparks, was guilty of negligence, and that such negligence was the sole cause of, or contributed to, the injury complained of.

III. The evidence shows that the plaintiff’s decedent had knowledge of the danger complained of, and assumed the risk thereof.

[588]*588IV. The evidence shows that the injury complained of resulted from danger ordinarily incident to mining, and from a danger which was open and obvious, and therefore one which the plaintiff’s decedent in accepting the employment, and remaining in the employment, assumed.

V. The evidence shows that the injury complained of happened in the working place ■ of plaintiff’s decedent, at the face of the coal, and further shows that it was the duty of plaintiff’s decedent to protect himself against such dangers in his working place.

VI. The evidence shows that plaintiff’s decedent violated the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia, after discovering the danger overhead in his working place from loose slate, in not staying from under said slate, in the roof of said mine in his working place, until after he had propped same, or otherwise made same safe.

VII. The evidence shows that plaintiff’s decedent was reasonably experienced in mines, and in coal mining and loading; that he knew of, and had been warned of, the danger of loose draw-slate hanging overhead, in the roof of his working place where he was working; shows that he had át hand sufficient props with which to protect himself against danger from such loose slate; shows that there was no compulsion upon him to remain under such loose slate in his working place, and shows that it was his duty either to protect and prop such loose slate in his working place, or else to remain from under same, and that, nevertheless, he continued to work thereunder, assuming the risk,of such danger, and that as a result of such negligence, and such contributory negligence on his part, he received the injury complained of, from the falling of such loose slate from the roof in his working place.

One of the allegations of the declaration is that the decedent was not an experienced miner, and that his knowl[589]*589edge and understanding of mining was not such as to enable him to know, understand, or appreciate, the very great dangers that surrounded him on account of the dangerous condition of the roof of the room in which he was at work.

This allegation raises an issue of fact, and testimony is not lacking to establish the extent of the decedent’s intelligence and experience, and the sufficiency of both to enable him to apprehend that a cracked stratum of slate in no wise attached to the upper sandstone would be likely to fall when the support of the underlying coal was removed.

T. L. Flanary, a witness who had been mining coal “off and on for something like eighteen years,” testifies in part as follows:

Examination in Chief.
“Q. Did you know John M. Sparks?
“A. I had known him ever since he was a kid.
“Q. Do you know whether he was an experienced miner, or not?
“A. I would not think John was an experienced coal miner from what I know about him.
“Q. Knowing him as you do, and having seen the place, and judging from your experience, would you, as a mine superintendent, or foreman, have put him in this place to work?
“A. Knowing what I do about John’s coal digging. He came to me while I was foreman on Whiteoak, two or three times, for a job. I had bad top, and did not give him any work. I did not think he was a man who could run a place safe, and did not give him any work to do.
“Q. Would you have given him work in this place by himself?
“A. No, sir, he nor any other man I knew as well as I knew him.
[590]*590“Q. Do you know the character of that roof there where he was killed generally, whether it was good or bad?
“A. Well, I never done any work in this mine that John was killed in, but it was the same seam of coal that Camper worked and Bruce worked at Greeno, and it is all bad top.”

It will be noted that this witness does not state when decedent came to him for a job, or how much experience as a miner decedent had acquired after that time, nor does he testify as to any association with him as a miner, or any opportunities that he had had to form a personal judgment from association and observation. His statement as to the character of the top in Guests River Company’s mine is based upon observation of top elsewhere in other mines on the same seam of coal.

Cross-Examination.
“Q. You had known of him doing work in the mines, for how many years back before he was killed ?
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 695, 130 Va. 584, 1921 Va. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addington-v-guests-river-coal-co-va-1921.