Anderson v. Watson

118 A. 569, 141 Md. 217, 1922 Md. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 118 A. 569 (Anderson v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Watson, 118 A. 569, 141 Md. 217, 1922 Md. LEXIS 103 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

Oeeutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants in this case are coal.miners who have severally at various times, between October, 1902, and October, 1917, been employed by the Consolidation Coal Company in its. coal mine Ho. 3 at Hoffman, Allegany County, Maryland, in cutting, mining, and loading coal. For their labor each miner was paid according to the quantity of coal mined by him, which was ascertained by weighing the cars containing the coal so mined, which was loaded into them as it was mined, on scales operated by the Consolidation Coal Company. The complainants allege that the scales so operated by the coal company were inaccurate, and that as a result of their inaccuracy they were credited with and paid for less, coal than they actually mined. That condition, they say, existed continuously between the dates to which we have referred, .and they further say that the Consolidation Coal Company has in its possession records showing the quantity of coal mined by each of the complainants, and that the information contained in these records, which is essential to the ascertain *221 ment of the loss suffered by each of the complainants as a result of the inaccurate scales, cannot be obtained by them from any other source. They therefore demanded of the coal company that it discover the information contained .in said records, showing the amount of coal respectively mined by each of the complainants, and that it account to each of them for the compensation withheld from them and retained by the company, being the sum due them for the difference between the amount of coal credited to them in accordance with the registration of the inaccurate scales, and the amount of coal actually mined by them, and they accordingly filed in the Circuit Court for Allegany County a bill of complaint against the Consolidation Coal Company, certain employees and former employees of that company, and certain other miners who were employed at the mine during the period referred to and who were all affected in the same way by the error complained of by the appellants, asking for such discovery and accounting, and who have the same interests in the object of the suit. A demurrer to that bill of complaint was interposed and sustained, and an amended bill of complaint filed, to which certain of the defendants also demurred, and that demurrer was likewise sustained, and the complainants having indicated that they did not desire to make further amendments, the bill of complaint was dismissed, and from that decree this appeal was taken.

In the amended bill of complaint, which is the only one which we are required to consider, it is alleged that the plaintiffs are residents of Allegany County and bring the suit on behalf of all others having a common interest with them in its object; that certain of the defendants are sued as employees and former employees, weighmasters and servants of the defendant; that other defendants are .sued as parties having an interest in the object of the suit, who have declined to join with them as parties plaintiff; and that the Consolidation Coal Company is a corporation incorporated under the laws of Maryland.

*222 That the plaintiffs have respectively been employed as miners at various times and for varying periods between the first day of October, A. D. 1902, and the ninth day of October, A. 'D. 1917, by the Consolidation Coal Company, to which for convenience we will hereafter refer as the coal company, at its mine Ho. 3 at Hoffman, in cutting, mining and loading coal upon mining cars, and that the coal so mined was delivered by the coal company over its own mining tracks in its mining oars to and weighed upon its own mine scales, and “that thereafter such coal was dumped from such cars into railroad cars for shipment by rail to purchasers of such coal, or in wagons for delivery to local purchasers of such coal; and records of the purchasers of such coal, and of the weight of coal sold and delivered to them, to which records the plaintiffs have not, nor have had access, were solely kept by the defendant company”; that such work was performed entirely within the mine at- a considerable distance from its principal entrance, in most cases extending a mile or more, and that the coal company required all miners employed in the mine on each working day to go directly to the place of labor assigned them, and remain there during their respective periods of labor.

That as the plaintiffs respectively loaded the mine cars they attached thereto a. “check” as a claim for credit from said employer for compensation for services rendered by them in mining, cutting and loading the coal on such car, which compensation was based upon the weight of the coal thus loaded; and that thereafter the company removed said cars from the place of loading out of the mine and over the platform of certain mine scales where they were weighed by one of the coal company’s weighmasters, who in each case, as he weighed the car, detached from it the miner’s check and, upon a sheet provided by the defendant company, entered the serial number of the car and the weight of the coal found therein, as, shown by the scales to the credit of the name or check number of the miner who had loaded the same within *223 said mine, and that, when these ears were removed from the mine, the miner wlu> had loaded them had no further opportunity of seeing them or of knowing whether or not tho weight credited to the miner whose check was attached to the car being* weighed was correct.

That the record made by the weighmaster, showing the amount of coal credited to each of the plaintiffs and the serial number of the mine car in which such coal had been delivered ro the scales was transmitted to the office of the defendant company, and a memorandum thereof posted in the weighing house, hut no copy given to any of the miners; and that from such record the coal company computed and reported to the miners the weight of coal credited to them for the period covered by the report, and the earnings computed thereon, and paid them from time to time at the several rates from time to time agreed upon between them, and that that report and payment constituted all the accounting, notice or information furnished or available to such miners.

That the scales on which the cars of coal were weighed were provided with a large platform upon which was laid a short length of track over which the loaded mine ears passed. That such scales were kept in very bad adjustment and condition by the coal company, so that the ratio of balance of the scales became altered from the established ratio of design of said scales, and the counterpoise weights designed for use upon the scales became erronesous, so that they falsified the balance of such scales in such a way that they indicated one hundred and eleven pounds less than the actual and true weight of coal loaded upon and weighed within each car, and that in balancing' the said scales each day the coal company’s weighmasters removed from its; place upon the balance beam of said scales tho counterpoise hanger, and, after balancing the remaining parts of said scales, restored it to its place and used it while coal was being loaded, thereby causing the scales to weigh each mine carload of coal 620 pounds less than its actual weight, the counterpoise hanger preventing *224

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 569, 141 Md. 217, 1922 Md. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-watson-md-1922.