Arminius Chemical Co. v. White's Administratrix

71 S.E. 637, 112 Va. 250, 1911 Va. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 71 S.E. 637 (Arminius Chemical Co. v. White's Administratrix) 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
Arminius Chemical Co. v. White's Administratrix, 71 S.E. 637, 112 Va. 250, 1911 Va. LEXIS 79 (Va. 1911).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

White’s administratrix brought suit against the Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated, in the Circuit Court of Louisa county, to recover damages for the death of her decedent by the wrongful act of the defendant company. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $5,000, upon which the court entered judgment, and the case is before us upon a writ of error.

The case was tried upon an amended declaration which contains six counts, and the defendant is described as the “Arminius Chemical Company, a corporation created by [266]*266and existing under the laws of the State of Virginia.” The Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated, appeared and craved oyer of the original writ, from which it appears that the sheriff of Louisa county was commanded to summon the “Arminius Chemical Company, a corporation created by and existing under the laws of the State of Virginia,” and that it was executed by delivering a copy thereof to R. L. Gordon, Jr., the agent and attorney of the Arminius Chemical Company; whereupon the defendant company pleaded that R. L. Gordon, Jr., was not the attorney of the company named upon whom legal process could be served, but was the agent for the purpose of receiving service of process on the Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated; that they were separate and distinct legal entities; that the West Virginia corporation, the Arminius Chemical Company, expired on the 9th day of January, 1907, when it conveyed by deed of that date all of its property in the State of Virginia to the Arminius Chemical Company, which was created a corporation, under the laws of the State of Virginia on the 8th day of November, 1906, by the name of the Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated.

The court rejected this plea and gave leave to the plaintiff to amend her declaration by inserting the word “Incorporated” after the word “Company”; and these two rulings of the court, refusing to allow the plea to be filed and permitting the plaintiff to amend her declaration, are the subjects of the first and second bills of exceptions.

We think the rulings of the court were plainly right. There was at the time of the institution of this suit but one company, which was the Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated. It was the defendant in the suit; R. L. Gordon, Jr., was its attorney, duly appointed under the laws of the State to receive service of process on its behalf; it was served upon him, and the Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated, was thereby brought before the court.

[267]*267The defendant company also moved to quash the original writ in the case, because it was not made returnable in accordance with the law, in that it did not appear that it was made returnable within ninety days from its date.

The-writ was issued on the 25th of November, 1908, and was made returnable to the rules to be holden “on the third Monday in January,” to answer the administratrix of Richard S. White of a plea of trespass on the case; the objection being that the writ should have said, “on the third Monday in January, next.”

We find no merit in this objection. Of course, it would have been better to have said “the third Monday in January, next,” but the omission was immaterial. It could have misled no one who did not exercise some ingenuity to be deceived.

There was a demurrer to the declaration and to each count thereof. Upon examination we find that, while the counts in the declaration are more elaborate than needful, containing much which might safely have been rejected as surplusage, yet in each, if the material facts which are well pleaded are proven, the plaintiff would be entitled to a judgment. In other words, each count states a sufficient cause of action.

The several preliminary exceptions and the demurrer to the declaration are, therefore, overruled.

With respect to the instructions given on behalf of the defendant in error, we find no objection, if there be evidence tending to prove the facts upon which they are predicated; nor do we find reversible error in the action of the court refusing to give certain instructions asked for by the plaintiff in error.

This brings us to a consideration of the motion of the plaintiff in error to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence.

The defendant company is engaged in the mining of [268]*268pyrites, and employs about three hundred men. The shaft of the mine is sunk at an angle of thirty degrees from the perpendicular and sixty degrees from the horizontal. It is 1,060 feet deep, and from it at various depths levels are run off on either side from which the ore is -taken. The ore is raised by a steam engine, by means of an ore car or skip. The car is moved by a wire cable attached to the bail of the car, the other end of the cable being attached to a large drum at the surface, which drum is connected by a clutch or cog-wheels which fit into the wheels on the engine. This connection is made by a lever, which is moved to the right to disconnect, and to the left to connect, by the turning of a wheel at the engineman’s stand. When the drum is thus connected with the engine, the car cannot descend, and when it is desired to lower the car the drum is disconnected from the engine and it is lowered — or it would, perhaps, be more correct to say that the speed by which it is lowered is regulated by means of a brake on the drum. This brake may be operated by hand or by compressed air, by which pressure is brought to bear upon the drum. The setting of the brake by hand is effected by forcing a lever back and catching it in a clutch, by means of which it retains the pressure thus secured. The air when used has a pressure three times as great as that which can be secured by hand. The car runs upon a narrow-gauge steel track, and in order to facilitate the work there are two of these tracks, over each of which a car is moved, being attached to separate drums, but drawn up and lowered by the same engine. In the engine-room, immediately in front of the hoistman or engineman, there is a gauge upon which there are two hands, one red and one black, like those on the face of a clock, which indicate at all times the exact pressure of air upon the brake cylinder or brake, and the air pressure on the air reservoir, which is connected with the brake cylinder. This pressure can* be [269]*269increased or decreased at the will of the operator. There is an air brake for each drum and a gauge for each drum. Both drums are under the eye of the hoistman, and any movement of either can be instantly observed. There is also a shaft indicator, consisting of a large dial, the hands on which point to the depth of the skip in the shaft from the top of the dump to the bottom of the shaft. The air is turned on or off of the brake by a hand lever eight or ten inches long, which is moved easily by the. operator, but is stationary unless moved by physical force.

'Che plaintiff’s intestate was killed by falling from defendant’s ore car or skip. The hoistman testified that after he had landed the men from the north skip he turned to raise those on the south skip and saw the drum turning the wrong way and knew that the skip had escaped control; that he applied the air brake suddenly, turning the lever to emergency; that he did not know how it escaped control, but that he might have struck it inadvertently and knocked the air pressure off.

The lever referred to, by which the air is controlled, moves through a space of about six inches.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.E. 637, 112 Va. 250, 1911 Va. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arminius-chemical-co-v-whites-administratrix-va-1911.