Barry v. Badger

169 P. 34, 54 Mont. 224, 1917 Mont. LEXIS 95
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1917
DocketNo. 3,817
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 169 P. 34 (Barry v. Badger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barry v. Badger, 169 P. 34, 54 Mont. 224, 1917 Mont. LEXIS 95 (Mo. 1917).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this action plaintiff seeks to recover damages for a personal injury, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants during the course of his employment by them as a miner. The defendants were copartners, under the firm name of the “Gold Reef Lease.” They were engaged in the business of leasing and operating quartz mines in Fergus county, their [226]*226principal place of business being at Lewistown. In the year 1913 they held under lease and were operating the MacGinniss mine at Maiden. The plaintiff was employed by them as a miner. It is alleged in the complaint that the defendants failed and neglected to exercise ordinary care and diligence to proyide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work, whereby he sustained the injury complained of. The answer of the defendants consists of a general denial of the negligence alleged, and allegations of the defenses of assumption of risk and contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The cause was tried in November, 1914. At the close of the evidence, the court granted defendants’ motion for nonsuit, the grounds thereof being: (1) That the evidence failed to show that the defendants did not use ordinary care to provide the plaintiff with a reasonably safe place in which to work; (2) that the injury was due to one of the ordinary hazards of the employment assumed by the plaintiff when he entered the employ of defendants; and (3) that it appeared that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. The plaintiff has appealed from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

About thirty days prior to January 23, 1913, the plaintiff, :in company with W. G. Allen, also employed by defendants as a miner, was assigned work in a stope in defendants’ mine from which most of the ore had theretofore been removed. It was a large excavation, extending along the vein from west to east about twenty-eight feet. It was forty or fifty feet in height and about twenty feet in width from north to south at the widest portion of it. The north wall was in a porphyry formation. The south wall was in hard limestone. Ore was exposed in a vein in the north wall, down near the floor. In order to reach the ore in this vein it was necessary to clean up and remove from the floor a large amount of debris. The evidence does not disclose whether this debris consisted of ore or was merely waste which had been left there during the previous mining operations. Nor does it show whether it had resulted from blasting, or had fallen from above because of a process of slacking in the roof [227]*227or walls. A raise had been constructed from a tunnel in the lower workings up into this stope, coming through the floor near the foot of the wall on the south. This had been made use of as a chute in order to remove the ore and waste during mining operations in the stope. The floor sloped upward from the west toward the east. The face of the north wall was substantially perpendicular and comparatively smooth; the south wall was rough and uneven, and inclined from a perpendicular to the south. About twenty feet from the floor was an “overhang” extending horizontally along the face of this wall, which was referred to by the witnesses as a “bench.” At a point several feet east of the mouth of the chute it projected out from the general surface of the wall to a distance of three or four feet. At this point it was supported by stalls. So far as the evidence discloses, there were no other supporting timbers in any part of the stope. Three or four days before that on which the accident occurred, plaintiff and Allen had finished removing the loose material and had begun to drive excavations into the exposed vein. They first began work together at a point opposite the chute. When the work had progressed somewhat they began to work separately, the plaintiff drifting along the vein toward the west and Allen toward the east. The morning was usually employed by them in cleaning up and removing the ore which they had blasted down during the previous afternoon. On the day of the accident they had cleaned up the result of the blasting on the day before and each was engaged in drilling a set ,of holes for blasting when they quit work for the day. The plaintiff was sitting on a box engaged in drilling, when a large boulder fell from somewhere above the projection or bench in the south wall. It first struck the bench, bounded off across the stope to the north wall, then dropped to the floor, and, rolling down the incline, caught the plaintiff and inflicted the injury of which he complains.

Aside from that showing the occurrence of the fall of the rock, no evidence was introduced tending to show whether the walls, or either of them, or the roof, should, in the exercise of [228]*228ordinary care, have been supported by timbers, or whether the stulls supporting the bench were not all the timbers required in any part of the stope. The plaintiff testified substantially as follows: That he had had twenty-five years’ experience as a miner; that when he first entered the stope he looked it over as best he could without making a careful inspection of it; that the lime formation found in the mines of Fergus county was hard and solid, and, in places where he had worked, a few stulls here and there were usually all that were required in the way of timbering; that he had worked in stopes where no timbering was necessary because the lime was strong enough to stand without support; that such places were considered safe; and that there was nothing in this stope apparently different from others, nor anything unusual showing that it needed timbering. Allen was also an experienced miner. He had been employed in this kind of work for ten years. H¿ testified that, when he and plaintiff began the work of removing the loose material, he called the attention of the defendant Young, who was superintending the mining operations of defendants, to some loose rock in the wall above the bench; that under Young’s direction he took a crowbar and pried out and took down all that he thought was necessary — everything he thought dangerous — and that, back of what he took out, the wall appeared to be solid so that it would stand of itself. On cross-examination he made substantially the same statements, adding that when he took out the loose rock plaintiff was below in the stope and stood out of the way while he was engaged in doing it. These were the only witnesses who testified touching the condition of the walls of the stope and the nature of the ground. They made no statement to the effect that it was of such a character that it would slack and fall by reason of exposure to the air, or that a fall would likely be caused by blasting operations in the north wall as the work progressed. Neither. expressed an opinion on this subject.

“It is elementary that, when the plaintiff seeks recovery for [1] actionable negligence, his complaint must allege facts showing these three elements: (1) That the defendant was under a [229]*229legal duty to protect Mm from the injury of which he complains ; (2) that the defendant failed to perform this duty; and (3) that the injury was proximately caused by defendant’s delinquency. All of these elements combined constitute the cause of action; and if the complaint fails to disclose, directly or by fair inference from the facts alleged, the presence of all of them, it is insufficient, for it fails to state the facts constituting a cause of action.” (Ellinghouse v. Ajax Live Stock Co., 51 Mont. 275, L. R. A. 1916D, 836, 152 Pac. 481.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 P. 34, 54 Mont. 224, 1917 Mont. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-badger-mont-1917.