Biondi v. Central Coal & Coke Co.

9 S.W.2d 596, 320 Mo. 1130, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 596 (Biondi v. Central Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biondi v. Central Coal & Coke Co., 9 S.W.2d 596, 320 Mo. 1130, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 736 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of Macon County in an action in damages for the death of respondent’s decedent on April 12, 1925, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of appellant. The verdict was for respondent in the sum of $3500. An appeal to the Kansas' City Court of Appeals was granted from the judgment entered on such verdict. There the judgment was affirmed in an opinion written by “German, Special Judge,” in which Arnold, J., concurred; Bland, J., dissented in separate opin *1134 ion; Tkimbue, P. J., was1 absent. Thereafter tlic ease was certified to this court because one of the judges deemed the opinion and decision of that court in conflict with the decision of this court in State ex rel. v. Ellison, 270 Mo. 645, 195 S. W. 722. The case is therefore here for appellate review, just as if the appeal had been granted to this court in the first instance.

AYe quote from the majority opinion as follows:

“After reciting the facts showing the representative capacity of the plaintiff; the corporate existence of the defendant; that it was operating the mine in question under, the ‘room and pillar plan;’ that the mine consisted of a vertical shaft driven- in the ground, intersecting with horizontal beds or veins of coal, from the bottom of which shaft, entries for passageways and air courses are driven and multiplied, as occasion demands; and that passageways, known as ‘room-necks,’ connect the entries with the rooms where the coal is actually being mined, the petition charged it to be-the duty of defendant to furnish deceased with a reasonably safe place in which to work and with a reasonably safe passageway to and from his working place in the mine, and to use ordinary care to keep the roofs of its room-necks, passageways and entries where deceased was compelled to be, reasonably free from loose and overhanging rock.. That defendant failed in the performance ‘of these duties,: had failed .to inspect the roof of the passageway in question and to take down or properly timber the loose and overhanging rock therein, and that defendant knew, or could have known by the use of ordinary care and caution, the dangerous and unsafe condition of the passageway and the presence of loose and overhanging rock therein in time to have prevented the casualty. But that defendant carelessly, negligently and recklessly failed and neglected to remove or properly timber the passageway, by reason whereof the rock fell, causing the death of deceased.

“The petition further alleged that deceased was thirty-three years of age, single and unmarried, having a mother, living in Italy, who was dependent upon him for support.

“The answer denied the allegations of the petition, except those alleging the corporate existence of the defendant; contained a plea of contributory negligence and deceased’s failure to properly care for his own working place, and his failure to properly perform the duties imposed upon him as an employee of defendant, and that the death was the result of an accident..

“„The record does not disclose the filing-of any reply, but the trial seems to have proceeded as though the affirmative allegations of. the answer were traversed by a reply.

“After .unsuccessfully moving for a-new trial and in arrest of judgment, the case is brought here for review.

*1135 “Deceased was killed by the falling oí a rock or piece of rock from the roof or ceiling, and the' trial seems to have proceeded on the theory that if the place where the rock fell ivas under the sole charge and control of the deceased as his ‘room,’ there was no liability; while, contrariwise, if there was a duty on the defendant to inspect the place where the rock fell, and from such inspection its insecure position could have been determined, a liability would exist.

‘ ‘ There was positive evidence, substantial in character, from which the jury could determine the question of fact, and hence non-liability or liability, either way.

“It is true that frequently on cross-examination the testimony of a witness would be explained, and perhaps the positiveness of his statement on direct somewhat shaken, but this is usual; and unless there is testimony on cross-examination tantamount to a retraction, the testimony on direct stands and the duty rests with the jury to determine just what the witness’s evidence has been.

‘‘ The evidence shows that after the neck was turned off the entry, room No. 10 was driven in by the deceased, a skilled miner, from fifty to eighty feet, according to the' varying estimates of the several witnesses, when a clay seam was struck. Boom No. 10 was twenty-three or twenty-four feet wide, and when the clay seam was reached, the deceased, under orders from defendant, drove a passageway through it a distance of from three to five feet, into another coal Vein, where he again began the widening or ‘ drifting ’ process to form a room from which to remove the coal.

“The work' of going through the clay seam, according to the testimony of at least one witness, was called in mine parlance ‘narrow work,’ the purpose evidently being to afford opportunity only for the free passage of cars and men to the room to be opened beyond, from which additional coal was to be mined.

“There is definite and substantial testimony that the company was responsible for the condition of places where ‘narrow work’ occurs, and of passage or entry-ways, no matter by what terminology such places may be designated. And there is also positive and substantial evidence that the company is not responsible for the condition of the room where the miner is actually mining coal unless the company is notified by the miner and then fails to correct a seemingly dangerous condition. This testimony undoubtedly accords with the settled mining law of this State. [State ex rel. v. Ellison, 270 Mo. 645.]

“There is no evidence that the deceased notified the company to examine and protect him against the possible casualty which happened. *

‘ ‘ There is credible testimony that an examination of the roof would have detected the insecure position and condition of the rock, and there is equally credible testimony to the contrary.

*1136 ‘ ‘ On Saturday preceding the casualty the deceased had set' and fired a blast in the coal vein which he struck beyond the clay seam. Whether this blast loosened the rock is entirely problematical, as there is, and doubtless could be, no testimony on the subject.

“Defendant’s contention on the merits is narrowed down to this: That inasmuch as it was the duty of deceased to protect the roof of his room No. 10 (no notice having been given by him to the company to do so), and inasmuch as the part of the rock which fell was that part of the rock wdiich was imbedded in the roof or ceiling of roof No. 10, there is no liability, even though.it. was the duty of the defendant to inspect the ‘narrow' work’ through the clay seam, and even though such inspection would have discovered the insecure rock and prevented the casualty.

“Counsel asserts in his statement of the case that the deceased ‘had removed all of the coal in his room up to the clay seam. He w'as then directed to drive the room through the clay about'twelve feet wdde instead of twenty-four. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 596, 320 Mo. 1130, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biondi-v-central-coal-coke-co-mo-1928.