Chicago, Wilmington & Vermillion Coal Co. v. Moran

110 Ill. App. 664, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 674
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 23, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 110 Ill. App. 664 (Chicago, Wilmington & Vermillion Coal Co. v. Moran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Wilmington & Vermillion Coal Co. v. Moran, 110 Ill. App. 664, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 674 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Thomas Moran was seriously injured by a rock falling upon him while at work in a coal mine operated by the Chicago, Wilmington and Vermillion Coal CompanjL He brought this suit against the coal company to recover damages for said injury. His declaration consisted of an original and four additional counts, or five in all. The first, second and third were for common law negligence, the fourth for a willful violation or neglect of a statutory duty in failing to furnish props, and the fifth for a willful violation or neglect of a statutory duty relative to a mine examiner. Defendant pleaded not guilty and a special plea averring that at the time of the injury plaintiff was not in the employ of defendant. To this ' latter plea plaintiff replied that he was at that time in the employ of defendant. Upon a jury trial plaintiff had a verdict assessing his damages at §5,000. Motions by defendant for a nexv trial and in arrest of judgment were denied. Plaintiff had judgment on the verdict and defendant appeals;

Patrick Moran, plaintiff’s father, xvas an experienced coal miner, and xvhen his son, Thomas, became fourteen years of age he applied to defendant to take him into the mine to work. This xvas granted upon his furnishing the statutory affidavit, and at the time of the injury plaintiff had been working with his father in the mine about txvo years, and had reached the age of about sixteen years. There xvas in defendant’s mine a passageway or entry called the “ straight north entry.” The miners traveled the entries in going to and from their work, and coal cars were hauled and empties were returned along a track laid in this entry. There were “ rooms ” off this entry every few feet on each side, in each of which rooms two miners worked together. A switch track, led into each room from the track in the entry. When the miners in a room had filled a car a driver took it out and set in an empty, so that miners generally were not required to be in the entry except in going to and from their work. But plaintiff and his father were not at work in a room. They were driving the entry, that is, they were at the end of the entry, and were extending the entry by digging out the coal there, and taking out a certain thiqkness of earth below and rock above the coal, to get the requisite height for the entry. They therefore were in the entry all the time. When an empty was brought for them they had no room of their own in which to set it, but it was by the driver set upon the switch in the nearest room, and when a car of coal loaded by them was taken out they had to go some distance in the entry to the nearest room to get their empty car. There was a class of employes who went through the passage xv ays in the mine at night, “ brushing” the roof of the entryxvays, cleaning away debris, repairing the tracks, etc.; these were called “ company men,” and they evidently were not fellow-servants with the men who mined the coal. Some time before this accident to plaintiff, props had been furnished plaintiff and his father, and placed in the entry near the end xvhere they were at work. One night the company men found these propsin the xvay of work they xvere doing, and they moved them back in the entry. Thereafter when plaintiff and his father needed props they xvent to that place to get them, and as they drove the entry further into the mine they xvere further axvay from the props. On the dav of the injury the props were thirty or forty 'feet from the face of the entry. Patrick Moran needed some props and caps of certain lengths to support the place xvhere he was at work, and he gave the dimensions to his son, and told him to go and get them. Thomas went along the entry to the place where the props were, selected a prop and sawed it the required length, and then took another piece and began sawing a cap the length required therefor. The entry at that place was high enough so it was convenient to do that work there, "while at the face, where his father was getting out the coal, the space was only about four feet high. While plaintiff was sawing the cap, a large rock, estimated to weigh from two hundred to four hundred pounds, fell upon plaintiff from the roof, inflicting the injuries for which this suit is brought.

It is not argued the damages are excessive. The abstract omits the evidence as to the extent of the injuries, only giving the pages of the record where it can be found. This is equivalent to an admission that the damages awarded are not excessive compensation for the injuries plaintiff sustained.

It is argued plaintiff was in the employ of his father and not of defendant. Without repeating the evidence on this subject we think it sufficient to say the jury were required by the instructions to determine this question, and we are satisfied the proof Avarranted their finding that plaintiff Avas in the employ of defendant, and indeed that the jury could not have reached any other conclusion.

It is argued the proof does not show defendant was negligent, as charged in the first three counts. Plaintiff’s proof showed that some ten days before plaintiff Avas hurt, plaintiff’s father, in the presence of plaintiff, called the attention of the pit boss to the apparently dangerous condition of the roof of the entry at the place where plaintiff was afterward hurt; that the pit boss said, all right, he would send men to fix it; that he told them to go ahead and work and that he thought it Avas safe enough; that it Avas all right; that he would fix it some time but would have to Avait until the roof settled; that íavo days before the accident Patrick Moran, in the presence of plaintiff, again called the attention of the pit boss to the condition of the roof and told him it Avas getting Avorse, and somebody wonld be getting hurt there; that the pit boss directed them, to go to work, and told them there would nothing happen; that it was all right; that he would get around as soon as he could, and for them to go ahead and mind their work. Plaintiff testified that after he heard what the pit boss said he did not consider it dangerous. A driver testified' to having called the attention of the pit boss to the dangerous condition of the roof at this place. Several miners testified to the fact that the rock was hanging loose in the roof at this place and in a dangerous condition for several days before plaintiff was hurt. The pit boss, a witness for defendant, did not testify as to the first of these conversations with plaintiff’s father, but was examined as to the second, and testified he was there and viewed the place and found it bad, and told Patrick Moran he would have it attended to, but he denied that Moran complained of anything to him. He did not deny that he told them the place was safe enough and all right and directed them to proceed with their work. It was therefore established that the roof was in a dangerous condition; that the attention of defendant’s proper officer was called to it twice, the last time the second day before the injury; that he promised to have it repaired, and that he also twice lulled plaintiff and his father into security by assurances that it was all right; that it was safe enough; that nothing would happen; and bv directing them to go on with their work. Defendant claims it had the roof brushed and put in proper condition the night before the accident. Its proof was to that effect, while plaintiff’s proof was that the morning before the accident the roof bore no indications of having been brushed, and that its condition had not been changed.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Ill. App. 664, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-wilmington-vermillion-coal-co-v-moran-illappct-1903.