Coal & Mining Co. v. Admr. of Clay

51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 542
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 542 (Coal & Mining Co. v. Admr. of Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coal & Mining Co. v. Admr. of Clay, 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 542 (Ohio 1894).

Opinion

Spear, J.

The first proposition argued is that the common pleas erred in overruling the demurrer to the petition. A majority of the court is of opinion that, under our liberal rules of construction, the pleading in the absence of a motion to make more definite, is sufficient.

The next proposition is that the common pleas erred in giving, in its charge to the jury, one of a series of seven requests asked by plaintiff. To this the exception entered was in this form: “To which ruling of the court in giving the special [551]*551charges, as asked by the plaintiff, the defendant at the time excepted.” We are of opinion that this exception is too general to bring’ the objection before a reviewing court. The exception should have been directed to the particular proposition to which objection was made.

Another proposition argued is that the trial court erred in refusing to give to the jury instruction No. 10, asked by the defendant, which inr struction is as follows

“10. The defendant asks the court to say to the jury that if they find from the evidence that Clay was in control of the room where he got killed, that then under the criminal statute, section 6871, Revised Statutes of Ohio, it was his duty to properly post the room, and no custom existing at the time at the mine could relieve him of that duty. ’ ’

Upon this point, in its general charge, the court said to the. jury that if they found that Clay “violated a criminal statute, for which violation he could have been prosecuted had he lived, such violation will not preclude a recovery in this action. ’ ’

It is further contended that the undisputed evidence given at the trial shows that there was no case made by the plaintiff justifying a verdictj and that the trial court, therefore, erred in not sustaining the defendant’s motion for a new trial. In order to judge of the bearing of the request which was refused, and the charge given respecting the section of the statute referred to, and the claim above stated, it will be necessary to look somewhat at the facts as shown by the record. It is proper here to correct a misapprehension on the part of counsel for defendant in error. They contend in their brief that the general charge of the [552]*552court cannot be considered because it was not made part of the bill of exceptions. Doubtless the manner in which the record is printed misled the counsel. The original bill of exceptions shows that the charge is properly attached to and made part of the bill, and we are not, therefore, embarrassed by a defective record.

Geo. D. Clay, the deceased, a man of about twenty-two years of age, was employed at the time of his death in working a machine used in mining coal in the mine of the defendant company. With him at the time, as a helper, was one Harry Devault, who met his death at the same time and by the same accident. Clay had been engaged in mining about three years in all, most of the time as a helper, having had charge of the machine about two months. He was a man in good health, and of averag’e intelligence. The mine embraced a number of rooms in which cutting with the machine was done. The operation of the machine is to punch or jab the coal and so make a bearing in and under the coal for the driller who follows and drills holes in the face of the coal near the top for the reception of the blasting material. The driller is succeeded by the filler, who shoots down the coal, loads it into the cars, etc. Three sets of men are thus engaged in the room, but at different times, and at distinct employments. Necessarily, therefore, the one having’ charge of these several operations has, for the time being, control of the room.

The man Dalton was a filler, and had enjoined upon him, in addition, by direction of the mine boss, one Dilch, the work of posting in the two rooms where he worked as filler, one being the room in which Clay met his death. He had worked [553]*553in the mine some eighteen months, having been employed originally as a helper, which position did not require him to attend to the work of posting, and later had been advanced to the place of a filler, and had been engaged in posting only about two.months at the time of the accident. In the course of his work he was required to shoot down the coal, fill it into cars, prop the roof where necessary, and get the room ready for the machine to come in again. In the two rooms thus posted by Dalton, Clay had followed in after him during the two months and cut the coal. The operation of cutting occupies about two and a half hours in each room. Ten rooms are usually assigned to one machine, and are cut one after another until the entire number are cut, when the first room is again reached. It does not appear that either Clay or Devault at any time made complaint of the way in which Dalton was performing his duty, either to Dalton himself, or to the bank boss.

Dalton was called by the plaintiff below, and it was shown by his testimony, not contradicted, that on the day Clay and Devault were killed, Dalton was present when they started in to cut the room. He said to Clay that he had better examine the room to see whether there was anything loose or not; to see whether there was any danger there or not. Thereupon Clay took a pick and sounded the roof; and said it was all right. It appears by this and other witnesses that sounding the roof with a' pick was the usual way of determining whether it. was secure or not, and, by witnesses called by plaintiff, that the sounding of the roof was not a hard thing to learn, but an easy thing, and that a common man could do it; if a man had just gone in green he wouldn’t know, but if he had gone [554]*554in knowing the place to be dangerous and tried to learn, it is easy. No evidence was offered tending-to show that any propping- done by Dalton previously to the workin the room in which the decedents were engaged at the .time of the accident, had been defectively or insufficiently done. Nor was any evidence given by plaintiff tending- to show that the company did not furnish proper timber for supporting the roof at the place Clay was working, but evidence given by defendant, undisputed, shows that proper timber w’as so furnished.

Clay and Devault were killed by the falling upon them of a piece of slate some nine feet square and about a foot in thickness.

At the time of the accident, and for a long time before, a custom existed at this mine whereby the work of posting and propping was given to the workmen called fillers. By force of this custom Dalton was required to post and prop, as before stated.

In their respective duties Daltqn did not have the control of Clay, nor did Clay have control over Dalton. Each was under one common superior called the mine boss.

It was in evidence by the defendant, not contradicted, that the mine boss g-ave instructions to both Claj and Devault to the effect that they were to cut nothing they thought dangerous; to take nobody’s word for it, but to examine the place for themselves before they went to work, and if found unsafe leave it until it was fixed.

The section of the Revised Statutes referred to provides, among other things, that “whoever knowingly does any act whereby the life or health of the persons, or the security of any mine and machinery are endangered, or any miner or' other [555]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Waddell & Walter v. Simoson
4 A. 725 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
McGinty v. Athol Reservoir Co.
29 N.E. 510 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1892)
Armstrong v. Deshler
12 Ohio St. 475 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1843)
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Scheller
42 Ill. App. 619 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1892)
Fraser v. Red River Lumber Co.
47 N.W. 785 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coal-mining-co-v-admr-of-clay-ohio-1894.