Commonwealth v. Griesing

54 Pa. D. & C. 573, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24
CourtLuzerne County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedDecember 4, 1945
Docketno. 275
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 Pa. D. & C. 573 (Commonwealth v. Griesing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Luzerne County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Griesing, 54 Pa. D. & C. 573, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Valentine, P. J.,

Defendants, Herbert C. Griesing, James C. Gardiner and Charles Neyhard, are, respectively, superintendent, mine foreman and assistant mine foreman of the Henry Colliery, owned and operated by the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, and were such on August 2, 1945, on which date an explosion occurred at the face of chamber 23 in the Upper Baltimore vein of the mine connected with said colliery.

Defendants are charged with having violated certain mandatory provisions of the Anthracite Mine Act of June 2, 1891, P. L. 176,>52 PS §71, and under section 1, article XVII of said act, it becomes our duty to determine whether defendants, or any of them, have “been negligently guilty of an offense against the provisions of this act”. Violations of the act are designated misdemeanors. Defendants are, therefore, charged with a criminal offense, and to warrant their conviction the evidence must establish the fact of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. In seeking the answer to the guilt or innocence of defendants, this fundamental requirement must be kept in mind.

The charge against Griesing is that he failed to perform mandatory duties required by the following provisions of the act:

Article X, sec. 10 (as amended by Act of April 20, 1899, P. L. 65). “All main doors shall have an attendant whose constant duty it shall be to open them for transportation and travel and prevent them from [575]*575standing open longer than is necessary for persons or cars to pass through, unless a self-acting door is used which is approved by the inspector of the district.”
Article X, sec. 11. “All main doors shall be so placed that when one door is open, another, which has the same effect upon the same current, shall be and remain closed and thus prevent any temporary stoppage of the air current.”
Article X, sec. 12. “An extra main door shall be so placed and kept standing open, as to be out of reach of accident, and so fixed that it can be at once closed in the event of an accident to the doors in use.”
Article X, sec. 13. “The frame work of such main doors shall be substantially secured in stone or brick, laid in mortar or cement unless otherwise permitted in writing by the inspector.”

The Commonwealth asserts, that by reason of defendant Griesing’s failure to comply with these provisions of the act an adequate supply of pure air was not provided as required by article X, sec. 1, of the act, which stipulates that “The owner, operator or superintendent of every mine shall provide and maintain a constant and adequate supply of pure air . . .”

The contention of the Commonwealth is that the door located on Road 265, between chambers 20 and 21, is a main door; also that there should have been another “main door” on the gangway between chambers 22 and 23.

Defendants deny both these assertions and have presented evidence tending to establish that although the door between chambers 20 and 21 was a door affecting ventilation, constructed as required by article X, sec. 9, of the act, which provides: “All doors used in assisting or in any way affecting the ventilation shall be so hung and adjusted that they will close automatically”, it was in no sense a main door.

At the time of the accident no attendant was on duty at said door, and if the door was a main door, the re[576]*576quirement of the act was not complied with. The mine act does not define a main door. This feature of the case bears a close analogy to Commonwealth v. Reynolds, 1 Kulp 223, wherein defendant was charged with having violated a section of the Mine Act of March 3, 1870, P. L. 3, by failing to have an attendant at a main door. As Judge Rice there said, so it may be said here “whether or not this was a main door or a check door is almost purely a question of fact about which there is a conflict of testimony”.

Mine Inspectors John D. Edwards, Thomas M. Beaney, Daniel H. Connolly, and Edwin C. Curtis testified that the door between chambers 20 and 21 was a “main door”.

The testimony of these witnesses is contradicted by a number of witnesses called on behalf of the defendant, viz., John E. Thomas, who has been familiar with anthracite mining for over 60 years; William B. Geise, a mining engineer of wide experience; John H. Pritchard, whose experience with anthracite mining also covers 60 years; William D. Thomas, whose employment in the mines of Great Britian and the United States extended over 53 years, and Charles E. Enzian, a graduate engineer with wide experience in both bituminous and anthracite coal fields. These witnesses all testified that the .method of mining and the set-up concerning the circulation of air as it existed in the Upper Baltimore vein of the defendant’s mine at the time of the explosion, was the usual and ordinary method used in the mining of anthracite coal, and that the door between chambers 20 and 21 was not a “main door”, but a deflecting or check-door.

A number of the witnesses gave the definition of a main door, as they understood it. Edwards said a main door “is one, if left open or removed, will short cut the air to a portion or section of the mine”. Beaney defined a main door set-up as “doors that are required to adequately ventilate a section of a mine”. Connolly said “a main door is one that if it is left open or removed [577]*577will destroy the ventilation in a mine or the section of a mine in which it is located. In other words, a main door is a door that if left open will interrupt a constant supply of air to the faces of the working places”. Curtis defined a main door as “one, which if left open, removed or destroyed, affects the ventilation in a portion or section of a mine by allowing the air to be short circuited from its prescribed course to the return”.

The witnesses for defendants disagreed with these definitions. John E. Thomas testified that “a main door is a series of three doors permanently constructed and placed between the inlet and return entries on the haulageway and gangway to prevent a short cutting of the ventilating current of the different splits of the mine”. Geise said: “Main doors are constructed as really a series of three doors; they are constructed-permanently between the main air intake, which is usually the haulageway, and the return to prevent any short circuit of different splits of air to different sections of the mine.” Pritchard testified that a “main door set-up under the anthracite mine law must be a series of three doors, set in masonry to provide an absolute air lock, with two doors always in use, with the third door in place as a spare. Each of the two doors in use at all times must act upon the same air current, in the same way, regardless of whether or not one of them is open”. William D. Thomas testified: “Main doors are a series of three doors, permanently constructed between the intake and the return, to prevent the short circuiting of the air between one split and another.” Enzian testified : “The main door set-up as it is understood . . . is a series or a group of doors — in Pennsylvania it is required to be three. . . . The purpose of these main doors is to, first of all, establish a perfectly secure air lock which will prevent any interfering with the ventilation of the workings on the inside of these main doors.” Defendant Griesing said: “Main doors are set in pairs and with an extra door and they form a [578]

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Bluebook (online)
54 Pa. D. & C. 573, 1945 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-griesing-paqtrsessluzern-1945.