Conradsen v. Osceola Consolidated Mining Co.

146 N.W. 638, 180 Mich. 155, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 879
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1914
DocketDocket No. 18
StatusPublished

This text of 146 N.W. 638 (Conradsen v. Osceola Consolidated Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conradsen v. Osceola Consolidated Mining Co., 146 N.W. 638, 180 Mich. 155, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 879 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

While it is alleged in the declaration that it was defendant’s duty, among others, to have adopted, promulgated, and vigilantly enforced a rule for notifying miners of the condition in which the place in which they were required to work was left by miners working in the same place, on another shift, the case as made and as it was submitted to the jury, and the legal propositions presented in this court, may be gathered from that portion of the charge of the court which is here set out:

“The plaintiff has brought this suit to recover damages for personal injuries which he received while in the employ of the defendant mining company on or about the 16th day of February, 1911. He claims, and has introduced evidence tending to show: That he was working as a miner sinking a certain winze from the twenty-second level to the twenty-third level of defendant’s South Kearsarge mine. That there were two shifts of men working company account and not .on contract, on opposite shifts, in and about the sinking of said winze. That the plaintiff and his partner worked on one shift, and that on the other shift his opposite partners, consisting of two miners, worked in and about the work of sinking this winze downward along the vein. That, on the week when plaintiff was injured, he was working with his partner on the night shift, as I recollect the evidence. That on the preceding shift, which was the day shift, his partners on the opposite shift worked taking up a sink, as it has been called in the evidence, which is done by drilling holes in the solid ground or face of the rock at the bottom of the winze and blasting the same for the purpose of taking out a cut or taking up a sink in order to push the winze further downward. That, on the said day shift, seven holes were drilled by the opposite partners of the plaintiff, and that at the end of the shift the miners working on such shift, and who were known in the evidence as the opposite partners, blasted the seven holes. That, in and about the business of blasting holes in that mine, dynamite, fuse, and caps are used. That the fuses by which the holes are fired or exploded are usually, as in this place and at that time, cut in different lengths for the pur[157]*157pose of exploding the holes in succession. That the holes are then exploded or blasted by firing the fuse, which explodes a primer or cap contained in the dynamite or in one of the sticks, and is supposed to explode the charge of dynamite. That sometimes as many reports or blasts are heard as the number of holes drilled and attempted to be blasted, and sometimes a less number of reports are heard, varying from one or two to any number less than the full number of blasts or attempts at blasting holes. The plaintiff further claims, and has introduced evidence tending to show, that, when a less number of reports are heard in blasting under such conditions as existed in that winze, it was the duty of the miners so doing the blasting to so report the fact, that there were a less number of explosions or reports heard by them, to the men coming on to work on the succeeding shift, or to the shift boss, so that the latter could see that timely warning and notice thereof would be given to the succeeding shift unless such miners so doing the blasting had satisfied themselves that there were no missed holes or unexploded blast, by means of a careful inspection, investigation, or examination of the premises subsequent to the firing of the holes.
“The plaintiff claims: That, on the day shift immediately preceding the night of his injuries, his opposite partners drilled and attempted to blast seven holes in making a sink in the bottom of the winze where plaintiff was employed. That, when said blast was made, the miners who were doing the blasting heard only two reports. That such miners, after a reasonable time had expired, looked over and investigated said winze, but were not able to satisfy themselves that either there was or that there was not a missed hole; it being -the claim of the defendant, however, that such miners did satisfy themselves that there were no missed holes. That thereupon it became the duty of such miners to report that fact that they heard only two reports to the plaintiff, or to the shift boss, so that it would be eventually reported to the plaintiff, who would and did come to work on the succeeding shift, of the possible existence of missed holes or unexploded powder in the bottom of that winze. • That the plaintiff’s partners on the other shift (that is, the miners who were doing the blasting, as [158]*158aforesaid) failed to notify him or send him word or warning to the effect that only two explosions were heard, and that plaintiff went to his place of work without any knowledge of the existence of any unexploded dynamite in the bottom of the winze, and while exercising due and ordinary care for his own safety, and without having assumed the risk, he and his partner drilled into unexploded dynamite then and there in the bottom of the winze, which thereby caused an explosion, as a result of which the plaintiff received the injuries of which he complains in this case.
“That is substantially the claims of the plaintiff in this case. And, furthermore, the plaintiff claims: That his injuries so received are a result of negligence on the part of the men working on the opposite shift in failing to notify him that only two reports were heard, and failing to warn him of the possibility of the existence of unexploded dynamite in the winze, and that the defendant is responsible for the negligence of the miners on the opposite shift. That there was no want of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff which contributed proximately to his injuries, and that the injuries which' resulted to him were not assumed by him and were not and are not one of the inherent risks of the service which he assumed in entering upon and continuing in the employment of the defendant.
“On the other hand, the defendant claims: That there was no negligence on the part of the defendant. That the miners on the other shift satisfied themselves, from an examination and investigation of the situation in the bottom of the winze after the blasting, on the day shift, that there was no missed hole or unexploded dynamite in the winze. That the inspection and investigation which they made was the usual, reasonable, and ordinary investigation that would be made under such conditions, and that by reason thereof the miners working on the day shift became perfectly satisfied that there was no missed hole in that winze or any unexploded dynamite, and that therefore there was no occasion on their part and no duty to warn the partners who would succeed them, the plaintiff and his partner, or to warn the shift boss, of the existence or possible existence of any unexploded dynamite in the bottom of the winze.
[159]*159“The defendant denies that it was the custom under the conditions which obtained in that winze, and especially in making a sink and taking up á sink, as they express it, to depend upon the number of reports to determine whether there was any unexploded dynamite left after the blasting, and that such number of blasts was no evidence either one way or the other as to what had occurred with reference to missed holes or the existence of unexploded dynamite.
“The defendant further claims that the miners,' even if they did neglect their duty in this case, are fellow-servants of the plaintiff, for whose neglect they are not responsible in this case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 638, 180 Mich. 155, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conradsen-v-osceola-consolidated-mining-co-mich-1914.