Consolidated Coal Co. v. Maehl

22 N.E. 715, 130 Ill. 551
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 N.E. 715 (Consolidated Coal Co. v. Maehl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Maehl, 22 N.E. 715, 130 Ill. 551 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit wag brought in the Macoupin circuit court, by appellee, to recover pecuniary damages for the loss occasioned by the death of her husband, John Maehl, at the mines of appellant, as it was alleged, through the negligence of appellant, and its failure to perform its legal duty in respect of said mines and the operation thereof. A trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $5000. Motion for new trial was overruled, and judgment entered on the verdict. On appeal to the Appellate Court this judgment was affirmed, and the defendant below prosecutes this further appeal.

Four reasons are urged why the judgment should be reversed, which we will notice in the order presented by counsel:

First—That the court erred in giving the first of plaintiff’s instructions. The first criticism of the instruction is, that it tells the jury to find the defendant guilty, if they believe, from the evidence, it violated any of the provisions of the statute “as stated in the declarationand that, as the second, fourth and seventh counts of the declaration did not state the law correctly, or state such facts as would show a legal liability on the part of appellant, the instruction was improperly given. The second count of the declaration alleges the failure of the defendant to keep a competent person at the top and bottom of the shaft, to attend to signals, and that Maehl was killed by reason of defendant’s failure to discharge that duty, while the statute requires, only, that such person be so placed while coal is being hoisted, or within thirty minutes before or after that operation begins and concludes,—the fact proven being, that coal was not being hoisted, and that it was an hour and a half before the hoisting would begin when Maehl was killed. The seventh count proceeds on the same theory.

We are of opinion that the criticism of the instruction in the respect stated is not warranted. It begins: “The court instructs the jury, that the statute of this State makes it the duty of persons and corporations operating coal mines by-shafts and steam power, among other things, first, to provide safe means of hoisting and lowering persons in a cage covered with boiler iron, so as to keep safe, as far as possible, persons descending into and ascending out of such shaft; second, to provide every drum with a sufficient brake, to prevent accident in ease of the giving out of the machinery; third, to furnish a sufficient light at top and bottom of the shaft to insure, as far as possible, the safety of persons getting on or off the cage; and fourth, not to place in charge of any engine whereby men are lowered into or hoisted from the mine, any other than a competent, experienced and sober engineer, not less than eighteen years of age.”

No fault is found with the statement of the requirements of the statute, but, as before seen, it is objected that the jury were referred, generally, to the declaration for the law. A casual reading of the instruction will demonstrate the fallacy of this contention. After stating the duty of persons operating such mines, as before stated, the instruction then tells the jury, that if they believe, from the evidence, that the defendant was operating the mine,, and that Maehl was killed in the manner alleged, that he left plaintiff as his widow, etc., and that Maehl was in the service of defendant, working in said mines, proceeds : “And if the jury believe further, from the evidence, that at the time said Maehl was so killed the defendant then and there willfully refused, or willfully failed, to comply with its duty under the said provisions of the said statute, or willfully violated any of the said provisions of said statute, as stated in said declaration,” and the death of Maehl was caused by reason of such willful refusal or willful neglect, and damage is found from the evidence to have accrued to plaintiff, then they should find defendant guilty,” etc. The instruction is incorrectly given in the abstract, but upon looking at the record it is found that the attention of the jury is alone directed to the provisions of the statute, or requirements of it, stated in the fore part of the same instruction. The statutory obligations were first given, and the jury told that if they believed, from the evidence, that defendants had willfully failed to comply with its duty, or willfully violated said provisions of said statute, as (in the manner) alleged in the declaration, the defendant will be liable, if the other necessary facts concurred. It seems impossible that the jury could have understood this instruction in any other way. It is to be observed that the instruction omits any reference to the statutory duty to keep at the bottom and top of the shaft, while coal is being hoisted, and for thirty minutes before such hoisting is to begin, a competent person to attend to signals, and the jury could not, we think, have understood the instruction as in any way referring to the matters alleged in the second and seventh counts of the declaration. This view becomes more pronounced when we consider that the first witness who testified in respect of the condition of the mine and the injury to Maehl, showed that the injury occurred at a time when no signal-men were required by law to be kept at the shaft, and thereupon the court, on the objection of appellant, refused to permit appellee to prove that no signal-man was on duty, and the record is barren of any evidence on that subject. While the instruction in the form given is not to be commended, we are unable to perceive prejudicial error in the respect indicated.

It is also urged that this instruction is faulty in further stating, that “if the jury further believe, from the evidence, that the plaintiff has been damaged by reason of the loss of the life of the said John Maehl, then the jury will find the defendant guilty, ” and in “estimating said damages the jury may take into consideration that Maehl left surviving him said children, in addition to the plaintiff, his widow.” Whether said Maehl had left children, and plaintiff as his widow, had in a former portion of the instruction been left to the jury, to be found from the evidence. It is-not claimed that the inclusion of the element in respect of the children is erroneous, (Beard et al. v. Sheldon, 113 Ill. 584,) but it is said the jury are thereby left free to award damages for all loss,- not confining it to pecuniary damage. It is conceded that the instruction is not accurate, but it was not intended as an instruction upon the measure of damages, while the next instruction was so intended, and states the rule clearly and correctly. Taking the two instructions, the law was stated with substantial accuracy, and properly limited the recovery to the pecuniary loss sustained by the plaintiff. There was, therefore, no prejudicial error in this regard.

Second—The engineer testified that he had run the engine-connected with the hoisting apparatus at this mine, for two-months prior to the injury of Maehl, and, over appellant’s objection, was permitted to testify to his want of experience and competency at the time of his employment, and to what proficiency he had attained as an engineer in that time. This, it is insisted, was error, and tended to the prejudice of appellant. We think that in so far as it tended to show his capacity at the time of the accident, it was clearly competent.

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22 N.E. 715, 130 Ill. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-coal-co-v-maehl-ill-1889.