Consolidated Coal Co. v. Scheller

42 Ill. App. 619, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 326
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 30, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 42 Ill. App. 619 (Consolidated Coal Co. v. Scheller) 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
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Scheller, 42 Ill. App. 619, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 326 (Ill. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Pleasants, J.

October 3,1888, appellee, then about twenty years of age, was employed to work in appellant’s coal mine Ho. 8, at Mt. Olive, as a loader, to push the empty boxes from the entry to the face, load them there and push them back to the entry to be hauled to the pit bottom. Ho bad worked two years in the mines there as a loader and laborer, but not any during the two next preceding. In the morning of the day mentioned the pit boss directed him to go- into the mines, the time keeper told him the driver would show him the room, and the driver showed him to Ho. 14, where he had never before been. He had worked for little more than an hour,, ■having loaded two boxes, and while pushing in the third, about forty feet from the face, a mass of slate weighing from six to eight hundred pounds, becoming detached from the roof, fell upon him. For the injury thus received he brought this action, and recovered judgment on a verdict, which the court refused to set aside, for $12,000.

It appears that the width of the room at that place was about thirty-six feet, and its height from seven to eight; the width of the track was two feet or a trifle over, and of the boxes three and a half to four. On each side of the track was a row of props supporting the roof and extending to a point twelve or .fourteen feet from the face. These rows were variously stated to have been from six to nine feet apart, the more reliable evidence, as we think, placing them at about seven, leaving room to get around the boxes without obstruction from the props. These were placed in each row, at the usual distance apart of five feet, by Charles Opp, a timberman specially employed by appellant for that work in the mine.

The mass that fell upon appellee was what is called a slip; of. which a clear idea from the testimony is given by apjaellee’s counsel as a “ formation of slate around a pot, bulge or tit projecting downward from the roof. At the bulge the slate runs to a feather edge, which first becomes loosened from the rock above, and this causes the slate to gradually droop, down, commencing at the bulge, until finally the loosened feather edged end becomes so heavy that the piece breaks off and falls to the floor below.” Mr. Rollo, the manager of the mine at that time, says the piece that fell “ formed a smooth skin over á tit of bulging rock; ” that it thinned toward the road, and feathered out a little over it; from which it would appear to have been feather edged at both ends, making a smooth surface, but still (as one of the witnesses says of slips generally) something of “ a hump that is lower than the rest of the roof.” The piece was about four by five feet on the surface, and wholly between the props on the right side of the track approaching the face. Its fall disturbed neither of them. The probability seems to be that it became detached first at the bulge end, which was furthest, swung down and fell on that end leaning toward the track. Appellee was found on the right rail, “ caught from his feet up to his arms.”

From his own testimony it appears that he “ knew the roof of that mine was liable to fall in sometimes;” that “ men got hurt in that mine, but didn’t know whether it was by slate or not.” He did not know, nor was he ever informed that the roof was dangerous at the place where he was hurt; nor did he look to see whether it was. He had sounded the roof where lie had loaded, and found what he thought was a dangerous place on the right side by the face, but did not sound it at the place where he was hurt.

Whether appellant or any representative of it, before the accident, had actual knowledge or were informed of the character and condition of the roof at that place, is to be determined from the circumstances and the positive testimony following:

Adolph Scheller, a cousin of appellee, who was then working in mine Ho. 8, and had been for two years, says: “ I know the place where Richard was hurt. I was not there at the time; I was in about half an hour before, that morning, but heard the roof cracking and came out; I did not tell anybody about it.”

Frank Sautner, a miner, says: “I was at work chuting coal in this mine where Richard was hurt; was at work when he got hurt. I worked sometimes in the morning in there; was there the day before, and the day before that. I worked in there more than two weeks. That slate was loose about two weeks—long before he got hurt. I saw it and watched it so that I would not be caught. I heard it sometimes; sometimes it would sway down. * * * I knew there was a slip along the roadway, and so did almost every one that works in there. * * * Some loaders that worked in there knew, the place. 1 don’t know whether Opp knew it or not.”

These were all the witnesses produced by plaintiff to that point, except Paul Daler, who was at work in that mine at the time of the accident and had been for seven or eight months. He was shoveling for the machine, in the same entry with plaintiff. He says: “ The day before plaintiff was hurt our attention was called to the fact that the slate was loose there by a runner. I didn’t see anything, only he said so;” and that “he did not tell the plaintiff nor the timber-man.” The court excluded the hearsay.

Thus if appeared that of the many persons who must have been at and about the place during the fortnight preceding the accident and interested in the condition of the roof, appellee produced only three; that of these onty two had personal knowledge of anything indicative of special danger there, of whom one was apprised of it only by hearing the roof cracking, and that only half an hour before it fell, and one by seeing and hearing; and neither, before the accident, gave any information of what he had seen or heard.

The defendant introduced the following:

Bruno Hensler, who had known the mine ever since it was sunk and had just got out when plaintiff was hurt: “The slip looked kind o’ bad, but I couldn’t say it was bad. * * * The slip was on the right hand of the road, about two feet from the road. It fell on the road because it must have got loose on the other side first, and slipped right over the road. The slip didn’t look extra dangerous over the road, but it did about three feet from the road.”

John Lawson: “Am a butcher now. Was a miner before, for about twenty-five years. Was working at Ho. 8, assisting Mr. Bollo at the time that Scheller was hurt. Was not in the room at the time of the accident. * * * I had been in and out of this room every day with very few exceptions. I noticed no danger on the road in my rounds. Knew the bulge was there, but that was off the road, between the props and the rib ” (which is the pillar of coal left in mining, to support the roof). “Hoticed no dangerous place between the rows of props. I saw the bulge, knew there was a slip there. The bulge was three feet or so from the right rail. There was a row of props between the bulge and the road. The slate that broke was not over the road.”

Charles Opp: “I have been a coal miner eight years. Have worked in Mt. Olive at Ho. 8 and 10—been timberman since last January, 1888. I understand the business of timber-man. I put the props in room 14. * * * The slip looked level. Could not see that it was a slip from below. * * * I did not know the slip was there, or I would have taken it down. * * * On one side the props were nearer the road than on the other. They were not five feet from the road on one side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 619, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-coal-co-v-scheller-illappct-1892.