Consumers' Lignite Co. v. Grant

181 S.W. 202, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 27, 1915
DocketNo. 7421.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 202 (Consumers' Lignite Co. v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consumers' Lignite Co. v. Grant, 181 S.W. 202, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellant, a mining corporation, prosecuted this appeal from a judgment rendered in the district court of Wood county, Tex., in favor of the appellee, Grant, one of its employés, for personal injuries received through the negligence of appellant.

The appellee, at the time of his injuries, was shoveling coal into a car standing on the track in what is called a “room” of defendant’s mine. He was injured by a piece of coal, forming what is designated as a part of the roof of the room, falling upon his head, back, and hips. The axipellee testified that he estimated the weight of the coal that fell upon him at about 75 pounds, while a witness who saw the coal after it fell estimated its weight at about 15 pounds. The appellee had excavated the room by mining the coal *205 during a period of about two months nest preceding the time he was injured, which was the 23d day of July, 1914, and the room at that time was 14 feet wide and estended back from the entry about 90 feet. A track for pit cars, connecting with another track in the entry and extending lengthwise the room, equidistant from the side walls, terminated about 6 feet from the “face” of the coal. Robert Chaney, the “pit boss” of the mine, George Churehwell, the head timber-man, and several timbermen were agents and servants of defendant whose duty was to examine the roof of the mine and properly support with timbers such portions thereof as were found likely to fall; Chaney was foreman over all the miners and timbermen, and the testimony showed that he had authority to hire and discharge defendant’s servants, but he denied having this power at the time in question. On Monday, next before the time of the accident, while Robert Chaney was with the plaintiff in said room of the mine, they heard the roof “pop.” This indicated that the roof was unsafe, and plaintiff then requested Chaney to have it supported with timbers. Chaney then “sounded” the roof, but nothing was done toward timbering it until the following Thursday. On the intervening Tuesday a timberman brought into the room five timbers for supporting roofs and threw them on the floor, where they remained. On Wednesday and again early Thursday morning about two hours before he was injured plaintiff complained to head timberman Churehwell that the roof of said room was dangerous, and requested him to timber it. Soon after this last request Churehwell and another timberman went into the room to examine and timber the roof. Referring to this occasion, Churehwell, introduced by defendant, testified:

“It was my business when I went in there to timber the roof after receiving this message from the plaintiff, to examine the roof so as to determine what was necessary and timber it so as to make it safe for Grant to work in the room.”

Plaintiff did not know, and had nqt designated, what particular portions of the roof needed timbering; he had merely reported that the roof was likely to fall, and requested that it be timbered; it was “in a swing” and wholly without support. These timber-men found portions of the roof which they recognized as being likely to fall. They undertook to support some of the same, using for that purpose three of the timbers which had been brought into the room on the previous Tuesday, and no others, leaving the other two on the floor. They erected two of these timbers on the left, and the other on the right, side of the track (looking into the room from the entry). These timbers were straight pieces 6| inches square at the bottom, 4 inches square at the top, and 6 feet long. Each of them was erected with only a piece of plank 2 feet long and 6 inches wide and 2 inches thick resting on top of it as a cap and up against the roof. The timbers erected on the left side of the track were placed about 16 inches from the nearest rail, and, respectively, about 6 and 10 feet from the “face” of the coal; the timber erected on the right side of the track was placed about 16 inches from the nearest rail and about 10 feet from the “face” of the coal.

There was testimony for defendant to the effect that only one of the timbers was erected on the right side thereof about 6 and 10 feet, respectively, from the “face” of the coal. Churehwell and his helper, in examining and undertaking to support the roof at said time, discovered and recognized as being likely to fall another portion of the roof, about 2 feet toward the “face” of the coal from the timber erected on the right side of the track, and they made no effort to support the same, but left it wholly unsupported. The evidence showed without conflict that this portion of the roof fell upon and injured plaintiff while he was under; it engaged in his work a short time after Churehwell and his helper had finished timbering the roof. They testified that it was impracticable to support this portion of the roof, either by means of an upright timber or a timber erected horizontally with its ends resting on uprights, called a “collar bar,” or timbers extended from one collar bar to another, called “lagging,” or in any other way, because, in. their opinion, the same was so near the “face” of the coal that any timbers erected to support it might be knocked down in blasting the coal, or might interfere with mining it. They further testified that when they had finished timbering the roof they still regarded this portion of it as being dangerous, and that they warned plaintiff to watch it. There was then lying on the floor at and in the vicinity of a place under this dangerous and unsupported portion of the roof some loose coal which plaintiff had “blasted” the previous afternoon, and which he had to load into a car on the track, all of which said timbermen knew. They did not warn him to avoid getting under that portion of the roof, nor indicate that its danger was so imminent as to forbid his working under it for the short time required to load said loose coal into the car. But little of this loose coal then remained, three cars of it having been loaded and hauled out that morning before plaintiff suspended his work for the timbermen to do theirs. These men were engaged in timbering the roof only a few minutes, during which time plaintiff, according to his testimony, was at his bunk in the entry. When the timbermen finished their work and left the room plaintiff, believing that they “knew what they were doing, and had made the roof safe enough to keep it from falling,” resumed his work of shoveling the loose coal into a car near the terminus of the track. It was difficult to “watch” the roof while doing this work; the room was “pitch” dark, and the only light *206 was a small one carried on plaintiff’s head. While lie was stooping over shoveling the loose coal into the car the said dangerous and unsupported portion of the roof suddenly fell upon him without any sound or other premonition of the fall. 1-Ie thus received serious and permanent injuries which have caused him great suffering, and resulted in paralysis of his leg. The defendant contended and endeavored to show that the paralysis resulted from some disease, or from his being thrown by a mule or from a wound with a -pick in his foot, both of which accidents occurred within a period of about three months before the one in question. All of the timbers erected in the room remained standing after the accident; none of them had been in any way disturbed.

The plaintiff, who had worked in defendant’s mines about 4 years, and H. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 202, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consumers-lignite-co-v-grant-texapp-1915.