Director, United States Bureau of Mines v. Princess Elkhorn Coal Company (Princess No. 2 Mine), (Federal Coal Mine Safety Board)

226 F.2d 570, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4616
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 24, 1955
Docket12452
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 226 F.2d 570 (Director, United States Bureau of Mines v. Princess Elkhorn Coal Company (Princess No. 2 Mine), (Federal Coal Mine Safety Board)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Director, United States Bureau of Mines v. Princess Elkhorn Coal Company (Princess No. 2 Mine), (Federal Coal Mine Safety Board), 226 F.2d 570, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4616 (6th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

MARTIN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the Director of the United States Bureau of Mines from a decision and order of the Federal Coal Mine Safety Board of Review. The Safety Board directed annulment of an order of the Director which denied application of the appellee company for the voiding of an order issued by a federal inspector, pursuant to section 203(d) of the Federal Coal Mine Safety Act [30 U.S.C.A. §§ 451-483], requiring the ap-pellee operator of Princess No. 2 Mine to comply with the provisions of section 209 of the Act pertaining to gassy mines.

The decision of the Safety Board of Review was reached by a two to one vote. Both the majority opinion and the dissenting opinion set forth in excellent fashion the conflicting views of the members of the board. It would suffice to rest decision of this court upon the opinion in which we concur, except for the fact that the Federal Coal Mine Safety Board’s decisions are not included in the Federal Reporter system.

In addition to two briefs filed by each of the contending parties, an amicus curiae brief has been filed by the United Mine Workers of America and, likewise, one by the Operators’ Committee on federal mine safety legislation. After due consideration of the briefs and oral arguments of attorneys, and after our study of the entire record in the case, we have reached the conclusion that the majority opinion of the Federal Coal Mine Safety Board of Review should be upheld.

The issue presented is whether the Federal Coal Mine Safety Inspector, who took a sample from the Princess No. 2 Mine upon the basis of which the mine was classified as gassy, complied with section 203(d) of the Act: “If a duly authorized representative of the Bureau, upon making an inspection of a mine, as authorized in section 202, finds that methane has been ignited in such mine or finds methane by use of a permissible flame safety lamp or by air analysis in an amount of 0.25 per centum or more in any open workings of such mine when tested at a point not less than twelve inches from the roof, face, or rib,

The appellant insists that he did comply; the appellee contends that he did not, in that the sample of mine atmosphere was taken within twelve inches of freshly cut machine cuttings. The Federal Coal Mine Inspector who took the sample on August 31,1954, reported some two weeks later that 0.27 per centum of methane gas had been found in the Princess No. 2 Mine and ordered appel-lee, Princess Elkhorn Coal Company, to comply with the provisions of section 209 of the Federal Coal Mine Safety Act with relation to the operation of gassy mines.

*572 On appeal by the company, the Director of the United States Bureau of Mines denied annulment of the inspector’s order, upon a finding that the sample of mine atmosphere taken by the'inspector had been collected in accordance with the provisions of section 203(d) of the Act; that the chemical analysis of the sample had been made in a proper and accurate manner; and that methane was found in open workings of the mine in an amount of 0.25 per centum, or more.

The Safety Board held that the air sample was not taken by the mine inspector in accordance with provisions of section 203(d) of the Act. This conclusion was reached after a full hearing by the Board upon application of the appel-lee for annulment of the Director’s order. In its decision, the Board majority entered findings of fact based upon the entire record in the case and upon “observation of the witnesses.” These findings of fact will be summarized, with omission of unnecessary details.

Federal Coal Mine Inspector Meadows made an inspection of the Princess No. 2 Mine on August 31, 1954. He was accompanied by the Safety Director of the appellee company. He took a sample of the mine atmosphere in a bottle which was placed in a fibre container and mailed to the gas analysis laboratory of the Bureau at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where it was received on September 7, 1954. On the basis of the analytical report from the laboratory, the mine inspector issued a notice and order dated September 16, 1954, requiring the operator of the mine to comply with the provisions of section 209 of the Act, which pertained to gassy mines. The Board found upon substantial evidence that the sample of mine atmosphere analyzed was taken at approximately ten o’clock in the morning, in the No. 2 Pillar, No. 55 section, of the mine, at a place which had been under-cut and drilled some ten or fifteen minutes before the inspector and the Safety Director entered the room. Nelson, a machine operator, and his helper had just finished drilling and were in process of securing the drill on the cutting machine.

Spears, the company’s safety director, testified that he and Inspector Meadows approached the solid coal which had been under-cut and drilled; that Meadows made a right angle with a folding rule, each leg of which was twelve inches long, the point of one leg being placed against the roof and the point of the other leg against the solid coal. Spears held the rule in that position while Meadows held the bottle outside the right angle formed by the two legs of the rule in a position below the horizontal leg and outside the vertical leg in relation to the solid face. In this position, the tip of the bottle, when broken, was approximately thirteen or fourteen inches from the roof and the same distance from the solid coal. The distance to the rib was more than twelve inches, the sample having been taken about half way between the ribs. The room was about twenty-six feet wide.

After breaking off the tip, the mine inspector sealed the bottle by placing over the neck a small, wax-filled cap. The machine cuttings, or “bug dust”, created by the under-cutting and drilling of the solid coal, were still in place when the sample was taken. The mine inspector was unable to state how close the sample was taken to the machine cuttings; but Spears testified positively that the sample was taken approximately six inches above the mound of the machine cuttings. He testified, further, that the machine cuttings extended in a mound starting against the solid face for about four feet back into the room; that the highest point in the mound was some twenty inches back from the solid coal; and that the air sample had been taken slightly toward the solid coal from the peak of the mound. The testimony of Spears was not contradicted by Inspector Meadows.

It appears that a cutting machine of the kind and type used in the Princess No. 2 Mine would normally throw up a mound of machine cuttings across almost the entire face area of the working place. The coal seam in the mine is about thirty- *573 six inches high. The majority decision rejected the argument of the company that the term “methane”, as used in the Act, must be interpreted to mean “chemically pure methane (CEU).” The Board also rejected the argument of the company that “the mine inspector did not make a personal determination that the required amount of methane in fact existed in the applicant’s mine, as required by the statute.” It was declared to be obvious that to interpret the statute as requiring the inspector to make his own personal analysis would, in effect, vitiate the Act.

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226 F.2d 570, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/director-united-states-bureau-of-mines-v-princess-elkhorn-coal-company-ca6-1955.