Eichhorn v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co.

123 N.E. 603, 288 Ill. 351
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1919
DocketNo. 12547
StatusPublished

This text of 123 N.E. 603 (Eichhorn v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co.) 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
Eichhorn v. St. Louis & O'Fallon Coal Co., 123 N.E. 603, 288 Ill. 351 (Ill. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

A writ of certiorari was allowed to bring to this court the record of the Appellate Court affirming a judgment recovered by Marguerite Eichhorn, defendant in error, in the circuit court of St. Clair county, against the St. Louis and O’Fallon Coal Company, plaintiff in error, for damages occasioned by the death of her husband, Louis Eichhorn, from an injury received in the mine of the plaintiff in error.

The amended declaration contained two counts, the first charging a willful failure to enter the working place of Louis Eichhorn and inspect the same and make a conspicuous mark thereat as notice to all men to keep out and to make a record of such condition in a book kept for that purpose; and the second charging a willful failure to observe the unsafe and dangerous roof in the working place and willfully failing and omitting to place a conspicuous mark or' sign thereon as notice to all men to keep out. The defendant’s plea was not guilty and the case was tried by the court without a jury.

In the coal mine of the defendant room 4 extended south from a stub-entry about 250 feet and was 37 feet.wide. Room 3 was east of room 4 and parallel with it, and it was determined to open a cross-cut in the partition wall between the two rooms at the south end. The cross-cut was to be started from room 4 and to be between 21 and 23 feet in width. The vein of .coal was feet thick, and above it there was a stratum of slate from 20 to 24 inches thick and above that a limestone roof. Several days before the accident the machine runners went into room 4 and under-cut the vein of coal in the space allotted for the cross-cut to a depth of about six feet. The shot-firers afterward went into the room and fired a shot near the center of the under-cutting about 18 inches from the top and blasted out the coal, leaving a V-shaped space in the center. The coal was cleaned up and removed, and on the day before the accident the shot-firers again went into the place and prepared and fired two shots,—one at the left and the other at the right of the center shot,—blasting out the space and leaving the coal piled up in the face of the cross-cut to within about two feet of the slate. After this was done the mine examiner at three o’clock in the morning of July 19, 1916, inspected the room and left his visitation mark on the left-hand side of the cross-cut and did not make any mark of a dangerous condition. At eight o’clock that morning Louis Eichhorn and his buddy, A. VV. Dimmett, went into the room for the purpose of loading out the coal that was brought down by the two shots the day before. They loaded four coal cars with the coal that had been blasted out in the cross-cut, and while loading the fifth a piece of slate fell and so injured Eichhorn as to cause his death. The fall was triangular in shape, about six or eight feet in one direction and six or seven in the .other.

There was no evidence tending to prove the charge in the first count of the declaration of a willful failure to enter the working place and inspect the same. It was proved and not disputed that the mine examiner went into the room and sounded the roof with the sounding rod which the statute requires a mine examiner to use, and his visitation mark appeared at the left of the cross-cut. In order to maintain her action it was essential that the plaintiff should prove two things: First, that a dangerous condition existed at the time of the visit of the mine examiner; and second, that he willfully failed and omitted to make the mark required by the statute as a warning to all men to keep out. The Appellate Court, in effect, adopted a rule that if the first fact was proved the defendant could not excuse itself for a failure of the mine examiner to mark the place as dangerous by proving a proper examination and that no danger was discoverable by such an examination. Such a rule would substitute insurance against accidents in a mine in place of obedience to the requirements of the statute to make an examination to see whether dangerous conditions exist, and, if found, to mark the place. The statute imposes a liability for, and only for, a willful failure to comply with its terms, and to say that if a proper examination has been made and no dangerous condition was discoverable by such examination there has been a willful failure to make an examination and mark dangerous conditions would be to pervert language and confound all distinctions between the meaning of words. It will not be presumed that the court has intentionally adopted false reasoning leading to such a result. A willful failure to compfy with the act, as used in the statute, means a conscious failure to perform a duty enjoined by the act. (Catlett v. Young, 143 Ill. 74; Odin Coal Co. v. Denman, 185 id. 413; Donk Bros. Coal Co. v. Peton, 192 id. 41; Eldorado Coal Co. v. Swan, 227 id. 586; Davis v. Illinois Collieries Co. 232 id. 284.) No question of good faith or bad faith, good intent or evil intent, is involved, but if there is a conscious failure to make the examination required by the statute or to mark a dangerous condition when found, the owner or operator of the mine is liable for any resulting injury.

The question under consideration came before the court in the case of Mertens v. Southern Coal Co. 235 Ill. 540, in which there was a slip in the roof on the evening of March 19, 1906, making the roof dangerous and liable to fall, and about eleven o’clock the next day a portion of the roof fell and the plaintiff was severely and° permanently injured. No mark had been placed in the room indicating the dangerous condition and no minute or report of the same was made by the mine examiner. It was contended that these facts did not show a willful violation of the statute, but it was held that the jury was justified in finding that there w^as a dangerous condition at the time of the examination and if the mine examiner had made a proper examination he must have discovered the dangerous condition, and therefore it was a fair inference that he did not examine the room, or if he did examine it and discovered the condition he failed to mark the same, and that in either case the failure to perform the duty was a conscious one. That case was cited and the. opinion quoted from in Peebles v. O’Gara Coal Co. 239 Ill. 370, where it was held not necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the defendant had actually discovered the dangerous conditions complained of, and. that operators of mines are liable not only when dangerous conditions have been discovered but also where a proper examination required by the statute would have discovered the existence of such conditions. These decisions state a correct rule, since any other would permit a mine examiner to make only a casual or insufficient examination and the operator excuse himself on the ground that some sort'of examination was made. The law has not always been stated exactly in that way, but the facts of each case have brought'it within the compass of the rule so stated.

In Aetitus v. Spring Valley Coal Co. 246 Ill. 32, the mine examiner testified that he examined the place where the mule stable was to be built and it was not dangerous, but this court thought the evidence tended to support the' claim that the place was, in fact, dangerous.

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Related

Catlett v. Young
32 N.E. 447 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1892)
Mertens v. Southern Coal & Mining Co.
85 N.E. 743 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Peebles v. O'Gara Coal Co.
88 N.E. 166 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1909)
Aetitus v. Spring Valley Coal Co.
92 N.E. 579 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1910)
Cook v. Big Muddy-Carterville Mining Co.
94 N.E. 90 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1911)
Piazzi v. Kerens-Donnewald Coal Co.
104 N.E. 200 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.E. 603, 288 Ill. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eichhorn-v-st-louis-ofallon-coal-co-ill-1919.