Elcomb Coal Co. v. Gray's Adm'x

115 S.W.2d 1056, 273 Ky. 230, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 15, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 115 S.W.2d 1056 (Elcomb Coal Co. v. Gray's Adm'x) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elcomb Coal Co. v. Gray's Adm'x, 115 S.W.2d 1056, 273 Ky. 230, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 599 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Baird

— Reversing.

A judgment for $4,500 in favor of Jasper Gray’s administratrix was rendered in the Harlan circuit court against tbe Elcomb Coal Company, a corporation, from wbicb it appeals.

It relies upon a number of grounds for reversal, but its counsel emphasizes only tbe following as the chief ones, practically waiving all others:

“(1) Because the evidence shows that the deceased was not an employee of the appellant, but was an independent contractor and working for. himself;. (2) because the evidence fails to show that the deceased was injured at all or that he died of any injury; (3) the evidence fails to show any negligence on the part of the appellant that proximately caused his death or any. injury to him. ’ ’

We will discuss first the second and third grounds together Jasper Gray entered into a contract with appellant by the terms of which he' agreed to remove or take slate rock out of its mine for $2.75 and $3 a yard, furnishing and paying for the labor himself, necessary in removing the slate rock. The facts .on which the action is found are uncertain, indefinite, and *232 speculative. If the death of appellee’s deceased was caused by the injury while engaged in removing the slate rock, no witness was willing to state how it occurred or what the injury definitely was. Alvin Sharp, who was working with Gray, is the only witness who stated anything concerning what happened at the time of the alleged injury. Appellant insists that Gray’s death resulted alone from a cerebral hemorrhage or high blood pressure and not from any injury resulting from an electric shock, or, if caused from injury resulting from an electric shock, it was not on account of any negligence of appellant, its servants or employees. A solution of those questions will settle the case. A paucity of any.direct testimony is apparent.

On the occasion of Gray’s injury he was operating and riding in a deck of an electric motor moving a compressor or jack hammer which he had obtained for the purpose of drilling a shot for more slate rock. The compressor was in front of the motor. Sharp was riding on it. The motor was on the main track in the mine. In moving they had gone about 35 feet from the frog of the track. In going to get the compressor, the trolley pole was in the rear of the motor.. The compressor was on the third entry. They went below the switch with the motor and stopped. They then pushed the compressor out on the main track and coupled it on to the motor. After they had coupled on to it, Gray started his motor and moved on to the place where he intended to use the compressor. In doing so, he did not change the trolley pole. Consequently, the trolley pole was in front of the motor. After moving 30 or 35 feet from the frog, Sharp, riding with his back to Gray, heard Gray “holler” and say: “Brother, I am killed.” He then looked back and by the time he got off of the compressor to the ground, the motor stopped. He then went to Gray and found him in the deck leaning toward the bumper with his miner’s cap on and the carbide lamp on his cap burning. The trolley pole was lying across his shoulders and disconnected with the wire. There was no jerking of the motor at any time or any noise or spark caused by a short circuit of the current. The trolley pole had no .electricity in it. Sharp removed it from the shoulders of Gray. After doing so, he then assisted Gray from the motor. He took hold of Gray’s arm and they walked about 232 feet away from the motor, when Gray went down and could *233 walk no farther. As he walked, he said again: “Brother, I am killed. ’ ’ Sharp further stated that it was more dangerous to head the trolley pole than it was for it to follow; that Gray knew that fact; that it was a rule of the company that the trolley at all times should be behind the motor and not in front; that at the time Gray made the exclamation: “Brother, I am killed,” the motor was between two entries about 50 feet from the one they had passed, and about 100 feet to the next entry. Sharp saw nothing to indicate that electricity caused the death of Gray. He could not and did not state what caused Gray to cry out he was killed. The only thing he saw was some blood coming from Gray’s nose and mouth and possibly his ears as they walked away. The trolley pole was insulated. Sharp took hold of it with his' hand and moved it and it was not in connection with any charged wire. When the body was examined immediately after his death, there was no evidence of injury discovered except a sore on. the back of his left hand between the thumb and front finger. The undertaker who prepared the body for burial stated that it was an old sore; that it had a scab •upon it which he removed, cleaned it out, and filled the place with some substance that he might properly embalm the body. Bill Qualls, a witness for appellant, stated that he took off a glove from the deceased’s left hand; that to do so he had to cut the rubber that held the glove off his hand; that when he took it off it had no holes in it; was not burned or in any way affected by anything that indicated it had been burned. However, witnesses for appellee stated that the glove which was on his left hand had the appearance that the part of the glove that would cover the hand over the sore place was burned through, making a hole in it that was as large as a 25 or 50 cent piece; that the place on the glove over the sore place on the left hand indicated it had been freshly burned. Bill Qualls stated that the glove that was testified about by witnesses for appellee was not in that condition when he took it from the deceased’s left hand. Drs. H. K. Buttermore,’ W. R. Parks, and W. P. Cawood, witnesses for appellant, gave evidence that on examination and from hypothetical questions asked them that in their professional opinion the cause of the death was not an electric shock, but' was from a cerebral hemorrhage. On the other hand, Dr. Charles B. Stacy, a witness for appellee, gave evidence *234 that he examined the body after death, made an autopsy, found the organs of the body normal, and there was nothing to indicate a cerebral hemorrhage or heart trouble. In his, professional opinion he stated that the „ death was caused from an electric shock. Dr. Butter-more further stated that heart trouble was the cause of the bleeding of the nose, mouth, and ears. Dr. Stacy undertook to account for the bleeding by saying that the deceased might have struck his head against some object when he received the shock that produced the bleeding.

This evidence is not enough to authorize a submission of the case to the jury. There must be some other evidence that the death of the deceased was not only attributable to an electric shock, but that it was attributable to the negligence of appellant and not the result of Gray’s negligence. Counsel for appellee fully realized that point; therefore, it is insisted that appellant violated section 2739-33, Kentucky Statutes, in failing to comply with that statute by covering and protecting its live electric wires, as the statute' provides. That section, in part, is as follows:

“On all haulage roads, landings and partings, where men are required to regularly work or pass-under trolley or other bare power wires which are placed less than six and one-half feet above top of rail, a suitable protection shall be provided.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W.2d 1056, 273 Ky. 230, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elcomb-coal-co-v-grays-admx-kyctapphigh-1938.