Elkhorn Coal Corp. v. Bumpass' Administrator

243 S.W. 32, 195 Ky. 453, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 375
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 32 (Elkhorn Coal Corp. v. Bumpass' Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elkhorn Coal Corp. v. Bumpass' Administrator, 243 S.W. 32, 195 Ky. 453, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 375 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

Affirming.

This is an action' by the personal representative of William T. Bumpass, deceased, against appellant coal corporation and its mine foreman, H. D. Jones, for the death of Bumpass in the company’s coal mine because of their alleged negligence.

On a trial the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for seven thousand dollars, upon which a judgment was entered and the defendants have appealed.

Bumpass, at the time of his death, was about twenty-seven years of age and had a wife and two children! He had been at work in different capacities in coal mines for some time but had never acted in the capacity of pumper until three or four days before his death.

[455]*455The company operated in connection with its mine an electrical pumping station, and it had connected with that pumping station certain small pipes which were run to the different rooms where the coal was mined, and the duty of pumper was to visit these several rooms as many as three or four times a day each, and carry with him a few feet of hose which could be attached to the small pipes near the entrance to the room, and then place the hose in the water therein and pump it out by suction so as that such places might be kept dry and free from water and facilitate the work of those getting out the coal. The evidence is that there were five or six rooms or places in the particular mine each of which the pumper was required to visit four or five times a day in the discharge of his duties.

The pumper some four or five minutes before his death was seen going in the direction of the room where he was killed, and only a short distance therefrom, dragging his hose along with him and with his miner’s light on his cap.

Three grounds for reversal are relied upon, (1) that the court erred in not sustaining appellant’s motion for a directed verdict, (2) that the first instruction given by the court over appellant’s objection was erroneous because it was incomplete and did not submit to the jury the question whether the dangerous condition of the.roof was so obvious that decedent in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety should have known of its condition, and (3) improper argument by plaintiff’s counsel.

The evidence plainly justified the submission of the case to the jury. In substance it showed that some thirty to forty-five minutes before the roof fell on and killed Bumpass its dangerous condition had been called to the attention of at least one, and probably two, of the mine employes superior in authority to Bumpass, and they with other employes had examined the roof and all those present had been warned to stay out of that room because of its dangerous condition. There is evidence which justified the jury in believing that appellant Jones, the mine boss, was present at that time and it is admitted that another superior in authority, Doniphan, was present and warned all the employes present. The evidence further unmistakably shows that all of these employes left this dangerous place without putting up any notice of any character, or leaving any signal of any kind to warn others from entering that room, although the rules of [456]*456the company required them upon discovery of any dangerous condition of the roof, before leaving the place to put some plain warning across the entrance to warn others against entering the dangerous place.

After these employes had this dangerous place pointed out to them and after they had discussed it among themselves and after all of the workmen present had been warned about it, they went a short distance away from there, some fifty or sixty feet, and at least some of them stood or sat there talking or leisurely discussing other things. While they were so engaged the decedent came from another part of the mine and although seen passing within a few feet of. them, with his miner’s light in his cap, going in the direction of the dangerous room, was given .no warning of that danger. The evidence shows that decedent must have passed within a very few feet of where they were sitting and'that there was no other way he could have gotten to that room; and it further shows that when the slate was heard by them to fall some one of those present immediately said “That must have got that pumper” or words to that effect. There is evidence from which the jury might well have believed that at least two of the persons who were present at that time, a short distance from this room and who were members of the party near which decedent had to pass, were superior in authority to him and that it was their duty to have warned him of the danger. Not only did they not warn him in person, as was their plain duty to do, but it was culpable negligence for them to have left this dangerous place without putting up some sort of notice or warning, and particularly in view of the rule of the company requiring them to do so.

It is not necessary to go further into the evidence, for it must be apparent from this short statement of it that the action of the court in overruling the motion for a directed verdict was eminently proper. The court in its instruction number one, complained of, directed the jury that if they should believe that the unsafe or dangerous condition of the roof was known to the defendant company or its employes superior in authority to the decedent, or that such condition could have been known to them by the exercise of ordinary care, and that the condition of the roof was not at the time known to the’ decedent they should find a verdict for the plaintiff. The complaint of this instruction is, and the defendants offered one cover[457]*457ing that view, that it did not say to the jury if the dangerous condition was so obvious that decedent in the exercise of ordinary care in the discharge of his duties should have known of its condition, there should be a verdict for defendant. The instruction as given based the plaintiff’s right to recover upon his want of knowledge of the dangerous condition, but the complaint is it did not embrace the idea that still he could not recover if the danger was so obvious that one of ordinary intelligence and in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety should have known of the dangerous condition, although no duty of inspection rested upon him. In other words, the contention is that even though decedent owed no duty of inspection of the roof, if its dangerous condition was so obvious and patent to one of ordinary intelligence that such knowledge may be imputed to him, there can be no recovery.

The first instruction in effect denied a right of recovery to the plaintiff if at the time he knew of the unsafe and dangerous condition of the room, and further requires that he should have been killed while exercising ordinary care for his own safety -before he was entitled to recover. In another instruction ordinary care is defined as such care as an ordinarily prudent person would, under similar circumstances, usually exercise for his own safety or the safety of another. Then again, in the instruction on contributory negligence the jury was told that if the plaintiff on that occasion was negligent and his negligence contributed to the injury to such an extent that but for it he would not have been injured, there must be a verdict for the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 32, 195 Ky. 453, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elkhorn-coal-corp-v-bumpass-administrator-kyctapp-1922.