Every v. Rains

115 P. 114, 84 Kan. 560
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 8, 1911
DocketNo. 16 989
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 115 P. 114 (Every v. Rains) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Every v. Rains, 115 P. 114, 84 Kan. 560 (kan 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of ..the court was delivered by

Benson, J.:

This action was brought by a widow to recover damages for the death of her husband, caused by the alleged negligence of the defendants in the operation, as partners, of a lead-and-zinc mine. Defendants Griggsby and Elliott admit that they were operating the mine at the time of the injury, but deny that the other defendants were their partners or interested in the business. The other defendants deny the partnership, and deny any participation in the business until after the injury. The plaintiff recovered a judgment against all the defendants.

Every was a laborer in the mine. Sometime before [562]*562the accident the mine had been leased by the owner to Clary & Schultz, who had by written agreement given to Griggsby & Elliott the right to mine and hoist ore to the surface, where it was received and crushed by Clary & Schultz, and after paying the royalty the proceeds were divided between these firms. Clary & Schultz had nothing to do with the mining operations underground. Afterward Griggsby & Elliott became associated with the other defendants, under the name of the Mineral King Mining Company, to continue the mining operations and business before that time carried on by Clary & Schultz and Griggsby & Elliott.

Every was killed while at work in the mine on the 21st day of October, 1909. He was shoveling ore into a tub which stood on a push car in a drift about 100 feet from the shaft. His duty was to fill the tub, push the car to the shaft and there attach it to the hoisting apparatus, and return with another tub and repeat the operation. Thirty feet beyond where he was at work another laborer, was drilling into the face of the mine, preparatory to blasting. Every had just filled his tub and started to push it to the shaft when he received a signal that a shot was about to be fired, and he, with other laborers, went on to the shaft for safety. The shot was fired, after which the signal “that’s all” was given by the shot firer, in pursuance of" his duty. The signal was a notice to the laborers to return to their work. About five minutes afterward, while Every was going back to his work and when he was within twenty feet of that place, a piece of soft rock fell from the roof, inflicting the injury from which he died. The drift varied from about fifteen to fifty feet in width, and from twenty-five to seventy feet in height. There was evidence tending to show that at the place of the accident it was forty-five to fifty feet high and fifty feet wide. Fifteen or twenty feet from this place there had been a cave-in at the side of the drift, extending to the roof and opening to the light, so that the roof could [563]*563be seen. Along one side of the drift, near this place, was a bench that had been left about fifteen feet from the floor. It was customary to prod the roof from time to time with a piece of gas pipe about fifteen feet long, and at this place, where the roof was high, the person using the prod mounted this bench, but the entire roof could not be reached by this means and the prod was used only so far as it could be done. This prodding was the means adopted to ascertain whether the roof was safe. The roof was prodded in the morning of the day before the injury. Griggsby and Elliott were practical miners, and were in the active control of the operations.

There was evidence tending to prove that prodding should be done after each shot, the shots having a tendency to loosen the roof; also, that the proper time for firing shots was in the evening, although it was testified that different mines had different regulations. The roof was of flint rock, and the fragment that fell had not been noticed before its fall. The cave-in occurred about fifteen or twenty days before this accident.

The negligence complained of and submitted to the jury was the failure properly to prod the roof.

The jury found that the drift was lighted by the opening caused by the cave-in; that the roof of the mine could be seen by the miners; that Every was an experienced man; that he could see a person prodding the roof if that work had been in progress while he was returning from the shaft to his place. There was no evidence of the frequency of shots other than that a shot or shots had been fired the previous day. The evidence tends to show that this was after the prodding had been done in the morning of that day.

It is contended that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a finding of negligence against any of the defendants, and also that Every had full knowledge of the dangers and assumed the risk incident to his serv[564]*564ice. It is also earnestly contended that none of the defendants, except Elliott and Griggsby, was a partner in the business or had any interest in the mining operations when the accident occurred.

It was alleged in the petition that the defendants, as copartners, were carrying on the mine under the name of the Mineral King Mining Company. The principal testimony to prove that the defendants other than Elliott and Griggsby were partners was a petition in a case wherein all these defendants, as plaintiffs, had sued the owner of the mine, Mr. Schermerhorn, for failure to make them a lease. This petition was signed by the same attorneys who represented the defendants here. In that petition it was alleged that the plaintiffs named therein were a copartnership; and that the copartnership was formed on or about the first day of October, 1907. To this petition several exhibits were attached, containing items dated in October prior to the date of the accident. After this action was commenced an amended petition was filed in that action changing the date of the formation of the alleged partnership to November 1, and omitting from the exhibits all items dated before that time.

It is insisted that there was error in admitting the petition in evidence. All the defendants except one testified that the Mineral King Mining Company was formed about November 1, but no one gave the exact date. It seems that Mr. Elliott organized the company, and that the different individuals joined at different dates — according to their testimony, near the first day of November, and each one testified that he had nothing to do with the mining operations before that time. It also appears from their testimony and that of the owner of the mine that the old lease to Clary & Schultz was surrendered on that day. No testimony was offered explanatory of the mistake in the dates given in the petition offered in evidence.

There was also some evidence of accounts kept with [565]*565laborers in the mine, and of checks given in payment, but no checks, books or other written evidence was offered to show when the change in the management of the mining operation occurred. The agreement between Clary & Schultz and Griggsby & Elliott was dated September —, 1907, and the jury found that to be the date upon which the defendants obtained the lease ■ from the owner. This finding may have been based upon the belief of the jury that Griggsby & Elliott obtained the lease for the Mineral King Mining Company. However that may be, the date upon which the mining company obtained their lease is quite immaterial, the vital question being whether the defendants, or Griggsby & Elliott alone, were the employers of this man at the time he was injured. The jury found that the defendants commenced their mining operations on or about October 1, 1907.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 P. 114, 84 Kan. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/every-v-rains-kan-1911.