Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. Conkle

136 Ill. App. 53, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 587
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 13, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 136 Ill. App. 53 (Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. Conkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Co. v. Conkle, 136 Ill. App. 53, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 587 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit brought by appellee against appellant, to recover damages on account of the death of Stephen D. Conkle, which was occasioned by an explosion, occurring while he was working in a mine alleged to have been in the possession of, and operated by appellant. Verdict and judgment in favor of appellee for $3,500.

At the time of the injury, on the night of July 18, 1905, Stephen D. Conkle was in the employ of a mining company, engaged in mining fluor-spar, 'lead, zinc and other mining products, in a mine in Hardin county, Illinois. He was a young man 21 years of age, in good health, making $1.25 a day and had an aged father and several younger brothers and sisters whom he helped support to some extent. His knowledge of the use. and danger of explosives in mining was very slight and was limited to a week’s prospecting in the neighborhood and a few days’ employment on top at the mine, where he was killed. The products of this mine were found in drifts and were loosened and taken out by drilling holes, several feet deep along the drifts, and charging them with dynamite, which was fired with a cap and fuse. There were two drifts in the mine, one 211 feet down and another 50 feet lower. On that day the day shift of men had been drilling along the 211-foot drift under John Goodwin. The night shift was under direction of Samuel Miles and both he and Goodwin were under control of Mr. Ostrander, the superintendent of the mine. One of the holes drilled by the day shift failed to explode when the attempt was made to touch it off. This hole was about 4 feet deep and loaded with four sticks of dynamite set with cap and fuse and tamped down with loose spar on top. Goodwin set a man to cleaning it out, but after he got down some 15 inches, took him away, putting him at other work and leaving the hole still loaded. The man who started to clean out the hole claims to have left a fuse about 3 inches long hanging out of it as a warning that it was a “missed hole.” Deceased was that night for the first time ordered below with the night shift. He first went to the lower level and was then ordered back to the 211-foot level where he and Byron White, a boy 17 years of age, were set to work together by Miles. White testified that Miles directed them .to drill a hole 2% feet and then to finish the “missed hole,” drilling it to a depth of 3% feet; that Miles ran a spoon handle down in the hole and showed them how deep it was, and that after telling them how deep he wanted it drilled, ■he gave no further directions about the work. After they had finished the first hole, they commenced, a little before midnight, on the “missed hole,” Conkle holding the hand drill and White striking with the sledge hammer. An explosion followed and Conkle was injured so that he died shortly afterward.

Miles testified he did not know of the “missed hole” nor did he remember telling White and Conkle to drill it out. The evidence on the whole clearly showed such mismanagement or carelessness on the part of those in charge of the mine, as to justify the jury in finding for appellee upon the charge of negligence, under proper instructions as to the law.

Appellant criticises nearly all of the instructions, 12 in number, given for appellee. Instruction Ho. 1 is almost identical with one approved in C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co. v. Dowd, 115 Ill., 659 (660), and what is there said by the court answers the objections made by appellant to said instruction in this case. Appellant complains of a number of the instructions for the reason, as it alleges, they fail to state correctly the measure of damages. It is true that in some of these instructions the language used is not carefully guarded, but as a whole the instructions correctly stated the law governing the measure of damages in such cases, and we do not think the jury could have been misled upon this subject. We are especially inclined to this view from the fact that the damages assessed by the jury do not appear to us, from all the evidence in the case, to have been unreasonable or excessive.

Appellee’s instruction Ho. 9, after stating certain facts necessary for the jury to find to entitle plaintiff to recover, concludes, “And if the jury further believe from the evidence that the said Stephen D. Conkle left a father and six brothers and sisters, as his next of kin, surviving him, as charged in said declaration, and that said father, brothers and sisters have been injured in their means of support, .occasioned by the death of the said Stephen D. Conkle, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover.” The objection made by .appellant to this feature of the instruction is that it states an element of damages, provided for in section 33 of the act in relation to coal mines, instead of that provided for by section 2 of the Injuries Act, under which this suit was brought. Appellant, however, should not be heard to complain for that reason, as the rule laid down in the instruction named, was much more limited than it was entitled to have it stated under the Injuries Act. What is here said disposes of the same objection which is made to certain ■other instructions. There were other instructions given for appellee, which correctly told the jury that the damages must be based upon the pecuniary injuries, resulting from the death of said Conkle, to his next of kin. The series of instructions given on behalf of appellee fairly stated the law applicable to his case, while some 22 instructions given for appellant appear to have fully covered appellant’s theory of the law, applicable to its case.

What we regard as the most serious question arising upon this record, is whether appellant was at the time of the injury in possession of and operating the mine in question, as charged in the declaration. It appears from the evidence that on June 15, 1905, there was in existence a corporation known as the Fairview Fluor-Spar Company, organized under the laws of Hew York, which was then in possession of and operating said mine, and also appellant company known as the Fairview Fluor-Spar & Lead Company, which had then been recently organized under the laws of this State. These companies had the same president and secretary, but the stockholders were not wholly identical. On the date last named the foreign company made a conveyance in writing, of all of its property, real and personal to appellant, and on the same day appellant conveyed the same in trust to the Union Trust and Savings Bank of East St. Louis, Illinois, to secure the payment of 250 bonds of $1,000 each and the interest thereon. These two instruments were recorded four days later in the office of the recorder of Hardin county, where the mine was located and were thereafter deposited with the trustee. The stock of the foreign corporation was at that time held by the International Finance and Development Company of Hew York, as security for advances already made and to be thereafter made, and said Finance and Development Company was furnishing the money to take care of the pay roll, run the mine, improve and enlarge the plant, and was collecting the proceeds derived from the sale of its products.

Charles Turner, the vice president and manager of sales of appellant, testified that the principal reason why it was thought advisable to incorporate a new company in Illinois was because of the convenience in raising money upon bonds; that certain bankers in St. 'Louis, Missouri, and East St.

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Related

Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co. v. Dowd
4 N.E. 368 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
136 Ill. App. 53, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairview-fluor-spar-lead-co-v-conkle-illappct-1907.