Faylor v. Great Eastern Quicksilver Mining Co.

187 P. 101, 45 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 299
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2963.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 187 P. 101 (Faylor v. Great Eastern Quicksilver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faylor v. Great Eastern Quicksilver Mining Co., 187 P. 101, 45 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 299 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BEASLT, P. J., pro tem.

This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment against it based upon an adverse verdict of a jury in an action for the death of John Richard Faylor, a minor. The action is prosecuted by the boy’s father. The verdict was for five thousand five hundred dollars, and on motion for a new trial the court indicated its intention to grant the motion unless the plaintiff should agree to a reduction of the verdict to the sum of $4,250. This condition was met by plaintiff and the motion for a new trial was accordingly denied. The facts are stated in the opening brief of appellant’s counsel as follows:

For more than thirty years the defendant has operated a quicksilver mine about three miles from Guerneville, in Sonoma County. The mining property was part of a large tract of land and was inclosed with a barbed wire fence. A public road passed near the property, and a large gate in defendant’s fence permits travel between defendant’s property and the county road. This fence and gate are about twenty-five feet from the county road. Posted in a conspicuous place on said gate was a sign six feet long and eighteen inches wide, and with the word “Danger” painted thereon in letters one foot high and the words “No Admittance” about eight inches high. About a half mile from defendant’s property the plaintiff and his family, which included the deceased, resided, and opposite his dwelling was situated the public school attended by deceased. It was not necessary for deceased or any of plain *196 tiff’s children to pass near or through defendant’s property in going to or from school. The mine has been operated about thirty years. In working it a tunnel about five hundred or six hundred feet long was driven into the ore body. This tunnel was known as the “old tunnel,” and was about four feet wide. Two rails were laid in said tunnel about two feet apart and extending through the mouth of said tunnel and across a practically level part of the property to the crushing plant, situated about 150 feet from the mouth of the tunnel. In moving ore from the mine small cars two feet long and about eighteen to twenty inches wide, consisting of four wheels and a box-bed, were run on these tracks. There was a slight fall from the inside of the tunnel and the cars were easily pushed along the rails by the workmen. Some thirteen or fourteen years ago, in working the mine, a stope was driven up through the floor of the tunnel. Where this break occurred, and where ore tracks passed over the stope, planks were laid, one two by twelve inch board between the rails and a similar board on each side of the rail, and, as so constructed, it was safe to push the cars over the rails, and the tunnel was so used for many years. The workmen continually passed back and forth over this part of the tunnel, walking on these boards, and it was considered safe. During the winter of 1916-17, by reason of a cave occurring near the mouth of this old tunnel, it was impossible to use the part of it extending in about seventy-five feet from the mouth thereof, and a short tunnel, called the branch tunnel, was driven in about fifty feet to intersect this old tunnel beyond the caved-in part, and during the year 1917 and part of 1918 all ore extracted from the mine was moved out over this short tunnel to the crusher. The rails in the old tunnel between its mouth and its junction with the branch were removed, and at the time of the accident to John Richard Faylor there were no rails thereon and no cars could be moved through the mouth of the old tunnel. When the mine was not being operated these little ears were left near the mouth of the tunnel which was in use. On Sunday, the third day of February, 1918, no work being then done in or about said mine, the deceased, an intelligent boy eleven years old, together with his brother and a boy named Ewan, went in upon the mining property to *197 play. John Faylor ran the little car upon the track into the branch tunnel to the junction with the main tunnel once or twice and left it there, and instead of returning the way he entered, passed into the old tunnel and proceeded toward the mouth thereof. His body was afterward found in the stope. At the junction of the main tunnel and the branch tunnel there was a large timber in the center of the main tunnel which one proceeding toward the mouth of the old tunnel would have to pass around. It was also obstructed by a pile of dirt and debris two feet high and by a pipe-line extending across it.

The following additional evidence, some of it contradictory to defendant’s above-recited statement, is pointed out by appellant, namely, that the father of the deceased had been employed at the mine for many years, and that occasionally the deceased, with the children of other miners, would go upon the grounds to see their parents, but that they never at such times played with the cars and had never entered the tunnels; that orders had been given by the managers of the mine to all their employees not to permit anyone within the place; and that the deceased and other children had been ordered off the premises by a Mr. Roeth, an employee of the appellant, who drove them out and told them to get out and stay out; that the father of the deceased had told his children that it would be dangerous for them to go in the tunnels or to play on the ears; that a foreman of the mine had seen two boys playing with the car and took it away from them and told them not to play.there; that the children had played with the cars on the Sunday on which John Faylor was killed; that the Faylor children had been driven out of the mine about a month before the accident; that Johnnie Faylor, the deceased, had been ordered off the grounds several times by one Clyde Ayers, who stated he did not know on how many occasions he had done this; and that the tunnel and stope were an integral part of the mine and necessary to properly work the same.

The following additional evidential facts are pointed out by the respondent: The mine where the deceased met his death was partly inclosed by a fence on the northwest side, and is located within about one hundred feet from the hoist, from which entrance is made on to the mining property *198 through, a gate. It was easy to enter the mining property through the fence, and a road leads from this gate over and across the mining property, which at an earlier date had been used as a public road. Upon this road schoolchildren living beyond the mine, prior to and at the time of the injury, would travel and would cross the mining property, in going to and returning from school, located about one-half mile from the mine. On Saturdays and Sundays and after school and during the noon hour schoolchildren and children of the neighborhood would go upon the mining property to play. One Louis Bonnaearsi testified that he had seen children at the mine for a year or more playing with the cars; that they usually played around there like most children would around a place like that, and that often he had seen them playing with the cars; that they would run them up into the tunnel a ways and ride out on them, and sometimes some of the little boys would get in the cars and others would give them a start and ride on the trucks behind while the cars ran down toward the dump. On account of the cave-in at the mouth of the old tunnel the old tunnel had been for a time in disuse, but at and prior to the date of the death of John Faylor the debris had been removed, so that the entrance was unobstructed.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 101, 45 Cal. App. 194, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faylor-v-great-eastern-quicksilver-mining-co-calctapp-1919.