Folsom Morris Coal Mining Co. v. Fautt

1923 OK 525, 218 P. 158, 92 Okla. 1, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 24, 1923
Docket11300
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1923 OK 525 (Folsom Morris Coal Mining Co. v. Fautt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Folsom Morris Coal Mining Co. v. Fautt, 1923 OK 525, 218 P. 158, 92 Okla. 1, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 749 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, G.

Mollie Fautt, for herself and as next friend of her two minor children, recovered a ¥2,500' judgment against Folsom Morris Ooal Mining Company, for the death of her husband, John Fautt, who was killed in an explosion in the defendant’s coal mine No. 6, at Phillips, in- Coal county. The defendant appeals.

The only question presented for consideration is the sufficiency of ihe evidence to support the verdict of the jury. The established facts are that John Fautt was employed as shot firer in the company’s mine No. 6; that as such shot firer it was his duty to gb into the mine when all other persons were out of the mine and fire the shots; that as such shot firer he was the sole judge whether a shot was a practical shot and Iwhether or not it was Safe to fire the shot; that on the 8th day of January, 1918, as such shot firer, he went into the mine for the purpose of firing the shots; that after firing certain shots there was an explosion which resulted! in his death; that after the explosion, parties went into the mine and found him lying on his back in the 11th north entry.

It is alleged in the petition 'that the shot in one of the rooms ignited the coal dust or combustible matter in said room, thereby causing an explosion which dlrove the noxious gases and deadly fire into the 11th north entry, thus burning, asphyxiating, and killing said John Fautt; that his death was due to certain negligent and careless acts of the defendant company, all of which concurred and co-operated to produce his death, as folloiw®: Tn allowing and permitting the air in the mine to become saturated with coal dust; in not sprinkling-such entries, rooms, and slopes regularly and thoroughly with water so that the air would not be charged with such dust; in permitting the air in the room to become saturated With dust and combustible matter, and failing and refusing to remove the same from the mine; in not haying sufficient current of -air in and through and to the mine, slope, entries, roadways, and-rooms to remove such combustible material with which the air w,as saturated flrom said mine; in allowing and permitting the said John Fautt as shot firer to go into the mine when same was in a dangerous condition; and in failing and refusing to remove the coal dust from the entry and robins and allowing an accumulation of the same therein. The defendant answered by *2 a general denial and pleaded the assumption of risk and contributory negligence.

It is agreed that the death was caused by the explosion. The plaintiffs tried it upon the theory that it was a dust explosion caused by the negligence of the company in permitting dust to accumulate in the entries and in the rooms. The defendant tried the case upon the theory that it was not a dust explosion, but that it was an explosion caused by the two shots in the face, one being a following shot, which was at right angles to the shot on the right hand side of the room; that a portion of each of these shots kicked back, and the fire and coal dust from these shots crossed each other in about the center of the room and the explosion was the result.

There being no, one in the mine at the time of the explosion 'brat the deceased, parties and the witnesses necessarily reached their conclusions as to the cause and character of the explosion from an examination of the conditions in the entry and in the rooms after the explosion. These observations were made by the various witnesses, one, two, three, and four .days after the explosion.

UTour witnesses, all experienced miners, testified for the plaintiffs. The material parts of their testimony relating to the accumulation of dust in the mine, their iopinion as to the character. of the explo•sion and as to whether or not the shots in •the room where the explosion started were practical shots, will he quoted.

Both parties tried ihis case upon the theory that the explosion started in the room worked by Homer Miller, which was room 11, off the 11th north entry. These entries and rooms were merely narrow, low roofed tunnels. Boom No. 11 was a. tunnel about 8 feet wide and 4% feet high, leading off from the 11th north entry. It was about 150 feet long to where it widened out into a room about 17 feet wide and it was in that room, according to the theory of the parties and all the witnesses, that the explosion started. They all agree that three shots bad been fired in that room. The controversy and the different opinions as to the character of the explosion were upon the interpretations, of the different witnesses upon the conditions they found in this room No. 11 and the openings leading away from it.

Henry Parish on direct examination testified :

“Q. Do you know whether or not there was any accumulation in that north entry there? A. There was quite a bit of accumulation of dust. Q. Had that dust ever been removed from there? A. Not in quantities at all. Q. Had it ever been dampened? A. No, sir. Q. How long have yon been a miner? A. I commenced in the mine before I was 13. Q. Have you followed that all your life? A. Been 3 years I was out. Q. What different positions have you had in the mine? A. I have had about everything that there is, drove, dug, drove the rope, been gas man. Q. What kind of explosion in your judgment was that on that occasion? A It was a dust explosion. Q. Now, in this particular room you speak about, did you examine• where the shots was put in? A. Yes, sir. Q. I will ask you to state from your experience as a miner whether or not they were practical shots? A. Yes, sir; they all pulled; there was one of them that required a little digging, but they expect that.”

On cross-examination he admitted that he bad been in only one dust explosion; that be saw the effects, of this explosion for 1,000 feet towards the hoisting shaft; that its most extreme part was about 300 feet; that it traveled with the air a short distance and then against the air; had never seen a dust explosion in large force.

“Q. You say there was evidence of great violence there? A. There was commotion in the room, but the shots were in good shape. Q- They had all pulled the normal quantity of coal out? A. They didn’t as good as could have been expected of those shots. Q. All those or a shot? A. All those shots. Q. All those three that were drilled? A. There was not a one that was an unpractical shot. * * * Q. Did you see any dust in this room? A. Yes, sir. Q. Dust on the floor of the room? A. Yes, sir. Q. Much? A. No, noit any great amount. The shots had not tore the coal up so bad. Q. 1 was talking about the dust on the floor of the room? A. There was some. Q. Any dust in the -intry? A. Yes, sir, some. Q. Considerible quantity? A. No great amount. Q. On the floor? A. Yes, of course it would not be on the roof. Q. What quantity was there on the floor of the room, the entry? A. I did not measure it.”

Bobert Fisher testified:

••'3. What various positions in tlie mine his.ve you followed or occupied? A. I have occupied very near everything except boss; g>„i man and such as that, and know every occupation in the mine. Q. Did you make an examination of the mine down there after Mr. Fautt’s death? A. I went in the place where it was supposed to have occurred about 3 days after that, 2 or 3 days. Q. Did you examine the entries, roums? A. Yes, sir. Q.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 525, 218 P. 158, 92 Okla. 1, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folsom-morris-coal-mining-co-v-fautt-okla-1923.