Folsom Morris Coal Mining Co. v. Scott

1924 OK 592, 231 P. 512, 107 Okla. 178, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 3, 1924
Docket13027
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1924 OK 592 (Folsom Morris Coal Mining Co. v. Scott) 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. Scott, 1924 OK 592, 231 P. 512, 107 Okla. 178, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 661 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

WARREN, J.

This is an appeal from' a judgment of the district court of Coal county wherein the plaintiff there, Katie Scott, defendant in error here, secured a judgment in the sum of $10,000 against the plaintiff in error, Folsom Morris Coal Mining Company.

; The plaintiff in the court below brought suit alleging she was the widow of Tom Scott, deceased, and brought suit for the benefit of the next of kin. She alleges the defendant was operating a coal mine near Phillips, Okla. She alleges the deceased was elected, qualified, and acting district mine inspector for Oklahoma, whose district included defendant’s mine; that on June 17. 1920, deceased entered defendant’s mine for the purpose of making inspections as required by law and was killed while riding in a trip of -empty cars being hoisted out of the slope to the shaft. She alleges that it was the duty of the defendant to employ competent and qualified engineers to operate engine pulling cars out of mine, and it was its duty to provide proper, suitable, and safe cable for use in hoisting such trip, and was its duty to provide a drag or tail board to prevent the trip running away in the event of a break in the cable. Further, she alleges it was necessary to furnish a proper and suitable dram for winding the cable in hoisting the trio, also electric signals for use in controlling operation of the trip.

Plaintiff alleges deceased met his ■ death because the defendant ■ employed an incompetent engineer; because it failed to provide a safe cable; because of negligence in failing to provide proper drum with flanges, and that the drag or tail board to prevent runaway; also thát the company failed to install electric signals.

She alleges that the engineer permitted the cable to stack'up on the drum and that, because of improper flanges, about 15 rounds of cable rolled off the drum, causing about 90 feet of slack, and there being no drag, the trip ran away, and when the slack was taken up the cable- broke; the trip ran wild, and Scott was killed. - She alleges Scott was 59 years of age, had an expectancy of life of 17 3-10 years, and was earning $150 clear of expenses.

The defendant answered with a general denial, and a pleading of contributory negligence cm the "part of Scott. Defendant further pleaded that;] at the time! of the accident ¿Ü the, machinery and appliances 'in said mines were subject to Scott’s control and direction, and if he was injured, it was due to his own 'carelessness in failing to exercise proper' care for his own safety; that if there were defective appliances, they were known to deceased or could have been known by the exercise of proper care.

Errors are alleged by the plaintiff in error, defendant below, in the giving of instr Action's and the admission and rejection of testimony. The first error alleged was the refusal of the court to give defendant’s instruction No. .1, which is as follows:

“That Thomas Scott, the deceased, was what is known in law as a ‘licensee,’ and the defendant owed him no duty, except that of not willfully injuring him, or willfully permitting him to be injured.”

The court, in lieu of the requested instruction of the defendant, gave the following:

“You are instructed that the deceased, Tom Scott, was a district mine inspector, and that it was the duty of the defendant company to furnish him with reasonably safe means for entering and inspecting said mine, taking into account the ordinary and usual hazard of such duty.”

Tn our opinion the inspector, Tom Scott, was a licensee and the defendant owed him no duty as to the condition of the premises save not • knowingly to let him run upon -a hidden peril or wantonly or willfully harm him. unless there is a requirement of statute placing this burden upm it. We know of no case where the identical question here *180 presented is involved. The nearest analogy is presented in eases of injury to a policeman entering premises in the discharge of his duty.

The case of Parker v. Barnard, 135 Mass. 116, 46 Am. Rep. 450, is one where a policeman entered an open doorway in the night time and fell down an open elevator shaft. Thei court held that he was a licensee, but held that he could recover because of the failure of the owner to comply with a statute requiring such openings to be guarded.

The case of Racine v. Morris, 201 N. Y. 240, 94 N. E. 864, is another case where a policeman in the discharge of his duty was held to be a licensee, but in chis case, as in the Massachusetts ease, a statute required a substantial guard and sufficient trap doors.

So in this case we hold that Scott was a mere licensee and the defendant only owed him the duty of not willfully injuring him or permitting him to be injured, unless we have a statute imposing some additional duty on the plaintiff because of the relationship the law creates between them. Section 7554, Oomp. Okla. Stat. 1921, in part provides as follows:

“For the purpose of making the inspection and examination provided for in this section, the Chief Mine Inspector and the district inspectors shall have the right to enter any mine at any reasonable time, by day or by night, but in such manner as shall not unnecessarily obstruct the workings of the mine, and the owner, lessee or agent of such mine is hereby required to furnish the means necessary for such entry and inspection. * '* *”

Section 7557, Comp. Okla. Stat. 1921, reads as follows:

“Every person who willfully obstructs the Chief Inspector or his assistant inspectors in the execution of his or their duties, and every owner, agent, lessee or manager of a mine who refuses or neglects to furnish to the Chief Mine Inspector or his assistants the means necessary for making entry, inspection, examination or inquiry, as herein provided, in relation to such mine, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction he shall be punished as hereinafter provided.”

That portion of the statute requiring the owner, lessee, or agent “to furnish the means necessary for such entry and inspection” naturally contemplates reasonably safe means for entering and inspecting the mine. In view of this statute it was not error to refuse defendant’s requested instruction No. 1.

The second complaint of the plaintiff in error is to the effect that the trial court should have held as a matter of law that the failure of the deceased to go up the manway rather than by the trip, the one being safe and the other dangerous, constituted contributory negligence. The exact way in which the defendant complains of the action of the court is.not shown in the brief, but its instruction No. 8 requested and refused is the only place where our search has found it in the record. Such instruction is as follows:

“That in no case shall men be permitted to travel to and from their work on hauling roads where hauling is done by machinery, and where such hauling is done there shall be a manway provided for men to travel to and from their work. Said manway shall be six feet in width and five feet in height, and shall be kept clear of all obstructions and properly timbered.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 592, 231 P. 512, 107 Okla. 178, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folsom-morris-coal-mining-co-v-scott-okla-1924.