Hall v. Manufacturers Coal & Coke Co.

168 S.W. 927, 260 Mo. 351, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 121
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 927 (Hall v. Manufacturers Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Manufacturers Coal & Coke Co., 168 S.W. 927, 260 Mo. 351, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 121 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, C.

— This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries received by plaintiff while working in defendant’s coal mine near Novinger, Missouri. Suit was instituted in Adair county and on change of venue was sent to Knox county where trial was had resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $23,666. That portion of plaintiff’s petition charging; negligence is as follows:

“The defendant negligently, carelessly and recklessly set him to work in one of the rooms in said Mine number 50, known as room number 4 off the 10th west entry off the main south entry, at a place in said room where the rock, earth and other materials form- ' ing the roof of said room were in a loose and dangerous condition and liable to fall at any time; and did negligently, carelessly and recklessly fail and neglect to warn or notify the said plaintiff that the roof of said room, at the point and place where plaintiff was compelled to be in order to perform the work as directed, was in a loose and dangerous condition as aforesaid; but said defendant, its agents, employees and mine foreman did carelessly, negligently and recklessly assure this plaintiff that the roof of said room at the place aforesaid was in a safe and secure condition, and this plaintiff believing said foreman possessed superior knowledge of said roof, relied upon said statement and assurance and set about the work as directed; and this defendant had negligently, carelessly and recklessly failed and neglected to furnish and provide a safe, competent and proper man in charge of said room, and did negligently, carelessly, and recklessly fail and neglect to furnish and provide safe, competent and proper men in charge of said mine us mine foreman, and did negligently, carelessly and recklessly fail and neglect to furnish the said plaintiff with a reasonably safe, sufficient and proper place in which to perform his duties, and did negligently, carelessly and recklessly fail and neglect to warn or notify the said plaintiff of the [358]*358dangers of working in said room, this plaintiff being then and there an inexperienced miner, and ignorant by reason thereof of the dangers lurking in said roof of said mine, which said facts the defendant well knew or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known.”

The petition further alleges that by reason of the negligence and carelessness of the defendant, as above stated, and without any warning to him, a large slab of rock from the roof of said mine fell upon plaintiff. Defendant’s answer contained, (1) a general denial, (2) that plaintiff’s injury “was due solely to his own negligence and carelessness in not properly taking care of and securing said room and the roof thereof,” (3) plea of assumed risk.

Plaintiff’s evidence tended to establish the following facts: At the time plaintiff was injured he was working in said mine in a room which was about twenty feet wide and fifty feet long; the roof of the room being a short distance above plaintiff’s head. While he was at work picking up some loose rock from the floor of this room, a slab of rock, nine feet wide and about eleven feet long and varying in thickness from a “feather edge” to eighteen inches, fell from the roof of the mine upon him. Prior to the accident, plaintiff had worked in this room about three and one-half days, three days of the time being spent in the work of digging coal. On the day preceding the day of the accident, plaintiff set 33 props under the roof in this room and drilled some holes and loaded them with powder. After he left the mine that day, these holes were fired, as was the custom, by the shot-firers. The next morning (the day that the injury occurred) plaintiff returned to the mine about 6:30 a. m., and after warming himself in the boiler room went down into said mine and to said room. Upon arriving there he found that during the night a considerable quantity of rock had fallen from the roof of the room and that the props had fallen (caused, possibly, by the firing [359]*359of the shots). It was the custom in the mine that loose rock that fell from the roofs of the different rooms was cleaned up and taken away by special men which the company had in their employ for that work. Defendant’s foreman came into plaintiff’s room that morning and commented on the amount of loose rock that was down and told the plaintiff to clean out “a couple of cars of coal in front” and that then the company would clean up the rock. To this plaintiff said “all right” and then asked the foreman if he (the foreman) thought any more of the roof would fall. In answer to this question, the foreman took plaintiff’s pick and tested the roof above the place where plaintiff was working and after sounding the roof told the plaintiff that it was sound and safe. This was about an hour and a half or two hours prior to the accident. After the foreman left the room, plaintiff cleaned up the two cars of'coal and then went to see a Mr. Batley, who was then in the employ of defendant to do the special work of cleaning up the fallen rock from the rooms. Upon being asked by plaintiff as to when he could come and clean up said rock, Batley replied that he could not get to it that day and directed plaintiff to'go and see the foreman, Mr. Shaw, about it. Plaintiff thereupon called upon and requested the foreman to get some one else to do the work of cleaning up the loose rock. The foreman made the proposition to plaintiff that he (plaintiff) clean up the loose rock and that the company would pay him “extra” for doing that work. To this plaintiff agreed; returned to his room and started to clean up the loose rock. After having picked up five or six pieces of rock and while he was in the act of lifting another piece the slab fell upon him. The slab fell from that portion of the roof which the foreman had just previously inspected. The slab gave no warning of its breaking away. Plaintiff testified that he did not know that the roof was dangerous; he testified that he sounded the [360]*360roof and that it sounded solid to him — but it does not appear from the evidence as to the exact time that plaintiff sounded the roof; as to whether it was on the day of the accident, and after the foreman had sounded the roof, or during the three previous days that he worked in the room, or on the morning of the accident and before' the foreman sounded the roof, the evidence is silent. Plaintiff further testified that he was not an experienced coal digger; that, while he had worked in the mines about four years at different times and places, most of his work had been driving mules in the mines, etc., and that he had had only about two months’ experience in digging coal. He testified that he was not familiar with the character and formation of the rock in this mine and that when the foreman of the mine sounded the roof and told him it was sound and safe, he relied upon what the foreman said, because he thought the foreman “would know, if anyone would.” By plaintiff’s other witnesses it was shown that there was a defect in the formation of the rock in the roof of this room. The defect was known as a “clay slip” and that this kind of defect made a roof very dangerous and treacherous and that the air would get into the rock formation at this defective place and sometimes in the night and sometimes in a day and a half or two days the rock would loosen so that it would fall, depending upon the kind of rock and the conditions surrounding it.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 927, 260 Mo. 351, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-manufacturers-coal-coke-co-mo-1914.