Harvey v. Alturas Gold Mining Co.

31 P. 819, 3 Idaho 510, 3 Hasb. 510, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 1
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 31 P. 819 (Harvey v. Alturas Gold Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey v. Alturas Gold Mining Co., 31 P. 819, 3 Idaho 510, 3 Hasb. 510, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 1 (Idaho 1893).

Opinion

MORGAN, J.

The parties by their attorneys filed a stipulation to the following effect:

That the defendant waives upon appeal all exceptions to the amount of the verdict, and consents that the grounds of excessive damages stated in defendant’s notice of intention to move for a new trial may be stricken from the record, and defendant admits, for the purposes of this appeal, that the injuries proved to have been received by the plaintiff were sufficient to support the amount of damages found by the jury, if plaintiff was entitled to recover damages against the defendant, and it is agreed that the evidence as to the character of the plaintiff’s injuries and the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff be stricken from the record. This eliminates from the record and from consideration in this court all questions, except the question as -to whether the verdict is against the law, and as to whether improper evidence was permitted, and whether improper instructions were given or refused.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff was injured in repacking the bucket upon the pump-rod; that he had done this work but on'ce before the occasion on which he was hurt; that this was the eighteenth day of July, 1886; that one Abel Rowe was foreman of the said mine, and that when the plaintiff undertook to repack the bucket he discovered that the doorpiece to the chamber, which is usually taken off for the purpose of repacking the bucket, had been broken. This was on or about the eighteenth day of July, 1886.

The plaintiff, sworn as a witness on his own part, in reference thereto, testifies as follows: “I was a pumpman, and was employed for that purpose on the Ida Elmore mine. I worked on the night shift. I am acquainted with the working of the [?]*?Cornish pump — the kind used in this mine. Have been mining all my life. Abel Rowe was foreman of the mine; he was my superior officer. When I was going to work on the evening of the seventeenth day of August, 1886, I met Mr. Rowe. He told me that the bucket at the fourth level was failing, and that it would have to be changed so that I could get the water up for the men to work in the morning. After supper I told the men I was going to change the bucket, and told them to stop at the three-hundred foot level.. The men got all the blocks down, made 'the frame fast, and then I went down. We lifted the pump column about two feet; then I put a block under it, right between the two joints. This block was there for that purpose. The men lowered the column back onto this block; then 1 called up to them to screw up the yokes tight, as tight as they could draw them. I told the men then to take off the blocks and put them on the bucket rod, which they did, and then lifted it up to where we had to change it. I took off the old bucket and put on the new one. I then called to them to lower away. They tried to lower the bucket to its place, but it was tight. I put my hands into the top to keep it straight and make it go into the cylinder. The men above gave the rod a little jar and the whole thing came down on my arms, and I was fastened right there. I told the men to take the yokes off the bucket-rod, put them on the column and lift it off. They did this and got me out, and afterward took me to the surface. This is not the usual way of changing the bucket. When the column is the same size as the working barrel, we took the bucket clear out at the top and changed it, otherwise we took off the door-piece. I could not take it out at the doorpiece because.it was broken and had been mended in such a way that it could not be taken off. I first knew the doorpiece was broken on the 16th to the 18th of July. I changed the bucket then. I put this block in between the joints where the column was broken. It was a three by four scantling, about two feet long”. I used everything there was there to make it safe. There was nothing else there to use. I met Mr. Rowe the next morning, and asked him if the doorpiece that was lying there at the surface would not fit. He said it would exactly. I said, “You had better have that new one put on, because if there are any slips when [519]*519■a man is changing the bucket, he will have his aims cut off.” He said he would ask Captain Anthony, superintendent, about it. I asked him afterward if he had seen Captain Anthony ■about it. He said he had, and that he said he would have the new doorpiece put on as soon as possible. It went on three or four days, and I spoke to Mr. Eowe again. He said he had been talking to Captain Anthony about it, and he (the captain) said he was going to change the pole. Eowe then told me they were going to lower the pole. This would do away with the draw-lift with the broken door. They wanted to get ore enough ahead to keep the mill running while they were making the change. Somewhere about the first week in August, 1 met Captain Anthony myself. He asked me how things were going. I told him there was nothing on the main rod, if the thing should break, to keep it from going to the bottom of the shaft, and in case of a breakage when the men are changing the bucket, there will be some man get hurt, if not killed. He said they were going to change the pole from the third level to the fourth, and do away with that draw-lift with the broken doorpiece that was there. He said he was going to do it as soon as they got quartz enough ahead to keep the mill running while they were making the change. If the doorpiece had not been broken, we would have lowered the bucket down from the working barrel to the chamber, and changed the bucket through there. This would have been perfectly safe. I had to call the men to help me fix the pump. The night I was hurt I called five or six men — might be seven. I could not have put in more props; if we had wo could not work to fix the bucket. I changed the bucket twice while I was there; the first time about the 16th to the 18th of July, and then when I was hurt. I did it the first time the same way as the last. The column might have been supported without the block being put in. It might stay all right, but I did not think it safe. I put the block in to malee it perfectly safe. I considered that when I had the block in and the yokes up tight, it was pretty safe. I thought the thing was safe enough. I considered I was taking very little chances when I had the prop in. I can’t hardly say that I considered that it was taking any chances. I had no suspicion it would fall.”

[520]*520George Slack, -sworn on the part of the defendant, testified as follows: “That the bucket was put in a number of times while I worked there, and was always done the same way; that is, by breaking the pump column and lifting the bucket to this place and changing it there. Never, so far as he knew, changed at the doorplate. Didn’t know whether the doorpiece was then broken or not. Sometimes the block was used between the-parts, and sometimes it was not. Either way he considered safe. He assisted in changing- the -buckets himself every day while there.”

P. E. Erickson, sworn, testifies that he was a machinist, and had been one for years; that he understands the Cornish pumps, and describes the method of changing the bucket ou the pump. The witness swears that the yoke will hold up, when properly screwed up, more than you can put on it; that it will hold between three and four -tons; that this column above where it was taken apart with the rod, would not weigh over ten or eleven hundred. In a test they put on three thousand four hundred and sixty pounds, and it held it up. If the yoke was screwed up tight, any little shaking done on the top would not shake it down.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 P. 819, 3 Idaho 510, 3 Hasb. 510, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-alturas-gold-mining-co-idaho-1893.