Haywood v. Dering Coal Co.

145 Ill. App. 506, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 361
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 Ill. App. 506 (Haywood v. Dering Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haywood v. Dering Coal Co., 145 Ill. App. 506, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 361 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit by William T. Haywood, appellee, against the Dering Coal Co., appellant, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by reason of the wilful violation by appellant of certain provisions of the Mines and Miners Act. Upon a trial by jury there was a verdict and judgment against appellant for $2,500. The case was submitted to the jury upon two- counts of the declaration. The first count charges, in substance, that the mine examiner of appellant wilfully failed to visit the mine before the men were permitted to enter to work therein, and wilfully failed to inspect all places where men were expected to pass or to work, and to observe whether there were any unsafe conditions in the rooms or roadways in the mine, and wilfully failed to inscribe with chalk on the walls of the working place of appellee or the roadways in said mine, the month and day of the month of his visit, and wilfully failed to place a conspicuous mark at the entrance of all roadways or working places, where dangerous conditions existed, as notice to all men to keep out, and wilfully failed to report his finding to the mine manager; and that appellant wilfully permitted appellee to enter said mine to work, not under the direction of the mine manager, at a time when unsafe conditions existed therein; and that the mine examiner wilfully failed to make a detailed record of the condition of the mine as he found it in a book kept for that purpose, as provided in Section 18 of the Mines and Miners Act. The second count charges the mine manager of appellant with a wilful failure to see that all dangerous places above and below were properly marked, and with a wilful failure to see that danger signals were displayed where required. To the declaration appellant pleaded the general issue and also filed a special plea, averring that appellee was not in its employ as a coal miner or in any other capacity at the time of his alleged injury; that appellant did not then own, operate and possess the coal mine described in the declaration, and that it was not then engaged in mining and removing coal from said mine. The record does not disclose that appellee joined issue upon the special plea.

On September 18, 1906, and for about two years and a half prior thereto, appellee was employed as a coal miner in a coal mine known as Mine No. 24 located at Witt, in Montgomery county. At half past six o ’clock on the morning of that day he entered the mine for the purpose of resuming his work, in driving the entry at the face of the sixth east entry on the north side, and while he was walking along said entry, and at a point near a coal car upon the track in said entry, loose rock and slate in the roof of the entry fell upon him causing the injuries complained of. The evidence tends to show that no conspicuous marks were then placed at the entrance of said entry to indicate that any dangerous condition existed therein. The evidence further tends to show that at or near the place where appellee was injured a cross-cut had been driven a distance of about seventeen feet toward the fifth east entry, which entry had not then been extended up to that point. The evidence further tends to show that there were no marks either on the walls or on the roof of the entry at the place where appellee was injured, indicating that the mine examiner had inspected that portion of the entry or that any dangerous or unsafe conditions existed there. It is uncontroverted that the roof of the entry at the place in question was unsafe and dangerous and was not supported by props or cross-bars.

It is insisted on behalf of appellant that the place where appellee was injured was his working place and that as appellee had been directed some time previous to his injury to prop the roof of his working place, and as conspicious marks indicating dangerous conditions in the roof had then been placed by the mine examiner, appellant is not liable. The evidence tends to show that the working place of a miner extends from the face of the coal to the rear of the car when in position to be loaded, or a distance of sixteen to seventeen feet from the face of the coal. The evidence further tends to show that when men are engaged in driving an entry and a cross-cut at the same time they usually work in both places alternately, and that under such conditions the working place of the men includes the face of the entry and the cross-cut and the space between the face of the entry and the cross-cut. The contention of appellant in this respect is predicated wholly upon the fact that appellee was injured at the place where his car was standing, immediately opposite the cross-cut which had previously been driven by appellee and his buddy. The evidence, however, tends to show that the car was then standing forty or fifty feet from the face of the entry which appellee was engaged in driving, and that appellee and his buddy had completed their work in the cross-cut about a week previous to the day appellee was injured. The evidence further tends to show that the props which miners are required to set to support the roof of their working place are only intended to serve a temporary purpose while the work is being prosecuted, and that thereafter the duty of setting props and cross pieces for the purpose of permanently supporting the roof of an entry, as a road-way or passage-way in the mine, devolves upon the mine operator.

We think the jury were justified in finding that the place where appellee was injured was not his working place and that the mine operator had wilfully failed to comply with the provisions of the statute in the particulars alleged in the declaration.

The evidence bearing upon the question as to whether or not appellant was operating the mine in which appellee was injured is conflicting, and we should not be disposed to interfere with the verdict upon that issue if the court had not admitted incompetent evidence offered by appellee over the objection of appellant.

The summons in the case and the return of the sheriff thereon, showing that the same had been served upon appellant, did not in the least tend to show that appellant was in possession of the mine in question, and the admission of the summons and return in evidence could not have been otherwise than prejudicial to appellant. Whether or not Edward Bottomlee was the superintendent in the employ of appellant, or of the Burnwell Coal Company, was a controverted issue affecting the question whether the mine was operated by appellant or by said Burnwell Coal Company. The return of the sheriff that he had served the writ upon appellant by reading the same to Edward Bottomlee, superintendent of appellant, and at the same time delivering to him a true copy of said writ, amounted to nothing less than an ex parte unsworn statement by the sheriff of the county in his official capacity, that Bottomlee was the superintendent of the mine in the employ of appellant.

The witness W. W. Williams, a state mine inspector, called on behalf of appellee, was permitted to testify over the objection of appellant, that the company operating the mine at the time appellee was injured had made no report of such injury to Mm. The evidence of this witness in that regard was foreign to any issue in the case, and its admission, taken in connection with the statement by one of the counsel for appellee, that it tended to show a disposition on the part of appellant to conceal the accident and what occasioned it, we think was harmful to appellant.

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Related

Haywood v. Dering Coal Co.
161 Ill. App. 544 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 Ill. App. 506, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haywood-v-dering-coal-co-illappct-1908.