Hill v. Nelson Coal Co.

104 P. 876, 40 Mont. 1, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 138
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1909
DocketNo. 2,711
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 104 P. 876 (Hill v. Nelson Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Nelson Coal Co., 104 P. 876, 40 Mont. 1, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 138 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE SMITH

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action brought to recover damages on account of personal injuries received by the plaintiff while in the employ of the defendant as a miner at its coal mine in the vicinity of Sand Coulee, Montana. It appears from the evidence: That plaintiff was working as a pick miner in one of several long parallel rooms of the mine; that the room in which he was had been advanced a considerable distance farther than the adjoining room; that a wall of coal about fifteen feet wide was left between the rooms, and, in order to properly ventilate the mine, it was necessary to cut passages through this wall from one room to the other. One such passage had been cut, and, about fifty feet in advance of this passage, another had been driven into the wall of the room in which plaintiff was engaged, in order to connect with the adjoining room, when the latter had been advanced sufficiently to meet it; but at the time plaintiff went to work a few days before he was injured the operations in the adjoining room had not reached that point, and consequently this latter was called the blind passage or cross-cut. Subsequently the miners in the adjoining room reached a point opposite this so-called blind crossi-eut, and in blasting, in the course of their work, drove through into the same, thereby severely and permanently injuring the plaintiff. There was some conflict in the testimony as to where plaintiff was at the time of his injury. He testified that he was standing alongside of hisi car shoveling coal, and was three feet beyond the blind cross-cut, toward the face of the room. The defendant sought to prove that he was in the blind cross-cut.

The complaint, after setting forth that it was the duty of the defendant to use ordinary care to provide and maintain for plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to perform his work, alleges, inter alia; “The plaintiff should have been notified before any blasting was done in said adjacent room, and thereby have enabled him to secure a place of safety and protect himself from danger; that defendant’s foreman, Jack Pearce, promised to notify plaintiff before any blasting, but [5]*5defendant failed to notify plaintiff of the same after having promised to do so, and failed to make or promulgate any rules or regulations for the protection of the plaintiff from the danger of such blasting.” The defendant pleaded sole negligence, contributory negligence, and assumption of risk on plaintiff’s part, and also that plaintiff’s injury was occasioned and contributed to by the negligence of a fellow-servant. The trial resulted in a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and the following special findings:

“Interrogatory No. 1. Was plaintiff in the cross-cut at the time the blast which injured him went off? Answer: No.

“Interrogatory No. 2. Did Jack Pearce, at any time before plaintiff was injured, promise plaintiff' that he, Pearce, would notify plaintiff before blasting was done by the miners working in the adjoining room? Answer: Tes.

“Interrogatory No. 3. Did the defendant, at the time plaintiff was injured, have in existence rules regulating the time when blasting should be done in its mine by the pick miners? Answer: No. ’ ’

After judgment entered upon the verdict, defendant moved for a new trial. This motion coming on regularly to be heard, the Honorable J. B. Leslie, judge of the eighth judicial district, before whom the cause was tried, announced that he deemed himself disqualified to hear it, and therefore, over defendant’s objection, called in the Honorable John E. Erickson, judge of the eleventh judicial district, who overruled the same. From the judgment and the order denying a new trial, appeals are perfected.

1. We think there is no merit in defendant’s contention that the action of Judge Leslie in calling in Judge Erickson was error. In this state a party has no absolute right to have his motion for a new trial passed upon by the judge who tried the cause. (State ex rel. Carleton v. District Court, 33 Mont. 138, 82 Pac. 789.) And the judge called in has the same power in court or chambers as the judge who called him. (Farleigh v. Kelly, 24 Mont. 369, 62 Pac. 495.) We have no doubt [6]*6that this power includes the right to pass upon a motion for a new trial. It is the duty of a judge to perform his. official functions regardless of his personal feelings or sentiments, and no judge should refuse to act unless he is in fact disqualified; but, Judge Leslie having held that he was disqualified, we shall assume that he' became so pending the motion for a new trial. There are certain contingencies, which, when they exist or arise, disqualify a -judge, ipso facto, from sitting or acting in any action or proceeding. (Rev. Codes, sec. 6315.)

2. Plaintiff testified that the defendant had no rules regulating the time when pick miners should blast, and that these miners fired shots whenever they needed coal. The testimony on the part of the defense tended to show that the rule of the company was that shots should be fired twice a day, to-wit, at the noon hour and at quitting time; but there were, in fact, frequent infractions of this rule, which those in charge of the mine attempted to correct. Pearce, the superintendent, testified: “They would only shoot, to my knowledge, at other times in case there was a miss-shot, or a shot didn’t throw any coal.” Mr. Nelson, the vice-president and general manager of the defendant company, testified: “We authorized Mr. Pearce to make a rule permitting the pick miners to shoot twice a day, at noon and at quitting time. The objection to the pick miners firing whenever they want to is that it would make so much smoke in the room that we would always have the main entrance full of gas and smoke, and that would not only interfere with the men, but with the mules and horses.”

Appellant contends that the case should not have been, as in fact it was, submitted to the jury “upon the proposition that defendant failed to make and promulgate rules or regulations for the protection of the plaintiff from the danger of blasting”; and it is argued in the brief: “There is no suggestion of what rule could have been adopted that was not adopted that would have resulted in preventing this accident. No one had undertaken to testify of any rules in force in other mines that were not in force in this mine.” The case of Mitchell v. [7]*7Boston & Mont. Con. C. & S. Min. Co., 37 Mont. 575, 97 Pac. 1033, is relied on to support this contention. In that case it was held, in effect, that, where plaintiff failed to introduce testimony as to what rules should have been promulgated by the defendant company, he could not rely for recovery on an allegation of negligence in that regard. Here the allegation in the complaint regarding the absence of rules is very general, but there was no objection to the pleading on that account, and the testimony relating to rules, the substance of which has just been recited, was introduced without objection. There was no question as to the nature or scope of the rules which plaintiff contended should have been made and promulgated. The only issue on that subject was whether or not any such rules were in force. Defendant contended and sought to prove the affirmative, and the plaintiff assumed the negative side of the question. The jury answered in- favor of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 P. 876, 40 Mont. 1, 1909 Mont. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-nelson-coal-co-mont-1909.