Hoover v. Empire Coal Co.

149 Ill. App. 258, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 446
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 24, 1909
DocketGen. No. 5,060
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 Ill. App. 258 (Hoover v. Empire 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
Hoover v. Empire Coal Co., 149 Ill. App. 258, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 446 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Willis

delivered the opinion of the court.

On May 9, 1907, Williamson C. Hoover, while employed as a mule driver in the coal mine of defendant in error and driving a mule hauling two loaded coal cars along the eleventh west entry off the main south hauling way, fell in front of the first car and the front wheels ran over him and he therefrom received injuries which resulted in his death. Plaintiff in error was appointed administrator of the estate of said deceased and brought this suit against defendant in error to recover damages for the loss to the next of kin of said deceased occasioned by his death. Plaintiff’s amended declaration, as amended, which will be hereafter called the declaration, contained nine counts. The court sustained a demurrer to the fourth, seventh and eighth counts. Defendant filed a plea of not guilty to the remaining counts and there was a jury trial. At the close of the evidence introduced by plaintiff in error, the court directed a verdict finding the defendant in error not guilty. A motion by plaintiff in error for a new trial was denied and defendant in error had judgment for costs, from which plaintiff in error prosecutes this writ of error.

Plaintiff in error concedes that the evidence did not make a case under the ninth count. The sixth count was for a wilful violation of the statute relating to the operation of coal mines, and evidence was offered tending to show a violation of that statute. Where a wilful violation of the provisions of that statute results in injury to a party the statute gives him an action for the direct damages sustained thereby; and in case of loss of life by reason of such wilful violation of the statute a right of action is given by that statute to the widow of the person so killed, his lineal heirs or adopted children, or to any other person who was dependent for support on the person so killed, for a recovery of damages for injuries caused by such loss of life. It does not give a right of action to the administrator of the person so killed. Plaintiff in error therefore could not recover under the sixth count. It need not be further considered. The first, second, third and fifth counts will be assumed to be sufficient, after a plea of not guilty filed, to. support a verdict for plaintiff in error, if the proofs would have warranted such a verdict.

Deceased was between twenty-one and twenty-two years of age. He had been working in the mine of defendant in error since he was fourteen years of age, but not all the time. There were thirty rooms on the eleventh west entry and at the time of the accident in question coal was being mined in all but two of them. On the day of the accident, deceased and three others were engaged in hauling the coal from these rooms to the main south hauling way, where other appliances conducted the cars to the mouth of the shaft. Bach driver drove one mule hauling two cars. They went into the entry together hauling in and setting out empty cars, and then they went to such rooms as they were directed to by Curtis, one of their number, and took out loaded ears and drove with them to the main south hauling way. The two cars were hooked or coupled together. The cars ran upon iron rails resting upon ties laid in the bottom of the entry. Two traces from the collar or harness of the mule were attached behind the mule to a single-tree or butt-stick, which was kept from falling down by straps from the mule’s back. One end of the chain, called a tail-chain, was hooked into the single-tree. The other was attached to a hook on the front end of the front car. There was no place on the front end of the front car where the driver could ride in a sitting posture. Some cars had a bumper projecting out in front and some did not. Where there was a bumper it was the practice in this entry for the driver to ride with one foot on the bumper and the other foot on the tail-chain, and with one hand holding on to the car and the other resting on the mule. The tail-chains used in this mine were of different lengths, and each driver could select a chain to suit himself. We find no proof in this record as to whether there was or was not a bumper on the front end of this car. Deceased was injured at one or two o’clock in the afternoon. A witness who came on duty at nine o’clock that night testified that he then found five cars standing at that point, and that the coal on the front end of the front car projected over so that it did not leave a good footing for the driver. Plaintiff in error failed to prove that this was the car which deceased was riding upon when he met the accident, and failed to prove that it was then in the same condition as when deceased was injured. The front wheels were off the track and the coal might-have been moved by the sudden stopping of the car. The evidence of this witness was therefore finally excluded. There remains therefore in the record, so far as we are advised, no evidence that there was any lack of proper footing on the front end of the car.

There was proof that there was no brake on the car, but deceased had worked in the mine off and on for over seven years and there is no proof that there were ever any brakes used on any coal cars in this mine. There were two places in this entry where in going out the cars ran down a slight declivity, and deceased was injured in going down one of these depressions. A. sprag was sometimes used by a driver to check the speed of a car in going down an incline, and the proof showed that deceased did not have a sprag. But the proof also showed that there were sprags in the mine, kept where a miner could get one whenever he chose. There was proof of gob piled on the south side of this passage, and that there was water under and along the ties for some distance just back of the place where deceased was found, and that there were poor joints along this track, which caused the cars to rock as they passed along over these joints, and that there was no light in this entry except from the lamps carried upon the caps of the workmen. But there was nothing from which the jury could find that any of these conditions caused or contributed to the injury to deceased. Moreover, these conditions must have been well known to deceased, as he had been driving in this entry for three days and taking out twenty to twenty-five trips per day under these conditions, and had made no complaints, and clearly assumed whatever risks arose therefrom. With the exception of one item of evidence, there is no proof from which the jury could find how deceased came to get under this car. The man following him ran into his rear car, and stopped, and went forward and found deceased lying between the wheels of the front car, with his head upon the south rail and one foot projecting beyond the north rail and his body in such a position that it lifted the front wheels about two inches above the rail. But there was nothing in the surroundings from which any one could judge how he came to be in that position. The only testimony having any tendency- to show how deceased received his injuries was the evidence of a physician who attended deceased after he had been removed to his brother’s home, and who testified that his brother asked deceased how he got hurt, and that deceased said that the mole backed up and that he went down. No objection was interposed to this testimony and it therefore is to be treated as competent, but that conversation was not a part of the res gestae, and we fail to see how proof that deceased made that statement is any proof that that was the manner in which deceased came to go under the car. It is proof that he made the statement, but not proof of the fact.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Ill. App. 258, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-empire-coal-co-illappct-1909.