Kaaro v. Ahmeek Mining Co.

146 N.W. 149, 178 Mich. 661, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 771
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1914
DocketDocket No. 99
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 149 (Kaaro v. Ahmeek Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaaro v. Ahmeek Mining Co., 146 N.W. 149, 178 Mich. 661, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 771 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Stone, J.

This is an action on the case to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff on September 23, 1910, while he was in defendant’s employment and engaged in the performance of his duties.

Defendant for a number of years prior to plaintiff’s injury had been operating the Ahmeek copper mine. While plaintiff, a miner, but at the time of [664]*664the injury acting as shift boss, was engaged in moiling a start, preparatory to drilling a hole at the bottom of shaft No. 3, a studdle fell from a staging about 45 feet above in the shaft, where timbermen were engaged in timbering the shaft. This shaft was at the time being sunk through the rock. It was at that time upwards of 1,000 feet in depth and about 9x20 feet in the other dimensions. A number of men, called miners, were engaged in the work of loosening and excavating the rock at the bottom. Common laborers, called muckers, were loading rock into a bucket after the miners loosened it. The rock was hoisted to the surface by means of a bucket and hoisting apparatus. A separate gang, called the timber gang, was engaged in putting the permanent timbers into the shaft, which were being put in in sets from the surface downward. The shaft was lighted only by lamps carried by the men. A hole was left in the southerly side of the staging for the bucket to pass through. The ladder road was constructed on the northerly side of the shaft. The shaft went down nearly perpendicularly from the surface until near the point where the timbermen were working at the time and then began to curve and incline. A hole would be made in the staging to permit the passage of the miners and others up and down on the ladder-way. The men below could not protect themselves against falling objects, but it was a disputed question whether the plaintiff as shift boss had any control over the timbermen, there being testimony both ways on that subject. It was the duty of the timber-men, imposed upon them by the defendant, to keep the hole and other places in the staging in as safe a condition as practicable, to prevent objects from falling down from the staging and injuring the men below, but in the course of the work of putting in new sets of timber, the staging could not be kept absolutely tight at all times owing to the uneven or [665]*665irregular condition of the wall; and this condition changed from day to day as new sets were put in while going down the shaft. On the day in question there was a hole between the side of the staging and the foot wall side of the shaft. The miners were working on contract, getting paid by the foot for the rock they excavated. They did not have anything to do with putting in the timbers, but there was a dispute whether the plaintiff as shift boss had anything to do with the entire shaft, including the timbering. It appeared that the miners and the timber gang were separate crews, and had separate and distinct contracts. The sets which were being put in were composed of concrete and wood. The lower side of the shaft was called the foot wall, and the upper side was called the hanging wall. These sets would lie next to the walls and two pieces connected them, one at each side of the shaft. The sets were fastened together by means of bolts and nuts. Wooden timbers about 10 inches square and from 3% to 5 feet in length, called studdles, would be placed lengthwise between the sets on the foot wall, at the ends, and on the hanging wall, and the sets would be drawn tightly against the ends of the studdles by tightening bolts which ran from set to set. It was a disputed question whether, when timbers were being put in on the curve, the tightening of the bolts on the hanging side would have a tendency to draw the sets on the foot side apart and release the studdles on the foot side and permit them to fall.

On the day of the plaintiff’s injury, while he was working at the northerly side of the bottom of the shaft, a studdle fell from between the sets, on the foot side while the timbermen were engaged in tightening the hanging bolts, and struck the plaintiff on the back of the neck, or between the shoulders, and seriously, and he claimed permanently, injured him. This studdle fell, either through a space that existed [666]*666between the staging and the foot wall of the shaft, or through the ladder hole. Captain Rapson, the head captain of defendant, had full authority over all of the work and workmen in the shaft. He testified that it was his duty to look after the safety of the working places of all of the workmen, and warn them of any dangers to which they were or might be exposed, and with which they were not acquainted, while they were performing their duties. It was undisputed that he was upon the staging when, and for 10 or 15 minutes before, the accident occurred engaged in looking after the work and workmen there. The work of the timbermen was being done in a manner approved by him; but he testified that it was the duty of plaintiff as shift boss to look after all the work in that shaft at that time, that the plaintiff had just gone down the shaft through the staging. We quote a part of his direct testimony:

“I remember Kaaro coming down this shaft and going down below. I had a talk with him. I told him to be careful and look out for himself, and asked him how things were going, how many holes he was going to blast and how he was getting along. After our talk he went down.
“Q. What kind of a place did he go through there, how much space did he have to go through?
“A. Just room enough for a man to go through, about two feet.
“Q. How was that opening made?
“A. Covering over the shaft and allow a manhole for a man to go up and down and keep a false piece of board over the hole. This was taken off while he was going down, after he went down I put the board over the hole, I did that myself.
“Q. Do you know how long that was off before this . accident happened?
“A. About five minutes, I was still on the staging.
“Q. Can you say how this studdle went down?
“A. It backs off towards the foot; * * * rolled over the foot. There was room there for it to go through, there was maybe 12 or 15 inches of room [667]*667there. That was not an extraordinary opening there; that was about the average.
“Q. When you say the average, do you mean that’s the way those sets are?
“A. The average room in the shaft. You got to have a little room to swing around. That’s about the average we carry our shaft. That is a matter of necessity, such room.
“Q. Now, Captain, I want to ask you about the method of * * * putting in those sets, what do
you say as to the way that was put in? Those sets were put in all the way down that No. 3 shaft. Was there anything peculiar about this particular set, was there any difference in the way this set was put in from any other set?
“A. Not a particle, only just turn the under rail a little.
“Q. That shaft dips at what angle when it leaves the surface?
“A. Eighty for 900 feet.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 149, 178 Mich. 661, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaaro-v-ahmeek-mining-co-mich-1914.