Lenk v. Kansas & Texas Coal Co.

80 Mo. App. 374, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 169
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 Mo. App. 374 (Lenk v. Kansas & Texas Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lenk v. Kansas & Texas Coal Co., 80 Mo. App. 374, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 169 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

This is an action for damages resulting from personal injuries received by plaintiff which were caused by a rock falling upon him. He recovered in the trial court.

Statement The facts are these: Plaintiff was a coal miner and had been engaged at such work about twenty-four years. Defendant is a coal mining company and had plaintiff in its employ when he was hurt. The mine was operated on the “room and pillar” plan and is [377]*377governed by tbe following statute, Laws 1895, p. 227: “Tbe owner, agent or operator of any coal mine in this state, employing five or more persons, if said mine is worked on tbe room and pillar plan, shall cause the work in such mine to be prosecuted in the following manner, and none other, to wit: Two entries must be driven parallel for the ingress and egress of the air, and cross-cuts must be made at intervals not to exceed fifty feet apart, and no rooms, entries or other openings shall be allowed to start inside of the last cross-cut until the next one be made.”

Defendant had the two parallel entries properly driven as also the proper “cross-cuts” at distances of fifty feet, except, at the time of the injury to plaintiff, the head of the parallel entry where he was at work had progressed, or been driven, a distance of more than fifty feet (estimated at from sixty-five to ninety-five feet) from the last finished cross-cut. A cross-cut within fifty feet was being driven at the time of the accident but was not put through.

On the morning of the accident the plaintiff went to work at the head of one of the parallel entry ways and being so far from the last cross-cut the air became foul, or at least so 'oppressive as to give him the headache and make him dizzy to that degree that he quit work in order to get fresh air. He walked down the entry way to the first finished cross-cut, at the mouth of which he was in the full rush of pure air. He walked through the cross-cut into the other parallel entry, thence up to, or near the head of that entry where others were at work. After passing some words with them, he retraced his steps back towards the mouth of the cross-cut through which he had passed. Near this mouth of the cross-cut some employees were engaged in fixing a coal car. He stopped with them a moment and then went into the cross-cut a step or two- and sat down (as stated by some witnesses, though he says he did not sit down) when in a few moments a rock from the top fell upon him injuring his arm and breaking his leg. . The [378]*378serious nature of tbe injuries fully justified tbe amount of tbe verdict of $800.

Erom the foregoing, mainly taken from the testimony of the plaintiff given in bis own bebalf, it is apparent that be was not, at tbe time be was hurt, at a place where defendant directed him to go or knew he was going, or where any duty in defendant’s service called him. In other words, that be bad selected a place for bis ease, comfort and convenience not necessary for him to select in order to get the air of which he stood in need. Indeed it was wholly unnecesary for him to go over tbe ground passed over by him after be first came to tbe mouth of the cross-cut in tbe entry in which he was engaged, for at that point be was in tbe full rush of fresh air.

In order to avoid this hurtful fact in tbe way of plaintiff’s case, it is alleged in tbe petition, that “the air became so foul and tainted so as to make plaintiff sick, dizzy and partially unconscious, whereupon plaintiff, in order to save his life, in that unconscious state and condition of mind and body, wandered towards, to and into the last cross-cut in defendant’s mine, in order to obtain fresh air, and while plaintiff was in said cross-cut, without bis fault an overhanging rock” fell upon him, etc. There was no evidence whatever to sustain that allegation, nor was anything of that nature submitted to the jury by plaintiff’s instructions. On the contrary tbe entire face of plaintiff’s testimony in his own behalf contradicts it. He said that while at work “I did not lose my senses, but I got sick and dizzy.” When asked, if be could not have walked further along down to tbe main entry he answered that he had “no business going down there when I got the full force of tbe air there” (at the mouth of the cross-cut) “I had no business there; I went to get fresh air in that cross-cut.” Then be stated that “after I had got air I went up there” to where Andrews was working in the unfinished cross-cut. That is, he went from where he was working down to the closest [379]*379cross-cut, where he got fresh air. After he go? the needful air he passed through the cross-cut into the other parallel entry and then went back towards the head of it where Andrews was at work. (He says he went there to see when Andrews would get it through so as to make better air at the head of the entries.) He then retraced his steps back to where a car was being fixed and finally went into the cross-cut, being injured just after entering. So then we have a case where the matter pleaded in the petition, as an' excuse for plaintiff’s conduct, is not only not supported by the evidence but wholly contradicted by it; and where it was not submitted by instructions, as, of course, it could not have been under the evidence.

Mines and mining: negligence: contributory negligence pleading. We can not interpret the petition in any other way than that it is a concession that plaintiff would be guilty of contributory negligence except for the fact that defendant’s first negligence put him in such an irresponsible state of mmd that he was not conscious of what he was doing when he took up his position under the overhanging rock. And authorities are cited in plaintiff’s brief to the effect that when one is plaeed in a situation of peril by another, he is not to be held responsible for an error of judgment as to the best means of escape. This is only a further effort to carry out the theory of the petition, but there is no evidence upon which to apply the law; for here the testimony of plaintiff shows he knew that he had fully escaped all peril when he first, walked down to the current of fresh air at the mouth of the cut.

—: statute: cross-cut But aside from the foregoing, the case fails from another consideration. The statute above cited shows that the object of the cross-cuts was for the circulation of air in coal mines. The evidence of both parties shows that was the -understanding in this mine. That no care was taken of them further than to see that one was supported until the next one was driven after a sufficient distance had been reached with the parallel entries. They were [380]*380then allowed to fall in if they would. That while no rule had been promulgated against their use, and while employees, ns well as bosses, did use them at times for the purpose of taking a near way from one parallel entry to the other, yet it was only done as a matter of personal convenience. That by walking a greater distance down the main parallel entry to a main cross way a person could go from one to the other without going into or through a cross-cut.

It appears that plaintiff was not engaged in the line of his ■duty in going to or stopping at the place where he was hurt. He had not been directed to go there, nor did the condition in which he found himself where he was at work make it necessary for him to go there, or near there.

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Related

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175 S.W. 271 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
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84 Mo. App. 411 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 Mo. App. 374, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lenk-v-kansas-texas-coal-co-moctapp-1899.