Leslie Four Coal Co. v. Simpson Ex Rel. Simpson

333 S.W.2d 498, 84 A.L.R. 2d 728, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 18, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 333 S.W.2d 498 (Leslie Four Coal Co. v. Simpson Ex Rel. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leslie Four Coal Co. v. Simpson Ex Rel. Simpson, 333 S.W.2d 498, 84 A.L.R. 2d 728, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 189 (Ky. 1960).

Opinion

STEWART, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of $5,500 awarded, without the intervention of a jury, to Robert Simpson, a seventeen-year-old infant. The judgment was the outgrowth of a suit in behalf of the latter instituted by his mother, Mrs. A. M. Simpson, as his next friend, against Leslie Four Coal Company for damages, it being averred in the complaint the company’s negligence caused the youth to lose his left hand. In this appeal a reversal is urged on the *499 ground that at the conclusion of all the evidence Leslie Four Coal Company was entitled to a directed verdict.

On October 18, 1956, appellant was operating an auger coal mining enterprise in Harlan County. Appellee, Robert Simpson, was employed at the time as a truck driver for Simpson Brothers Trucking Company, a partnership which was engaged as an independent contractor to haul appellant’s coal from the point of production to the coal tipple. This partnership was composed of Joe Simpson, Vernon Simpson and A. M. Simpson. The last-named person is the father of appellee. Robert Simpson, however, was directed in his work by the partners equally.

As is usual in such an operation, a bulldozer had stripped the overburden away from the seam of coal, so that the auger could be directly applied to it. This “facing up” of the coal seam, as it is known in strip mining parlance, had made a cut along the hillside approximately 20 to 25 feet in height. This cut is called the “highwall”; it had been sloped slightly and, in consequence, there was no overhang at the top.

The auger was set up against .the coal seam and spiral bits, 42 inches in diameter, were forced into the coal, which pulled the coal out to the face of the seam. A 20-foot conveyor, located under the front of the auger, between it and the coal seam, extended from the auger upward to a point high enough to enable coal trucks to back under the extended end. The mined coal traveled on this conveyor and was dumped into waiting trucks. For night work the auger and conveyor were equipped with lights.

For convenience, two days before the accident, appellant had placed a wooden sled, 10 feet by 15 feet, parallel to the highwall and attached to the 'auger-propelling equipment. This sled was piled six feet or seven feet high with extra auger bits and it traveled along the coal seam as the auger moved. The joining of the sled onto the auger mechanism required the conveyor, which formerly angled away at 45 degrees from the highwall, to be placed more nearly parallel with the face of the highwall, thus causing trucks that were to be loaded to back in nearly parallel to and close to the highwall.

At about 10:00 p. m. on October 18, 1956, A. M. Simpson, the father of appellee and one of the partners in the trucking company, backed his truck into position for loading. On one side the truck was within four or five feet of the highwall; the conveyor and auger were at the rear of the truck; and the sled loaded with bits was on the other side of the truck. Appellee was waiting with his truck for a load of coal. While his father’s truck, ahead of him, was being loaded, appellee, having been ordered to do so, climbed upon the truck bed and leveled the coal as it poured into it “to get a good load.”

After he had leveled the load, appellee jumped down to the ground between the truck and the highwall, near the middle of the truck. He called to his father to pull out. About three seconds later, he noticed a handful of dirt falling from the highwall. As the vehicle went forward, appellee ran toward the rear of it, in the direction of the conveyor, and was caught in a large earth-slide from the highwall. Appellee was covered by the slide and his left arm was caught against the truck. As an outcome of this mishap, appellee’s left hand was severely injured and had to be amputated at a point about three inches above the wrist.

The trial court, in its findings, concluded that the operation of the auger caused the slide; that it was the duty of appellant actually to discover the condition of danger of the highwall as the work progressed; that after such' a discovery, a burden was imposed upon it to notify appellee accordingly, who was an invitee on its premises; and that appellant had failed to detect and warn appellee of the hazardous state of the highwall, which later evolved into the slide that injured appellee, and was therefore negligent.

*500 The rule is well established that an inviter is not responsible to an invitee for an injury sustained on the inviter’s premises from a cause arising from a defect or a danger which the invitee knew of or ought to have known of. Nor in such a situation does the law require the inviter to place the invitee on notice of such a defect or danger. This rule is- thus stated in detail in 65 C.J.S. Negligence § 50, p. 543: “The basis of the inviter’s liability for injuries sustained by the invitee on the premises rests on the owner’s superior knowledge of the danger, and as a general rule he is not liable for an injury to an invitee resulting from a danger which was obvious or should have been observed by the invitee in the exercise of reasonable care, or from a condition which was as well known or as obvious to the invitee as to the inviter, or which the inviter had no reason to believe would not be discovered by the invitee. There is no duty to warn the invitee of any defect or danger which is as well known to the invitee as ,to the owner or occupant, or which is obvious or which should be observed by the invitee in the ■exercise of ordinary care. * * *

Does this rule apply to the facts of this case as stated and as shown hereinafter? We conclude that it does.

Appellant’s evidence established that the acknowledged safety measures of freeing or removing from the highwall all overhanging burden and all surface cracks had been observed, thus minimizing the perils besetting an operation such as this. As ■stated heretofore, the highwall was almost ■straight with very little slope. Appellee’s father testified that in his opinion the high-wall was reasonably safe. The same opinion was expressed by Rufus Bailey, the •safety director for the Harlan County Coal ■Operators Association and a former state mine inspector; by William Charles, the safety engineer and mine inspector for Bituminous Casualty Company; by L. E. Gazay, the superintendent for appellant; and by D. L. Strunk, the foreman for appellant. Appellee, in fact, introduced no evidence that controverted this line of testimony.

Nevertheless, the proof in this action disclosed that, in the conduct of auger mining in the manner described, slides from the highwall, generally speaking, will continue to occur. Appellant argues in this connection that slides are a known hazard which inevitably accompany this type of mining and that appellant’s duty was not to maintain the highwall so as to prevent any and all slides, but only to exercise ordinary care to construct and maintain it in a reasonably safe condition.

The lower court found that the operation of boring the auger into the steep highwall created a “dangerous condition” to one placed in close proximity to the embankment from which the coal was being extracted. As has been pointed out, this situation is brought about by the fact that such a process employed in strip mining coal produces slides of hazardous proportions down the face of the highwall.

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Bluebook (online)
333 S.W.2d 498, 84 A.L.R. 2d 728, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-four-coal-co-v-simpson-ex-rel-simpson-kyctapphigh-1960.