Luman v. Golden Ancient Channel Mining Co.

74 P. 307, 140 Cal. 700, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 661
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1903
DocketSac. No. 991.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 74 P. 307 (Luman v. Golden Ancient Channel Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luman v. Golden Ancient Channel Mining Co., 74 P. 307, 140 Cal. 700, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 661 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries to plaintiff, alleged to have been suffered by him by reason of the negligence of defendant, while he was in its employ. The action was tried by the court without a jury, and the findings and judgment were given in defendant’s favor. 'Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.

The defendant, a mining company, was engaged in sinking. a vertical shaft on its property, which, on July 22, 1899, had reached a depth of more than two hundred feet. On that day plaintiff was at work in said shaft, excavating dirt and rock from the bottom thereof, which was then being hoisted to the surface. While he was so at work a bucket filled with dirt and rock, weighing some two hundred pounds, which was then being hoisted out of the shaft, fell to the bottom thereof and upon plaintiff’s left foot and ankle, severely injuring him. It .was alleged in the complaint that the hoisting machinery then being used by defendant was then being maintained by it in a negligent and unsafe condition for said use, and that by reason of said negligent construction and maintenance it gave way and caused the falling of the bucket upon plaintiff. This was denied by the answer, which also averred that the injury to plaintiff was caused by his own negligence and the negligence of a fellow-servant. The court found that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence, but further found that the machinery was not being maintained by defendant in a negligent or unsafe condition; that the fall of the bucket was not caused by the breaking or giving away of any part of said machinery, or by its negligent construction or maintenance; that said machinery was constructed and at all times maintained by defendant in a safe and sound *703 condition for the purposes for which it was being used, and that the accident ivas caused by the negligence of a fellow-servant. These findings are attacked by plaintiff as not being sustained by the evidence. The hoisting machinery was very simple in character, and was operated by water-power. The hoist-cable was fastened to a drum on a movable shaft, on which it was wound and unwound, and ran from the drum over a sheave in a gallows-frame, and thence into the shaft of defendant’s mine. The shaft of the water-wheel used in operating the hoist had on the end next to the hoist three teeth, or shoulders, so made as to fit into three corresponding teeth, or shoulders, in the end of the movable shaft. "When the movable shaft was thrown to the left, its teeth, or shoulders, fitted into the teeth, or shoulders, of the water-wheel shaft, and the two shafts revolved together, thus winding the cable around the drum of the movable shaft and raising from the mine anything attached to the cable. When the movable shaft was so adjusted it was said to be “in clutch.” The water-wheel had no reverse motion, and the machinery could be used only for hoisting from the mine. In lowering material into the mine, the brake only was used to arrest and regulate the descent. The movable shaft was thrown into clutch by means of a lever called the clutch-lever, which was moved by the hand of the operator on top of a horizontal timber in the gallows-frame. When this lever was moved to the right it threw the movable shaft to the left, and so into clutch. On this horizontal timber, on top of which the clutch-lever was moved, was nailed a strip of plank fifteen inches long and three quarters of an inch wide, called a safety or gauge cleat, the right-hand end of said cleat, as one faces the movable shaft from the hand end of the clutch-lever, marking the distance to which the clutch-lever must be moved to the right in order to throw the movable shaft into clutch.

The brake was applied to the movable shaft by means of a brake-block and brake-lever. The block had a semicircular bearing on the upper half of the movable shaft, and was brought into contact with the shaft by weight applied to the lever at the hand end, which is near the end of the clutch-lever, and within reach of the man operating the same, whose *704 business it was to operate both the clutch-lever and brake-lever. At the time of the accident, one Smith, a fellow-employee, was operating the machinery at the top of the shaft. Plaintiff having loaded the bucket at the bottom of the shaft, gave the signal for raising it, whereupon Smith, by the use of the clutch-lever, threw the movable shaft into clutch, and the bucket was raised up in the shaft twenty or thirty feet, when the movable shaft came out of clutch, and the weight of the loaded bucket caused the movable shaft, detached from the water-wheel, to move in the opposite direction, thus allowing the bucket at the end of the cable to fall to the bottom of the shaft without being detached from the cable. There was no breaking or giving way of the machinery, and it appears to be conceded that the movable shaft having been fully thrown into clutch, unless the lever controlling the same had been allowed to slip back, thus leaving the movable shaft free to come out of clutch, the accident could not have occurred. Plaintiff’s main contention was, that the safety or gauge cleat, which there was testimony tending to show was relied upon to assist in holding the lever in place, was, because of its slight bearing or resisting surface, not sufficient for such purpose, and allowed the lever to slip back, and, further, that the brake was defective, and for that reason the operator was unable to arrest the descent of the bucket, after the shaft had come out of clutch and the bucket had commenced falling.

The evidence was certainly sufficient to sustain the findings of the trial court to the extent necessary to uphold the judgment. Counsel for plaintiff earnestly contend that the theory upon which the conclusions were reached was erroneous, and that this is shown by the exhaustive written opinion of the learned judge who tried the case, and which is contained in defendant’s brief. This opinion, of course, constitutes no part of the record, and, even if we were satisfied that the judge was in error in some of the views as to the law expressed therein, that fact would not avail plaintiff, for the. findings of fact must stand or fall upon the evidence contained in the record. It is very clearly shown by the opinion that the learned judge was satisfied by the evidence that the machinery was reasonably safe for the purposes intended, if used in the ordinary way. It has been said by this court *705 that “if the machinery or apparatus he of an ordinary character, and reasonably fitted for the purposes for which it is designed, the employer in this regard has fulfilled his duty. The burden is upon the injured servant to show that the machinery or appliances were so defective or inadequate as to make the use of them by the employer negligent and culpable.” (Mc Alpine v. Laydon, 115 Cal. 68.) Much can be said in support of the conclusion of the trial court to the effect that the machinery was reasonably safe for the purposes intended, if used in the ordinary way.

The testimony showed that the movable shaft when in motion, unless restrained by the clutch-lever, had a slight tendency to slip, by reason of the resistance or weight of the bucket and rope and the friction of the shaft, and thus throw the lever back and come out of clutch.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 307, 140 Cal. 700, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luman-v-golden-ancient-channel-mining-co-cal-1903.