Muslera v. Patton Clay Manufacturing Co.

12 A.2d 554, 338 Pa. 249
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 26, 1940
Docket1; Appeal, 165
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 554 (Muslera v. Patton Clay Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muslera v. Patton Clay Manufacturing Co., 12 A.2d 554, 338 Pa. 249 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Maxey,

Plaintiff brought an action in trespass against defendant company for damages for personal injuries resulting to him by reason of certain harmful gases emitted from certain mines. The mine located under the property of plaintiff was known as No. 3 Mine, and was operated by *250 the Patton Clay Manufacturing Company until 1932, after which date the operation was discontinued. Subsequent thereto, there were cave-ins of this mine and these were filled or partially filled by defendant with hot ashes, hot coke, cinders, and hot bitten or waste pipe, which, it is alleged, set fire to the crop coal in this mine and caused harmful gases to be emitted therefrom. These .gases entered the house of plaintiff, causing him to be overcome and rendered unconscious from January 28, 1936, to January 31, 1936. It is also alleged that this caused plaintiff other physical illness of a substantial character. The negligence pleaded is that defendant allowed its abandoned mine to cave in and carelessly dumped into such cave-ins “hot ashes, hot coke, cinders and hot bitten or waste pipe.” It is pleaded that “in dumping hot ashes” etc., over an outcrop of coal, they should have known that this would cause a fire which would produce dangerous and poisonous gases, “which they knew or should have known would enter plaintiff’s home.”

In the affidavit of defense it is averred, inter alia, that the alleged injuries complained of by plaintiff “have resulted by reason of a fire in an abandoned coal mine underneath or in close proximity to plaintiff’s property. Said coal having been removed a number of years ago by one Karlheim, then owner of the property, and later by William Medlicott under lease from the Beech Creek Coal and Coke Company, then owner of the fee. And that pillars or stumps of coal were left standing in said mine. That fire gained access to said old coal mine or workings by reason of the burning of a public rubbish dump, used by residents of the Borough of Patton, which rubbish dump covered the entrance to the abandoned mine or workings of William Medlicott.” It was also averred that the “rubbish dump was set on fire from time to time by children playing around the same, and by other persons unknown to the defendant, and over whom defendant had no control.” Defendant' further *251 averred that they did not own the land on which the rubbish dump was burning, that they did not at any time own or operate a mine to mine and remove coal from that land, “nor did they mine or remove coal from said abandoned mine or workings” and that defendant “in no manner contributed to the cause of said fire or the advance thereof.” It is further averred by defendant that it “never at any time operated a coal mine under the property of the plaintiff, Steve Musleva, nor under property adjacent thereto.” Defendant, however, admits that it did operate a clay mine on another property but that it discontinued the operation of this mine in 1932. Defendant denied that it filled cave-ins with hot ashes, hot coke, cinders and hot bitten or waste pipe.

The case went to trial and on conclusion of plaintiff’s case, the court entered a compulsory nonsuit, which it subsequently refused to take off. This appeal followed.

The court stated in its opinion that there was not sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant company to go to the jury.

At the trial it was testified in behalf of plaintiff that the fire clay mine of defendant company ran up to within about ten feet of plaintiff’s property line and that a watercourse had been driven entirely through the Mislevy property. This was the only clay mining that was done under that property. This watercourse was nine feet wide and eight feet high. The cover over the fire clay was about twenty feet in thickness at the Mislevy home. There was some outcrop coal near the Mislevy property, and there was evidence that there was some outcrop coal near the refuse dump of defendant company, and also that there were some openings at this point from the surface into the mine. Another witness testified that there were cave-ins of the clay mine a couple hundred feet from the Mislevy home. He said that he did not know whether the ashes dumped in these cave-ins were hot or cold, but that he did see lots of smoke coming up when they dumped the refuse in these holes. *252 Another witness testified that she saw smoke coming from the cave-ins along the road leading to plaintiff’s house, and that heat was escaping from the dump. On cross-examination she was asked whether she saw a dump truck dumping broken and bitten pipe into the cave-ins, and she replied, “Yes, sir. Easily ten years before 1936.” She was asked: “At that time there was no fire, or no heat of any kind?” She answered: “I never noticed it.”

The court in its opinion said: “All the evidence in the case discloses beyond any question that this refuse dump had been in use for twenty-five or thirty years and, in our opinion, the testimony is very indefinite and unsatisfactory as to the firing of the outcrop of coal, or any of the coal in the mine workings at any time within the period of the statute of limitations. The only evidence is that there were hot ashes dumped there, but there is no satisfactory evidence as to the time of the origin of the fire, if the fire caused the generation of the gases.”

P. F. Nairn, a former deputy secretary of mines and qualified as an expert on mines and mining, testified on plaintiff’s behalf that over the sink in the kitchen of the latter’s home he found carbon dioxide and a small quantity of carbon monoxide. A drain pipe extended from this sink down into the abandoned workings of a coal mine. He said that over the sink his “flame safety lamp went out,” thus indicating to him that there was present *10% or more of the [gas] mixture.” In the cellar there was about 7% of deadly gas “coming up through cracks and crevices.” The court asked the witness: “Is this gas similar to the gas that is found in coal mines?” The witness answered: “It is the same thing.” A map offered in evidence showed abandoned mine workings under plaintiff’s home. After the witness had said that “gas is a part of the formation of every coal seam,” the eourt asked: “That gas does not depend entirely upon whether the coal is on fire or not?” The answer was: “No, carbon monoxide will generate in a mine even though there isn’t any fire.” He also testified: “Fires *253 usually occur in the waste places in the mine, and they are due to the presence of iron pyrites, commonly known as sulphur.” He said there was smoke coming up through the cracks to the surface, about 300 feet from the Mislevy home and that fire would increase the amount of gases “and as the pressure is increased, it would have to advance to other parts of the workings to accumulate or be forced through to the surface.” He was asked: “Is it your opinion that that is what happened in this case?” He answered: “Well, I know it was coming up through the cracks in the cellar, and through the drain pipe, over the sink, and I know that the outcrop was on fire.” He examined the watercourse tunnel through the Mislevy property and found “there was no gas present in the tunnel.” This tunnel passed within a few feet of the Mislevy home and was open at both ends.

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Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 554, 338 Pa. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muslera-v-patton-clay-manufacturing-co-pa-1940.