New Union Coal Company v. Sult

290 S.W. 580, 172 Ark. 753, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 580 (New Union Coal Company v. Sult) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Union Coal Company v. Sult, 290 S.W. 580, 172 Ark. 753, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 50 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Hart, J.,

(after stating the facts). Inasmuch as the main reliance for reversal of the judgment is that the evidence is not legally sufficient to support the verdict, it may be well, at the outset, to restate the settled principles of law which control cases of this sort. A mine owner owes to its employees in the mine the duty to use ordinary care to furnish a safe place to work and to keep the place in a safe condition. Central Coal & Coke Co. v. Charles; 122 Ark. 401, 183 S. W. 969.

In Bauschka v. Western Coal & Mining Co., 95 Ark. 477, 129 S. W. 1065, it was held that the owner of a mine is bound to exercise ordinary care, even if props have not been- demanded, to discover the condition of the roof of the mine and to keep same in reasonably safe condition for its servants to work in.

There is an exception to the general rule where the injuries result from changed conditions brought about by the servant in the course of his work. Mcline Timber Co. v. McClure, 166 Ark. 364, 266 S. W. 301.

It is first contended that the safe place doctrine is not applicable in the case at bar, because the plaintiff himself was creating the danger during the progress of the work. It is the contention of the defendant that it was the plaintiff’s duty, before beginning work, in order to satisfy himself that the room was a reasonably safe place in which to do his work, to inspect the roof, and that it was also his duty to inspect it, if it became dangerous in the progress of the work. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that his only duty was to make a casual observation to see if any thing was wrong with the roof, and that he was under no duty to make any test for the purpose of discovering any defects in the propping.

According to the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, the machine operators first enter the room with their machine and cut the ground under the vein of coal for about thirty inches. The vein of coal in question was about twenty-eight inches in height. The machine, as it cuts, cleans out three or four inches of dirt and coal and enters into the face of the coal about thirty or thirty-six inches. When the cutting is made, it is the duty of the operators of the machine to put sprags in the openings thus made for the purpose of keeping the vein of coal from caving in. When this is done, it is also their duty to place props from the bottom of the mine to the roof about three or four inches from the face of the vein of coal in order to keep the roof from falling in while the loader is at work. It is the duty of the machine operators to put in as many props as are necessary to make the roof safe. Then the machine is removed from the room, and the place is ready for the loader.

It is the duty of the loader to remove the muck, dirt, coal and rock taken out by the machine in making the excavation under the vein of coal. All this waste material is piled up by the loader on the wall opposite the vein of coal. It is also the duty of the loader to remove or pile up any props which have been left by the machine operators. It is not his duty, in any wise, to inspect the roof of the mine to see if it is safe for him to begin work. After a loader has loaded the coal into the car, it is his duty to inspect the roof and put in new props if necessary, in order to make the place safe for the machine operators to come into the room and make a new cutting or excavation under the face of the vein of coal.

Thus it will be seen that, according to the evidence for the plaintiff, it is the duty of each set of employees to put in props and leave the place safe for the servants who succeed them in the work. In short, it is the duty of the machine operators to prop the roof for the loaders and it is the duty of the loaders to see that the roof is made safe for the machine operators when they come in again.

When the plaintiff attempted to remove the sprags under the vein of coal, the roof fell in, and the plaintiff was seriously injured by a large rock falling on him. According to the evidence adduced by the plaintiff, there was an old break in this rock which might have caused it to fall, and it was also inferable that two of the props had not been properly put in and that this caused the roof to cave in when the plaintiff pulled out the sprags; or the falling of the rock might have resulted from both these causes.

When it is kept in mind that the plaintiff was under no duty to examine or inspect or prop the room until after he had finished loading the coal, it is difficult to see upon what ground the defendant did not owe him the duty of keeping the room in a reasonably safe condition. Mining, under the most favorable conditions, is a hazardous business ; and, under the evidence for the plaintiff, after the excavation had been made, it was the duty of the machine operators to prop the roof in order to make it safe for the work of loading which was to be done by the plaintiff. All that was required to make the room safe for the loaders was to properly prop it. With this the plaintiff had nothing to do. It was the master’s duty to exercise ordinary care to do this, or to see that it was done 'by the machine operators who were engaged for that purpose. If the machine operators failed to do their duty in propping the roof, it was the negligence of the defendant.

A brother of the plaintiff testified that he went to the place where his brother had been injured, and that two of the props had fallen down. From the appearance of the ground it looked like the props had been set on top of the cuttings and that the props had slid out in that dirt. It will be remembered that the undisputed proof shows that it was the duty of the machine operators to clear away the machine cuttings and to set the props on solid rock, or on a cap placed on solid ground. It is necessary to wedge in the props tightly in order for them to hold up the roof of the mine when the sprags are pulled out and allow the vein of coal to drop down. Again, Burt Crumpton testified that he made an examination of the place where the plaintiff had been injured, and could tell where the props had been set, from the appearance of the ground. He could tell that the props were placed upon dirt, and had slid out. He could see where the props had been set in the dirt; that is, the caps had first been placed on the dirt and the props had been set on the caps. He could see in the loose dirt where the props had been set and where they had slid away.

Other witnesses for the plaintiff testified that the rock which fell upon him extended from the face of the vein of coal over towards the opposite wall, which was called the “gob” wall. The rock was about seven inches thick in one place and extended out to a feather edge on the other side. It was' about five feet long, and had an old crack on the side of it which extended to the gob wall. This testimony, if believed by the .jury, tended to show that, on account of the old break or on account of the defective way in which the props were set upon loose dirt, or from both, conditions, the roof caved in when the plaintiff pulled out the sprags in the course of his work.

The defective condition caused by the results above stated was the direct and proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 580, 172 Ark. 753, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-union-coal-company-v-sult-ark-1927.