O'Donnell v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.

262 N.W. 728, 273 Mich. 27, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 559
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1935
DocketDocket No. 16, Calendar No. 37,341.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 262 N.W. 728 (O'Donnell v. Oliver Iron Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Donnell v. Oliver Iron Mining Co., 262 N.W. 728, 273 Mich. 27, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 559 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Btttzel, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of $12,500 rendered on the third trial of this case. At the first trial, the jury rendered a verdict for plaintiff for the sum of $17,500. The judge ordered a new trial and plaintiff was awarded a judgment of $8,500. This judgment was reversed on appeal. See O’Donnell v. Oliver Iron Mining Co., 262 Mich. 470. It is well nigh impossible to encompass within the proper limits of an opinion all the facts and questions at issue in the instant case and set forth in two lengthy volumes of the record. We shall only give a brief résumé of the issues involved and refer to our former opinion in 262 Mich. 470, for such further facts as are not set forth herein. Plaintiff, the owner of a large residence on Ayer street in the city of Ironwood, Michigan, claims that there was a subsidence of the ground upon which his house stood, that this was caused by the mining operations of defendant and that as a result, large cracks have appeared in the house, particularly in the foundation walls where some stone has been displaced. He further claims that the house is in a damaged condition and that the subsidence will continue and completely ruin the house, and make the land worthless; that the property is a total loss except for such salvage as may be obtained through removal of the house and the two small garages on the lots. Plaintiff built the house in 1910 and 1911 on lots which he bought subject to the mineral rights, which his grantor retained. A part of the Gfogebic Range, a large body of iron ore, is located under the city of Ironwood, Michigan. Three of defendant’s mines are the Aurora, situated *31 at a considerable distance east of plaintiff’s home; the Bast Norrie, somewhat nearer and south of the Aurora; and the North Norrie, south of plaintiff’s property. There is some dispute as to how near the operations in the North Norrie mine came to plaintiff’s property. It was somewhere between 1,400 and 2,400 feet south of the property.

In the early days of defendant’s mining operations, the ore bodies were mined close to the surface. Immediately after the removal of the ore the ground settled directly over the mining operations. Shafts were also sunk directly into the ore formation and the removal of the ore caused the shafts to cave. Some 30 years ago, however, it became the practice of the defendant to sink the shafts in a vertical direction south of the foot walls in the quartz slate and more latterly in the granite. From these shafts cross cuts were driven northerly in the formation and various rises were used to connect the upper with the lower levels. Drifts on the sub-levels were timbered, but no more timber was used than was necessary to support the necessary openings, it being claimed that upon removal of the ore the overhanging rock, constituting the cave or the capping, settled and rock fell down so as to completely fill the cavity caused by the removal of the ore.

Defendant makes no argument as to whether negligence need be proved (see Bator v. Ford Motor Co., 269 Mich. 648), but apparently admits that if its operations caused the subsidence it would be liable. The only questions brought up on appeal are questions of causation, evidence and damages.

1. Causation. It was conceded by defendant that there had been much subsidence in certain sections of the city of Ironwood due to the earlier methods of mining and that it made purchases of many parcels *32 of property that were thus damaged. It claims, however, that the subsidence never reached plaintiff’s property and that the damage to his house was due entirely to the fact that the house was built over swampy ground and that poor mortar was used which caused a disintegration of the bond in the foundation stones so that the frost entered. The first crack was noticed several years before the beginning of the first trial, but plaintiff did nothing to repair it. Defendant claims that the failure of plaintiff to immediately repair the slight cracks that first appeared enabled frost and water to get into the crevices which, subjected to the bitter winter weather of the northern peninsula of Michigan, caused progressive damage from year to year.

Defendant also claimed that there was a large pillar of ore about 400 feet in width in the North Norrie mine, south of plaintiff’s home and that a new shaft was sunk for the purpose of extracting this ore; that when in its mining operations the 12th level was reached, it became apparent that the ground began to subside towards the north, defendant ceased operating at that point in October, 1927, and that owing to this subsidence which the defendant insists never reached plaintiff’s property, almost two million tons of ore were left intact and no mining has been carried on at that point since October, 1927.

From September, 1927, on, defendant’s mining engineers began taking levels of all' the surfaces to the northeast and northwest of the North Norrie mine and defendant claims that the figures prove that there was no subsidence as far north as plaintiff’s property. In May, 1931, they obtained an elevation of 1,539.44 at point 22 which was in front of plaintiff’s property and 1,545.58 at point 25 which is in front of the Baker property, a short distance west of plaintiff’s property. In May, 1933, plaintiff’s expert *33 witness, John M. Patek, took levels at the same two points, obtaining an elevation of 1,539.41 on point 22, and 1,545.55 on point 25. On the basis of the comparison of these elevations, Patek claimed that there was settlement of %ths of an inch between 1931 and 1933 in front of plaintiff’s property.

Defendant claims that such is not the fact. . Defendant’s engineers found an elevation of 1,539.43 on point 22 in May, 1933, or a decrease of only % of an inch, and 1,545.58 on point 25, which would show no decrease at all. Defendant further claims that the elevations as found by Patek are incorrect inasmuch as in taking his 1933 elevations he started from the elevation secured by defendant on point 17 in 1931 instead of the elevation at that point in 1933; that the elevation at point 17 in 1933 was % of an inch higher, and therefore if Patek had started with that elevation, as he should have done, the levels obtained by him on the other points would accordingly have shown a decrease of only 2/8ths rather than %ths of an inch.

Defendant further claims that even if the readings showed a difference of %ths of an inch, that does not show a subsidence of the ground in front of plaintiff’s property, but is merely a natural variation in the reading resulting from different weather conditions at the time the elevations were taken, or perhaps from the fact that the rod was not held at the same angle. Defendant points out that although the elevations taken by it at the points on Ayer street in front of plaintiff’s property, from September, 1928, to May, 1933, show slight variations up and down of anywhere from %th to %ths of an inch, there is no steady decline, and the average elevation obtained is the same throughout, the reading obtained in 1933 being the same as or higher than the original elevation found in 1928, that elevations taken in the gran *34 ite area southeast of “D” shaft, where it is undisputed.

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Bluebook (online)
262 N.W. 728, 273 Mich. 27, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odonnell-v-oliver-iron-mining-co-mich-1935.