Owen v. Retsof Mining Co.

102 A.D. 130, 92 N.Y.S. 270
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 102 A.D. 130 (Owen v. Retsof Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owen v. Retsof Mining Co., 102 A.D. 130, 92 N.Y.S. 270 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Hiscock, J. :

Plaintiff’s intestate was in the employ of the defendant working in its mines. January 30, 1903, while he was being lowered into one of them, .the cable by which was suspended, the bucket in which he was riding broke and he was precipitated to his death at the bottom of the shaft.

Plaintiff’s action to recover damages from defendant for its alleged negligence in connection with her husband’s death rests for its substantial basis upon the claim that the defendant had carelessly allowed the cable to become old, rusty and weakened, and that this defective condition was the cause of the accident.

While there has been some reference upon this appeal to the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur as applicable to such a case as this, it appears to be practically conceded by the counsel for the plaintiff, as is the undoubted fact, that the case was not tried or submitted and that the judgment cannot be affirmed under such doctrine. Plaintiff has adopted a course and theory which called upon her to establish, in accordance with the legal rules ordinarily applicable, that the cable which broke had been negligently allowed to become unfit for use, and that her intestate met his death as the result thereof. When -the evidence produced in her behalf is tested by such obligation, I think it is deficient and that the judgment must be reversed.

There were two shafts leading to defendant’s mine, known as No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, the former being regularly and the latter only occasionally used. Upon the day of the accident the intestate undertook to go to the bottom of the mine by the latter. This shaft was 1,000 feet deep. There was used for raising and lowering men and other things an iron bucket attached to a steel cable. The bucket was of boiler iron, about three feet in diameter and three or four feet deep. It had a bale which was attached at its upper portion to an iron clevis. To this clevis was attached a heavy iron chain two or three feet long, which in turn was attached to the cable proper with a loop and iron clamps. . Encircling the cable was a rubber buffer two or three inches thick. Encircling the [133]*133cable and resting upon this buffer and ordinarily passing up and down the shaft with the bucket was what was known as a “ billy.” This was a construction of timbers and planks weighing from 300 to 400 pounds, moving in guides upon each side of the shaft, and designed to keep the bucket from swinging as it passed up and down. While this appliance ordinarily moved up and down with the bucket, if it in any manner became stuck or stationary in the shaft while the bucket was being lowered the cable would pass through it, allowing the bucket to descend without the billy. The cable was of steel and an inch in diameter. At the top of the shaft it passed over a sheave block and drum and was raised and lowered by an engine. A wire, extending the entire depth of the shaft, communicated with a bell or hammer in the engine room, and was used to give signals for raising and lowering and stopping the bucket. The intestate with another man entered the bucket and gave the signal for lowering the same. When the latter had reached a depth of seven hundred and fifty feet there came at the same instant a single stroke from this bell wire and a sudden “ chug ” or strain upon the engine. When the cable was raised it was found that it had parted at a point within the space covered by the billy when in position upon the bucket, and later the bucket and men were discovered in the bottom of the shaft, and the bell wire was found to have broken at a point fifty or seventy-five feet from the top of the shaft. There was of course no eye-witness of the accident.

Plaintiff’s evidence permitted the jury to find that this cable had been in use from ten to fourteen years, and that the conditions and its use in the shaft were naturally calculated to produce rust, and especially a damp condition conducive to rust where the cable was encircled by the billy. Only one witness, so far as I am able to ascertain, gave evidence intended to show directly that the cable was rusty as distinguished from the theory that it naturally should become so. He testified that there was more or less rust upon the cable for a distance of about 200 feet from the bucket, and that the end of the cable was in a rusty and impaired condition. This witness, however, testified to observations made eight or nine years before the accident, and as we interpret its rulings, the court struck out his testimony in regard to the end of the cable upon the ground that the latter had been cut off upon one or two occasions and that it [134]*134did not appear that his evidence related to the end in use at the time of the accident. A witness also testified that the cable did not have any “ spring ” in it as he had observed in others.

An expert was sworn for the purpose of showing that a cable used as long as the one in question under the conditions said to prevail would become defective and unsafe, but a< careful analysis of this evidence makes it mean that a cable under some circumstances would last for two years, under others for seven years, and under still others would be good for twenty years, and it minimizes the materiality of the evidence in regard to lack of spring in the cable.

As against this testimony, expert, general and remote in its character, there is the evidence of witnesses called by the plaintiff hex-self, and at least one of them no longer in the employ of the defendant, based upon actual observation, to the effect that the cable was kept oiled to prevent rusting, and that the broken end after the accident showed a bright, clean break, free from rust, and the wix-es in the cable not brittle or impaired. Plaintiff, pex-haps, might have met with better foi'tune in calling witnesses other than those who gave this testimony, but she elected to call them and must abide by the ordinary rules govei’ning the attitude of a party toward his own witnesses. Thex’e is nothing whatever in the appearance of their evidence which makes this rule seem harsh or unjust. One of them as stated had absolutely ceased to be connected with or interested in the defendaxxt and ^noxxe had any culpable part or - connection with the accident. In the face of the positive, direct testimony given as to the good condition of the cable, it is difficult to see how plaintiff has met her burden upon this branch of the case.

I pass to a consideration of the second and remaining point in respect of which it seems to me plaintiff labors under even more difficulties than upon the fii’st one.

Her theory is that by reason of its defective condition the cable parted, allowing the bixcket to drop as it was being lowered. Two other theories have been suggested of the manner in which the accident may have happened. One is that the billy did not start with the bucket down the shaft but became stopped in some manner upon the guides; that after the bucket had been lowered to the depth indicated the movement and swinging of the cable loosened the billy and it fell, breaking off the bucket. Still another is that [135]*135the sudden stopping of the engine when the signal came may have .snapped the cable. We shall consider only plaintiff’s and the last theory.

The learned trial justice in effect charged, and upon this appeal It must be held, that if the break was caused by the stoppage and subsequent falling of the billy no recovery could be had.

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Related

Henson v. Lehigh Valley Railroad
122 A.D. 160 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)
Owen v. Retsof Mining Co.
119 A.D. 618 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A.D. 130, 92 N.Y.S. 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-retsof-mining-co-nyappdiv-1905.