Peebles v. O'Gara Coal Co.

143 Ill. App. 370, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 81
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 12, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 143 Ill. App. 370 (Peebles v. O'Gara Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peebles v. O'Gara Coal Co., 143 Ill. App. 370, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 81 (Ill. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of case brought by appellee to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by him while at work as a miner in appellant’s mine, in consequence of the wilful violation of certain provisions of the Mining Act, by appellant.

The declaration originally consisted of four counts, but the third count was withdrawn by appellee at the close of his case and the jury found defendant guilty only on the first and fourth counts.

The first count charged that appellant wilfully and knowingly failed and neglected to provide appellee with a sufficient supply of props, caps and timbers, after demand by him therefor, as nearly as possible in suitable lengths and dimensions for securing his working place, whereby a large quantity of rock and slate fell from the roof of said working place and injured him.

The fourth count charged that on the morning of the day appellee was injured, his working place was in a dangerous condition before he entered the mine to work; that appellant wilfully permitted, suffered and allowed him to enter his working place to work therein, without the directions or without being under the directions of the mine manager, before said dangerous place was made safe.

There was a plea of not guilty and a verdict in favor of appellee for $1,500. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were interposed by appellant, overruled by the court and judgment entered for the amount of the verdict.

Appellee, as the proofs in the case show, was a coal miner forty-nine years of age, earning three dollars a day, and had been employed in appellant’s mine from September, 1905, to the time of his injury, which occurred on August 13, 1906. The coal was mined by being cut loose with a machine and then shot down with three shots, one in the center called the break-down shot and one on each side. The evening before the injury, appellee fired three shots, which had been put in by himself and his son but could not see the condition of the roof on account of the smoke. When he went to work the next morning, he found the shots had knocked the'coal down on the right and left sides, but that the center shot was standing against the roof, and a piece of loose hanging draw slate extended about three .and a half feet out into the room. He took a pick and'tried to pull, the loose slate down, but could not move it. After loading the coal that had been knocked down, appellee about two o’clock in the afternoon attempted to mine or take coal from the center shot, standing at the right side of it. He only struck one' blow with his pick when the center shot dropped down and the slate from the roof swung around and fell on him. His left leg was broken and he was so bruised and im jured that 'he had been able to work only about two weeks from that time to the time of the trial some thirteen months later. Three or four days before the injury, appellee ordered cap pieces and six and a half foot props from the mine manager, and a day or two later ordered the same from the driver, but none were furnished him, though a- load of seven-foot props was brought, which he testified he tried to set up, but could not use on account of their length. Six and a half foot props and cap pieces were necessary to prop up the slate until the coal was mined away from it.- On the morning of the day of the injury he ordered cap pieces from the acting manager and was informed by him there were “none' on the job.’’ Afterwards on- the same day he ordered cap pieces' from the driver,- but they were- not furnished him. There were no danger marks of any kind placed in appellee’s room before or after he went to work. The mine examiner testified that he visited appellee’s room that morning; that he saw the draw-slate was loose as it always is. óver a standing shot; that he did not get within five or six feet •of the face as there was loose coal that prevented him from getting closer; that he examined the roof and sounded it and it was all right; that back from where the coal was, some two or three feet, there was some loose slate; that he did not place any danger mark in the room but marked with chalk on the roof, the date of the examination.

No question is made by appellant in its brief or argument as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, but it claims the judgment should be reversed solely on account of errors of the court in its rulings in ■regard to the evidence and instructions. Upon the trial appellee was asked by his counsel: “Q. Now you ■may tell the jury whether or not if you had any cap pieces and props of proper length if you could have propped that piece of rock?” To which he answered, “Yes, sir; that was what I wanted with cap pieces.” He was then asked, "Q. You may tell the jury whether or not in your opinion as a miner if there had been a prop and cap pieces under the slate in question, it would have fallen?” And answered, “No, sir.”

Objections were made to these questions and overruled by the court. Appellant here insists that these questions were leading and suggestive and that they called for his opinion upon a matter upon which he had not qualified. While it is true these questions could be answered by “yes” or “no,” yet they do not appear to us to be leading or necessarily suggestive. The testimony of appellee showed that he was a miner of experience having been engaged in mining coal ten •years, presumably competent to testify upon the subject concerning which he was asked, and appellant did not at the time object that appellee had not qualified to testify upon the subject. The court therefore properly overruled the objections. It also appears that there were a number of other witnesses, all practical miners, who testified substantially to the same thing. Appellee was also asked whether or not any mine manager on the morning in question gave him instructions or directions in regard to his work in that room, and replied, “Well, sir, he never told me to stay out or anything about it; he never told me the place was in bad condition.” Counsel for appellant objected to the last part of the answer and moved to strike it out, but the objection and. motion were overruled. This answer was not strictly responsive to the question and the latter part of it might well have been excluded by the court on motion, but the answer as a whole practically amounted to a statement that appellee was not given any instructions or directions by the mine manager, which was a proper.subject of inquiry and the form of the answer was not sufficiently erroneous to be material.

It is also objected that Valley Peebles, the son of appellee, was permitted to be asked whether or not the shot of coal or any part of it fell upon his father, which question he answered, “No, sir, there wasn’t any fell on him; there wasn’t nothing but the slate.” One of the questions being investigated was whether or not appellee was injured by a fall of coal, or of slate. This question bore upon that subject directly and seems to us to have been entirely proper. Besides there were other witnesses testified to the same fact and it was practically uncontradicted that appellee’s injuries were caused by a fall of slate. Several witnesses were asked whether there were any other props scattered around over the room. These questions were objected to as leading and appellant now insists that the court erred in permitting them to be answered.

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Bluebook (online)
143 Ill. App. 370, 1908 Ill. App. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peebles-v-ogara-coal-co-illappct-1908.