Penwell Coal Mining Co. v. Diefenthaler

48 Ill. App. 616, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 550
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 6, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Ill. App. 616 (Penwell Coal Mining Co. v. Diefenthaler) 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
Penwell Coal Mining Co. v. Diefenthaler, 48 Ill. App. 616, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 550 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court, the

Hon. George W. Pleasants, Judge.

Eobert H. Kuhn was employed by appellant as a blacksmith and to do general work about its mine at Pana. On the 19th of July, 1890, while assisting the superintendent to prop the pocket chute, then containing several tons of coal, it fell upon and killed him. He left a widow and three young children for whose use this action was brought, which resulted in a verdict for §3,500 damages, and judgment thereon.

The main chute was of the usual kind, about ten feet wide and thirty in length, twenty-two above ground at the upper end and slanting at an angle of thirty degrees. Its bottom was tight from the tipple for a distance of five feet, and the rest of the way of iron rods, two inches apart, to make a screen through which, the slack dropped into the pocket. This was of the same width, about three feet deep at the lower end, lessening to nothing at the upper end of the screen. Its capacity was six to eight tons, and when full up to the screen bars this slack made a solid floor for the main chute, over which the coal, as dumped into it, slack and all, would pass down it into cars on the switch track below. Coal so delivered was called the *'£ mine run,” and much of the product of this mine was so delivered. The pocket was, therefore, full for some time almost every day.

It was fastened to the upper chute by six or eight iron rods. The two opposite at the upper end went through the beams or large plates of the main chute and the stringers of the pocket, bolting them close together. The other opposite pairs, which were longer because of the increasing depth of the pocket, also went through these beams, but passed down the outsides of the stringers, then under them at a right angle, and then up them on the insides, three inches, at another right angle, making rectangular hooks in which the stringers rested. Studding and boards nailed to both also helped to support it.

It was made and put up by the company’s carpenter and blacksmiths, about the first of May, 1890, to take the place of one in previous use which the president thought was not close enough to the main chute. John Edgar, the carpenter, had an experience of twenty years in his trade, and had worked for Mr. Penwell, the president, for a year, but this was the first he did about the mine. Josiali Keed, the principal blacksmith, had worked at his trade for eighteen years, eight of them for coal mining companies, of which the last three were for appellant. Iluhn, his assistant, had had less experience, and had worked for Keed for over three years, and been his assistant at the mine of the Pana Goal Company; was thirty-eight years of age, running a separate fire and considered a competent blacksmith.

The only specific directions given, were to make it closer to the main chute, without a door, and of straight timber, and they were expressly charged to use the best material, do the work as well as they could, and make it strong and safe, to bear all the strain that would be put upon it.

The two survivors claim that they did so, as far as they know. Edgar testified that the lumber used was of the best he could find in the yard, being all select bastard pine, which is very strong. The stringers were six by six inches, into which the cross pieces, four by six, were mortised two by six, and the floor was of two-inch boards with sheet iron over it. Keed and Kuhn did the iron work together; the one about as much as the other. The rods used were seven-eighths inch round, being a size larger than they thought necessary. They both knew, as did Edgar, all about the chute, how it was constructed and supported, and what ivas to be required of it. Keed and Edgar conferred and agreed upon the hooks, to avoid the weakening of the stringers by boring. Reed understood that bending them, as they did, would weaken the iron to some extent, but his judgment, formed mainly from experience, was that, bent as they were, they would bear many times the weight to which they were to be subjected. lie and Kuhn talked about this while making them.

When finished they all pronounced it an excellent job. Mr. Henley, the superintendent, though not a mechanic, so considered it. The employes about the mine were constantly passing under it and nobody appears to have had a thought of danger from it. Mr. Rutledge, the State Mine Inspector for that district, specially qualified by large knowledge, both theoretical and practical, to judge of the matter, testified from a general observation of it, when his attention was called to it by the superintendent, that it appeared to be all right, and that the method of supporting by hooks, as here, was used “in places, but not generally.” He noticed these rods sufficiently to be satisfied that they were “ reasonably safe.” The pocket was filled every day or nearly every day, but showed no sign of weakness until a week or two before the accident, when it appeared that the second cross piece from the lower end was cracked and the third slightly “ swagged ” or bent. These were then strengthened by putting under and bolting to each, along its whole length, a bar of iron three inches wide and three quarters of an inch thick. Reed and Kuhn did this work also, and both were satisfied that it made them “ a great deal stronger ” than they were originally and that they would stand.

On the morning of the accident, the superintendent observing that the pocket was about two-thirds full, and knowing it was to be filled and to remain full for a lqnger time than usual, determined to put a prop under it. He testified very positively that he did not know or fear it was dangerous; that he saw no indication of its weakness, but because of the crack above mentioned, and the intention to keep it full so long, he did so “ bo avoid any possibility of danger.” As he was going for the prop he saw Kuhn standing in his shop door and beckoned to him to come along. A few moments later they were seen together under the chute, the superintendent pointing up. Then they proceeded to place the prop, but finding it too short, Kuhn got down on his knees to put something under it. The superintendent at that moment heard a crack as of breaking wood and ran, calling on Kuhn to do likewise. The fall followed on the instant. Henley barely escaped, but Kuhn was caught and crushed. Some of the cross-pieces were found to be broken, some of the hooks straightened out and others broken off. Samuel Collins, a witness for the plaintiff, was sitting on a car by the chute and saw the fall; other witnesses whose opportunity to know ivas, perhaps, not so good, leave it uncertain which part first gave way, but he thought it was the hooks. He had stopped his car within twenty-five or thirty feet from the men, to see them place the prop. They were both under the chute trying to prop it at about the middle. A box or car load of coal was dumped into the main chute while they were so employed, and almost immediately thereafter he saw the middle hook on the north side begin to spread and the fall followed instantly. He thought the timbers were broken, not by the Aveight upon them but by the fall on uneven ground.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Ill. App. 616, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penwell-coal-mining-co-v-diefenthaler-illappct-1893.