Perry v. Tonopah Mining Co. of Nevada

13 F.2d 865, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 900
CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedOctober 8, 1915
DocketNo. 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 13 F.2d 865 (Perry v. Tonopah Mining Co. of Nevada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Tonopah Mining Co. of Nevada, 13 F.2d 865, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 900 (D. Nev. 1915).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, District Judge.

The allegations of the complaint are in substance as follows:

Defendant company is the owner of the Silver Top and Valley View mining claims, situated in Tonopah, near the well-traveled and principal streets, and adjacent to a thickly-settled part of the town. Near a path leading across these claims from Florence avenue to defendant’s mines there were at the time of the accident a number of open shafts and excavations; among them, and not far from the Silver Top working shaft, was an old abandoned stope, from which ore had been removed to the surface, leaving a large opening, about 140 feet deep, which defendant had wrongfully and negligently suffered “to bo and remain unieneod, and without , any safeguards whatever to guard against danger to persons, and particularly children, from falling into the same,” and without giving “any warning or notice whatever to persons, and particularly children.”

“That said mining claims named, owing to their close proximity to the thickly settled and populous residence part of said town of Tonopah, and on account of their being vacant ground, and few, if any, buildings thereon, became and were an attractive place for children to play, and that children for a long time prior to August 29,1914, and up to and including said date, habitually frequented said claims and played thereon and therein. That defendant, its officers and agents, were at all times fully cognizant of the foregoing facts, and of the use and purposes to which said claims were being put and used by the workmen and children and others, and suffered and permitted the said claims to be so used by workmen in going to and from work as aforesaid, and suffered and permitted children to play and frequent in and upon said claims aforesaid.

“That on the 29th day of August, 1914, the deceased, Charles Hale Perry, a boy as aforesaid of the age of seven years, was then and there attracted to said Silver Top and Valley View claims, by their appearance and surroundings, as a place of play," and said deceased was too young and inexperienced [866]*866to foresee the danger therefrom, and while he and a hoy companion of about the age of five years were playing near the above-described stope and excavation, and by reason of the defendant’s failure to exercise ordinary care, and by reason of the wrong and negligence of the defendant, its officers and agents, as. aforesaid, and by reason of its failure to use ordinary care to guard against danger to persons from falling into said stope or excavation, the said Charles Hale Perry, while so playing, fell into and down said stope or excavation, to a depth of about 65 feet, and was instantly killed.”

. It is also alleged that the deceased left him surviving his father, Charles E. Perry, his' mother, Jennie T. Perry, and his three sisters, Ella May Perry, Gladys Gene Perry, and Mary Susan Perry, and that the plaintiff, Charles E. Perry, is the duly qualified and acting administrator of the estate of said deceased.

Defendant by its demurrer raises a number of questions, only two of which have been argued:' First, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; - and, second, that plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue.

The danger from open cuts on premises similar to those described in the complaint is obvious. It was the likelihood of just such conditions which prompted the Legislature of this s.tate in 1866-to adopt what is now section 3233 of the Revised Laws of Nevada, and what was then entitled “An act to secure persons and animals from danger arising from mining and other excavations.” The first section of the aet declares that “any person, * * * corporation [or corporations], * * * being the owner * * * of any shaft, excavation, or hole, whether used for mining or otherwise, * * * within this state, shall, during * * * excavating, or after they may have ceased work upon or abandoned the same, erect * * * substantial * * * safeguards, and keep the same in good repair, around such * * * shafts, sufficient to securely guard against danger to persons and animals from falling into such * * * excavations.”

Every owner of property in this -state holds the same subordinate to the regulative power of the Legislature. When the Legislature, in the interest of public safely, and for the protection of life and property, required every owner of such an excavation to fence it, it imposed on him a positive, absolute duty, nonperformance of which, resulting in injury, is negligence as a matter of law, for which, in the absence of contributory negligence, a recovery may be had. This was held in a ease where the owner of a canal passing through the city of Denver had failed to protect and cover it, as required by statute. A 14-year old boy, in some unexplained way, fell into the canal, and was drowned. A judgment in favor of the plaintiff was sustained. Platte & Denver Canal & Milling Co. v. Dowell, 17 Colo. 376, 30 P. 68.

In Williams v. Great Western R. Co., L. R. 9 Exch. 157, a child was found mutilated on a footpath crossing the railway, where no gate or stile had been, erected by the company, as required by law. The question was raised as to whether there was any evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant. The court held that the failure of the defendant to comply with the statute was sufficient, and that the ease should be submitted to a jury. To the same effect see: Sluder v. St. Louis Transit Co., 189 Mo. 107, 88 S. W. 648, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 187; Wolf v. Smith, 149 Ala. 457, 42 So. 824, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 338; Richardson v. El Paso Con. G. Mg. Co., 51 Colo. 440, 118 P. 982, 986; Conway v. Monidah Trust Co., 47 Mont. 269, 132 P. 26, 27, L. R. A. 1915E, 500.

The Supreme Court of this state had held, in the ease of Anderson v. Feutsch, 31 Nev. 501, 510, 105 P. 99, 100, that “the great purpose of the aet [quoted above] was to protect persons and animals from injury resulting from falling into unprotected excavations.” The protection intended by the act was for the public generally, and the boy, Charles Perry, was one of those for whose benefit the statute was enacted and designed, and the defendant owed a duty to him to inclose the excavation in question. Richardson v. El Paso Con. G. Mg. Co., 51 Colo. 440, 118 P. 982, 985.

In Erb v. Morasch, 8 Kan. App. 61, 54 P. 323, a child of 34 months was run over and killed by defendant’s passenger train. At the time the train was running within the city limits at a rate of speed forbidden by ordinance. The child was technically a trespasser, because it was on the unfenced tract, not at any street crossing, and without license from the company. For this reason, defendant contended that it owed the child no duty except to refrain from wanton or willful injury. The court, however, held that tbp ordinance was for the protection of citizens who might be upon the railroad track outside of the highway, and, while the company was entitled to the exclusive use of its tracks at the point where the accident [867]*867occurred, it owed the infant, as well as the public generally, the duty not to run its trains at a speed which was forbidden by law.

In this ease Charles Perry is alleged to have been but 7 years old at the time of his death. This is a sufficient allegation of fact from which the court may draw the conclusion that he lacked that discretion which would make him responsible for his conduct, and that he was therefor incapable of contributory negligence, or of being a trespasser. In Shearman &

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Bluebook (online)
13 F.2d 865, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-tonopah-mining-co-of-nevada-nvd-1915.