Proctor Coal Co. v. Crabtree

194 S.W. 101, 175 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 297
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 24, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 101 (Proctor Coal Co. v. Crabtree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proctor Coal Co. v. Crabtree, 194 S.W. 101, 175 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 297 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Affirming.

Crabtree was very seriously and permanently injured by falling slate while working in a mine of the coal company, and in this suit to recover damages for the injuries sustained, there was a judgment in his favor for twelve hundred dollars. The coal company asks a reversal upon the ground that the trial court should have directed a verdict in its favor, or, if not, that a new trial should have been granted because the verdict was flagrantly against the evidence.

Crabtree, a skillful miner of many years’ experience, was engaged in the work of taking down one of the “stumps” in the main entry that had been left for the purpose of supporting the roof. He understood very well that the danger of doing’ work like this was much greater • than the hazard that attends ordinary mining, but he had done this work, which was called “robbing the mine,” before, and on account of the danger attending the work received higher wages than was paid the miners generally. He had been working at the stump at which he was injured perhaps a day or so before the slate fell. He was furnished with plenty of props and had used as many of them as it was practicable to use. It also appears from his uncontradicted evidence that shortly before the slate fell he examined and inspected according to the usual [215]*215methods the roof and found it to be all right, but notwithstanding this inspection a large piece of slate fell from the roof and struck him.

His cause of action is not put upon the usual ground that the coal company did not furnish him a safe place in which to work, because he knew very well that the place was dangerous, nor is there any complaint that the mine was not in good condition, or that the appliances furnished him were not sufficient. But is rested on the ground that the plan or system adopted by the coal company for removing the stumps and pillars in its mine was a dangerous and improper plan or system, which fact was known to it, but was unknown to him, and practically all of the evidence in behalf of Crabtree was directed to showing the dangers attending the plan adopted by the company of removing stumps and pillars; and that on the part of the company to showing that the plan or system it practiced was a safe as well as the customary plan in use in well-equipped mines.

It seems that in taking coal from the rooms in a mine pillars of coal are left standing short distances apart for the purpose of supporting the roofs of the rooms; in other words, to keep the roofs of the rooms, which usually consist of slate or rock, from falling down; that in addition to these pillars that are left in the rooms supports of coal called stumps are left along the main entries. These stumps in this mine were about sixty feet long and twenty feet wide and supported the roof of the mine along the entries where they were located. It further appears that after all available coal in the mine has been exhausted, except such as remains in these pillars and stumps, miners are set to work, “robbing the mine”; that is, taking down the pillars and stumps which contain in large mines a great quantity of coal. The pillars in the rooms are first taken down and then the large stumps along the entries are removed.

In this mine at the time Crabtree was injured the pillars had been taken out of the rooms, and nothing was left to support the roof except the stumps along the entry. It also appears that after the coal in a mine has been taken out and the pillars in the rooms removed, the mountain over the rooms and entries has a tendency to “creep,” due to the tremendous pressure above, and to the fact that the supports of the roof, which also hold the mountain in place, have been taken away. And this tendency is so much increased as to become a settled fact [216]*216when the stumps are being removed unless their removal is accomplished in the proper way. As we gather it from the record, under this creeping process the normal or usual condition of the roof of the mine is changed and the substances composing it are crushed together by the awful weight of the mountain so as to cause large pieces of slate and other substances to be crowded out of their natural place in the roof and fall to the bottom of the mine.

It is the theory of Crabtree that this creeping process of the mountain crowded out of its natural place the large piece of slate in the roof over the point where-he was working, causing it to fall; and it is his further theory that the plan or system adopted by those in charge of the mine in removing the stumps assisted the mountain in this creeping process and produced the fall of slate that injured him. Upon these points, around which all the evidence in the case centers, it is shown by the evidence for Crabtree that he was directed by the foreman of the •mine where to begin work, what stumps to begin work on, and how much coal to take out of each, and that he had worked on four stumps and was working on the fifth when he got hurt. That he had taken out of the four stumps he had worked on about a third of the coal, leaving the remainder pf it standing; and further shown that the coal was not taken out of these stumps in any regular or uniform way, but that when he had taken out of each stump the quantity of coal directed by the mine foreman, he would quit that, stump and go to the next one and take out of it such quantity of coal as he was directed to take out.

Crabtree also testified that while he was an experienced miner, h© did not understand or* appreciate the danger that came from the “creep” of the mountain if the stumps were left in the manner he was directed to leave them by the foreman. It is further shown by a number of experienced witnesses that the better and safer plan in removing stumps and pillars is to begin at the head of the entry and take all of the coal in each stump, in regular order from.the head of the entry to the mouth of the mine, soi that the roof may fall in where the stumps are taken out and thus relieve the pressure on the other parts of the roof and prevent the mountain from creeping. But .in place of doing the work in this way, the plan we have indicated was adopted by the mine foreman, and a number, of expert witnesses, including witnesses introduced by [217]*217tbe coal company, testified that this plan adopted by the' mine foreman was unsafe and dangerous,

For example, William Eisden, a mine foreman as well as superintendent, and a witness for the coal company, was asked and answered these questions: “Q. Is it proper in pulling these stumps to cut off the end of that stump, to slab off the side of another stump, and so on? A. No. Q. And crop off the corner of another and take part of another? A. No, it is not. Q. Is it not a fact that if you cut off the comer of one stump and-the end off of. another stump and split another stump and have your support in a zigzag and irregular position, that is an improper method of extracting stumps ? A. I always have my men cut around a stump at the back and straight ahead down the entry. As I have said, the only method I find to be safe is to work my stumps from the back and pitch my weight behind. I never carry my weight ahead of me.”

Jim Drake, another witness for the coal company, who was an experienced miner and had acted as mine foreman as well as general superintendent and manager, said: “A creep is where you have taken out enough coal for the top to come down and not taken out enough for the top to fall.

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Related

Butts' Adm'r v. High Splint C. Co.
93 S.W.2d 356 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
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92 S.W.2d 56 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 101, 175 Ky. 213, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proctor-coal-co-v-crabtree-kyctapp-1917.