Rock Island Coal Mining Co. v. Davis

1914 OK 445, 144 P. 600, 44 Okla. 412, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 717
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1914
Docket3759
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 1914 OK 445 (Rock Island Coal Mining Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rock Island Coal Mining Co. v. Davis, 1914 OK 445, 144 P. 600, 44 Okla. 412, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 717 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

The plaintiff in error was engaged in operating a coal mine, known as “Hartshorne No. 7,” located near -Hartshorne, in Pittsburg county, Okla., and the defendant in error charges in his petition that on February 21, 1910, he was employed at said mine as a shot firer, and while so employed, and when passing through tne south main entry of said mine, the timbers gave way and a large quantity of rock and shale from the roof thereof fell upon him, crushing his leg and back and breaking two of his ribs, and otherwise seriously injuring him, and that this accident was due entirely to the negligence and carelessness of the plaintiff in error. The answer was a general denial and the affirmative defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk. The accident occurred some 500 feet underground and between seven and eight o’clock m the evening. It was contended by the defendant that the plaintiff was not injured at the time and in the place claimed, and that the mine boss had removed the timber charged to have fallen, and had taken down slate and shale from the roof at that place the afternoon of the day the plaintiff claimed to have been injured, and that, if injured at all, the plaintiff carelessly ran into this rock pile. Upon the is *414 sues thus raised, the cause was tried to the court and a jury. A verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff, and, upon the overruling of the motion for new trial, the defendant perfected an appeal to this court.

Error is assigned in overruling the motion ror new trial, and in entering judgment for the plaintiff, and m giving a number of instructions, and in the refusal to give other- instructions requested by the defendant.

The duties of plaintiff as shot firer required that he should go down in the mine, prepare and fire the shots after the miners had quit work and had gone out of the mine. There was no witness to the accident aside from the plaintiff; he being the only person in the mine at the time it happened, except a shot firer in another part of the mine, and who did not witness the accident. The plaintiff being the only witness to the accident, and his testimony being uncontradicted, in so far as his conduct is concerned, the circumstances connected with the accident and just how it happened may be explained in the plaintiff’s own language. After stating that he had been employed as a shot firer by the defendant for something over three years, he testified in part as' follows:

“Q. What were you doing for them in February, 1910? A. I was employed as shot fireman. Q. What are the duties of a shot firer, and what does he do ? A. The duty of a shot fireman is to go in the pit after the diggers come out and shoot the shots that they have prepared. Q. What do you have to do in shooting a shot? What is the purpose of shooting shots? A. You have to examine a man’s shot, and if it is a good shot, and everything properly prepared, it is the shot fireman’s duty to put his powder in and tamp it and light the fuse and then get away. Q. On the 21st of February, did you shoot shots for the defendant company on that day? A. Yes, sir. Q. How many shots did you fire or light? A. Well, I can’t say positive. I fire some ten or eight to ten or fifteen shots. I don’t remember exactly the amount of shots, because I never kept no account of the numbers of shots I shot during the night. I just guessed them from the amount of places I had shot. Q. In what part of the mine did you work ? A. I worked on the main *415 west, on the west side of the mine. Q. The main west and the openings onto the main west, does that include the west side of the mine? A. .Yes, sir; that includes the west side of the mine and the openings off of the main west. * * * Q. What is your-judgment as to the depth of the shaft? A. My judgment is it is in the neighborhood of 500 feet. Q. Into the ground? A. Yes, sir. Q. Well, now, what passages or entries were there off of this main west in that part of the mine? A. Well, there was the first and second south, the third and fourth south, and the fifth and sixth south, and then there was the first and second north, and then entries leading off of the first and second north, and there was four entries leading off of the third and fourth south. * * * Q. I will get you to state again what direction the air passed through the fouith south main entry. A. It was going south there. Q. That is, it was going away from the main west? A. Yes, sir; it was going toward the heading of the fourth south, or -face of the irourth south. Q. In what portion of the mine did you fire shots on the night of the 21st of February, 1910? A. I fired — the first shots I fired — you mean that main west entry there was a few rooms •turned off of that and a little block of coal in there; and I fired shots in there, and I went from there onto the third south, and there was one place on the third south I believe; I am not sure whether it had shots in there that night or not. No, there was two places working there, and I am not sure whether they had shots. Q. Where did you go from there? A. Up through the heading of the third south and through the cross cut to the fourth south. Q. Where did you fire shots on the fourth south? A. The first shot I light on the fourth south, my recollection is, was in what was known as the third west entry or room. It was first turned as a room and driven up there west and was changed from a room to an entry. Q. And was called what? A. It was called the third west off the fourth south, and it had originally been room 25 or 26. Q. Did you fire a shot in there? A. I light one shot in there. Q. Where was the next room this side of that place at that time? A. My recollection is the next-room that was working was twenty of the second west. Q. That was room twenty of the second west? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, did you say that you lighted a shot in that entry, the third west off of the main foúrth south? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you do then after you lighted that fuse? A. When I light the fuse I started to run out of the third west onto the fourth south and turned down the fourth south to go to the second west, and I had just went a short distance *416 down the fourth south when .this rock fell on me. Q. Now, how high was the roof on the fourth south at that point, along about 25? A. Well, it was somewhere between four and five feet. Q. What is your height? A. five feet six and one-half inches. Q. Could you stand straight on the fourth south main entry there? A. No, sir; not at that place. Q. Well, then, when you ran out of this third west entry, in what position did you have to run? A. Why, I had to run stooped over. Q. Just describe what occurred to you there and the condition there. A. Wellj as I went down the entry, I was going in as good a gait as I could go; run stooped over. Of course, In running away from a shot, I stoop over probably more than is neces-sáry because I didn’t know but what I might get a little toó high and run my head against something, and I stoop until I know I will be clear of the roof at all low places, and I run in that position until I get to a safe place to stop, and as I went down the entry a rock fell on me and mashed me down on the bottom. Q. Wh'at point of your body did that rock strike you? A. It struck me on the back from my shoulders plumb back past my hip was where the rock was on me. ,Q. Mashed you down you say? A. Yes,'.sir. Q. What occurred then? What did you do? A. Well, I don’t know that I realized anything for a moment or two.

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 445, 144 P. 600, 44 Okla. 412, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-island-coal-mining-co-v-davis-okla-1914.