Rowden v. Daniell

132 S.W. 23, 151 Mo. App. 15, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 747
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 23 (Rowden v. Daniell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowden v. Daniell, 132 S.W. 23, 151 Mo. App. 15, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 747 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

On the 12th day of February, 1910, this cause was tried in the circuit court of. Greene county, before Honorable George Pepperdine, Special Judge, and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, from which the defendants appealed.

The petition stated that, on the 15th day of January, 1906, defendants were engaged in the business of mining in Greene county; that while so engaged, de[21]*21fendants had sunk a shaft to about the depth of one hundred feet, and that on said day said defendants were operating said shaft and digging near the bottom of same in the search for mineral; that the defendants were operating under the name of Wolverine Zinc Company, purporting to be a corporation doing business in the State of Missouri, but that no such corporation was authorized to do business in this state, and that the name so used by defendants was assumed for the purpose of avoiding personal liability, and that in truth and in fact the defendants as individuals were conducting the mining business; that on said day the plaintiff was working in said shaft in the employ of the defendants; that the defendants had sunk said shaft in such a careless and negligent manner “that the walls of the same, consisting of loose earth and boards, were left unguarded and unsupported, and in a condition which rendered them unsafe, dangerous and liable to fall, and that defendants carelessly and negligently allowed the walls of said shaft to remain so unguarded and unsupported, and took no care whatever to provide against and secure plaintiff from the dangerous and unsafe condition of said mine.”

The answer was a general denial, and in addition thereto, contained special defenses of assumed risk and contributory negligence.

The Wolverine Zinc Company was a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Michigan, and the persons who organized the same were residents of that state. In fact the record shows an admission that the corporation was legally organized under the laws of the state of Michigan, and there was no evidence upon which to submit the question of fraud in the organization of the corporation.

The plaintiff’s testimony shows that he had been working for about six or eight weeks in the shaft wherein he was afterwards injured. The shaft was something over one hundred feet deep and the work [22]*22of sinking the shaft was completed, and at the time of the accident, a prospect drift had been started in a westerly direction from the northwest corner of the shaft. In sinking the shaft the first twelve or fourteen feet was dirt and gravel, and from that point for about sixty feet, solid rock was encountered. Prom the bottom of the lime rock formation, and for a distance of about eighteen feet, the shaft was sunk through soft grained rock. The testimony shows that it was the custom in proper mining to put in “cribbing” in the shaft wherein the walls are dirt or soft grained rode that is likely to crumble. “Cribbing” is a pen made by putting timbers around the walls of the shaft, and when properly placed holds the walls of the shaft in place. The last ten or twelve feet of the shaft were sunk through a boulder formation composed of boulders and clay. When the shaft was sunk, it was supposed that ore would be found at the bottom of the soft grained rock above mentioned, but instead thereof, the boulder formation was encountered with but little ore. It therefore became the intention of the parties to sink the shaft through the boulder formation, and then drift, in an effort to locate the deposit of ore. The east side of the shaft was not in the boulder formation, but seemed to be a solid rock which indicated to the miners that the ore deposit would be found in the opposite direction.

After the shaft was finished and drifting had been commenced, but before the drift had been opened any distance from the shaft, a boulder fell from the northeast corner of the shaft and injured the plaintiff. The testimony further shows that the plaintiff and the. men working with him, in so far as the character of the work performed was concerned, were fellow-servants, and that no special part of the work was left to be performed by any one of the men, but they worked along together in the common work of sinking the shaft and opening the drift. It was the duty and the custom of [23]*23the men to nse powder for the purpose of loosening the dirt and rock from its natural position, so that it could be shoveled into tubs and hoisted to the surface, and after the shots were fired, to examine the walls of the shaft with their picks and hammers, for the purpose of removing all material that was loose or liable to fall.

About ten or twelve feet from the bottom, a boulder was left in the northeast corner of the shaft, and according to the plaintiff’s testimony, in the north wall, and defendants’ testimony, in the east wall. This boulder extended a few inches into the shaft and was examined by the men, including the plaintiff, and they were of the opinion that it was solid, and there was no danger of it becoming loose and falling to the bottom of the shaft. In sinking, the men were able to excavate about one and one-half feet to two feet per day, and they all testified that from the time they first unearthed this boulder until they got so far below it they could not reach it, they sounded it from time to time for the purpose of ascertaining whether it was solid or likely to become loose. The testimony also shows that the miners determine whether a boulder is solid or loose by the sound made by striking it with a hammer or pick. If the boulder is loose and it is struck with a hammer, the sound is like that of a drum or a dead sound. The boulder gave no evidence that it was not solid in the wall, and it was not the duty of the men to remove it unless they were of the opinion that it was loose.

The plaintiff undertook to show that the defendants were guilty of negligence in not sending down timbers to timber^ the sides of the shaft, so as to hold the dirt in the walls thereof in proper place. We have carefully read the evidence, and from it this charge of the plaintiff is not sustained. It is true one of the men asked one of the defendants to prepare some timbers, and that the same were not prepared previous [24]*24to the accident. But the testimony shows the real purpose in preparing the timbers was to use them in the drift then being opened from the northwest corner of the shaft. In driving drifts in the character of ground encountered by defendants, the testimony shows it was customary and proper to put in timbers for the purpose of holding the roof of the drift, but all the evidence shows that the drift had not been opened a sufficient distance to require the timbers, and that the request of one of the men to furnish timbers was only intended that they should be secured and ready to put in the shaft when the drift had been sufficiently opened therefor. There Is not a word of testimony that the failure to furnish the timbers or to send them into the ground, had anything to do with the boulder falling from the northeast corner of the shaft. And if the defendants are liable in this case, it must be upon the ground that they were careless and negligent in permitting the boulder to remain where it did in the shaft after it became loose.

The plaintiff did not sue the corporation, but brought his action against the defendant, Langsford, who was the superintendent of the defendant company, but was not an officer or stockholder therein, and also i against the defendant, Daniell, who was an officer and director of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 23, 151 Mo. App. 15, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowden-v-daniell-moctapp-1910.