Royal Collieries Company v. Wells

276 S.W. 515, 210 Ky. 600, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 736
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 16, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 515 (Royal Collieries Company v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal Collieries Company v. Wells, 276 S.W. 515, 210 Ky. 600, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 736 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of ti-ie Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Reversing.

The appellant, Royal Collieries Company, was defendant below, and shall hereafter in this opinion he referred to as the defendant. It seeks to reverse a judg *602 ment for $2,000.00 recovered against it by the appellee, who was plaintiff below, and shall hereafter be referred to as the plaintiff.

The plaintiff was a miner of six years’ experience. He had worked for the defendant asa miner for about a year, and for the last few weeks of this time had been working in the room wherein he claims to have sustained injuries, for which he sued and made the recovery above noted. After the plaintiff had worked about two hours on the morning of September 17, 1924, he quit work, and brought his tools out of his room. Three workmen who saw him at the mouth of his room and talked with him, testified that when he was asked what was the matter, he said that he had a long way to walk; that he had suffered from rheumatism; that it was coming back on him, and he was going to quit and rest up a while. The plaintiff introduced as witnesses two of these men, and this conversation was brought out on their cross-examination. The next morning he called Dr. Castle, and when the doctor saw him he found he was suffering from inflammatory rheumatism, for which he treated him. Shortly after that he made a claim against a casualty company which was connected with the mine in some way, for benefit which he claims was due him for inflammatory rheumatism, and on December 14 he was paid by the casualty company $17.15, on December 21, $26.28, and $9.14 on February 3, on account of inflammatory rheumatism.

On March 20, 1915, plaintiff filed a suit against defendants, containing these allegations:

“This defendant carelessly and negligently permitted bad, impure and poisonous air to accumulate in the working place of said mine and where this plaintiff was required to and did work, and without knowledge of this plaintiff, and which air poisoned his body greatly, impaired and injured and run down health and body until he became wholly disabled. . . .
“At the point where said air was found and existed in said mine the entry or room where plaintiff was required to and did work as a coal loader was driven about two hundred feet beyond the air course or any breakthrough for the circulation of air.”

This was the only negligence of which he complained, though he did attempt in his own testimony to show that a breakthrough had been obstructed which prevented the *603 free circulation of air into Ms room. Defendant in its answer denied all the affirmative allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, and plead affirmatively contributory negligence, assumed risk and that the only disease with which the plaintiff was afflicted was inflammatory rheumatism, for which the defendant was in no wise responsible. This answer was controverted by reply. There have been two trials of this case. On the first trial, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant, but the court set aside the verdict and awarded plaintiff a new trial, which took place on July 21, 1920, and resulted in the verdict and judgment appealed from.

In defendant’s motion and grounds for a new trial, it relied and now urges as grounds for reversal of the judgment of the lower court:

First. The refusal of the lower court to substitute the judgment rendered on the first trial of the case for the judgment appealed from. Second. Incompetent testimony introduced by plaintiff on the second trial. Third: Refusal of the trial court to admit competent testimony offered by defendant. Fourth. The verdict is excessive, appearing to have been rendered under the influence of passion and prejudice. Fifth. .The verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence and is contrary to the law and the evidence. Sixth. Errors committed in instructing the jury. Seventh. Refusal of the trial court to sustain defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction made at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and renewed at the close of all the testimony.

We will discuss these propositions in the order in which they were stated.

First. We cannot review the first error complained of as the errors occurring on the first trial have not been set out and preserved in any bill of exceptions of that trial, and in the absence of such a bill the presumption in favor of the correctness of the court’s action in awarding a new trial must prevail. Life & Casualty Co. of Tenn. v. Hendon, 209 Ky. 771, 273 S. W. 469. There is in the record a bill of .evidence heard on that trial, certified by the official stenographer, but it is not signed or approved by the judge as required by section 4644 of the statutes, and while it does contain a set of instructions, which the stenographer certifies were the instructions given, there was nothing to show that other instructions were not offered and refused. Neither was any order entered making all instructions offered, given or refused *604 a part of the record, and directing them to be copied into the transcript of the evidence by the stenographer. For aught we know, the plaintiff may have offered instructions whidh were not given by the court and the court may have believed error was committed in not. giving such instructions, and on account of that error, awarded a new trial to the plaintiff. ’Defendant contends that this bill of evidence heard on the former trial was; by agreement, filed as a bill of exceptions and relies on this order entered as of date July 21,1920:

“Came the defendant and produced and filed transcript of evidence and carbon copy thereof, on the former trial of this case and by agreement either of the parties hereto may read (on the present trial) all or any part of the testimony of any of the witnesses introduced on the former trial to have the same effect as depositions.”

This order was insufficient for that purpose, and plaintiff’s motion to strike this bill of evidence from the record is sustained.

Second. The evidence of the witness Vanhoose, complained of by defendant in its second ground for new trial, was, after it was admitted, stricken from the record .by the court, and the jury admonished to disregard it, which corrected that error.

Third. One of the defendant’s most important defenses was that the only disease with which the plaintiff was afflicted at the time he complains of was that of inflammatory rheumatism, which was in no wise caused by any act of negligence on the part of defendant. We have already said that after he quit work, he made a claim against the Consolidated Casualty Company for that disease, and had collected on his claim. The application which he made to this casualty company was claimed by defendant to have been filled 'out by plaintiff in his own handwriting, signed by him and sworn to before a notary public. This original application was produced on the first trial of the case, but between the time of the first and second trials this application was accidentally destroyed by fire. The plaintiff took the position that the words “inflammatory rheumatism” which appeared in that application, were not. in there when he signed it. On the second trial the defendant sought to prove by Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 515, 210 Ky. 600, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-collieries-company-v-wells-kyctapphigh-1925.