Russell Fork Coal Co. v. Hawkins

223 S.W.2d 887, 311 Ky. 449, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 31, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 887 (Russell Fork Coal Co. v. Hawkins) 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
Russell Fork Coal Co. v. Hawkins, 223 S.W.2d 887, 311 Ky. 449, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1103 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Judge Knight

Reversing.

Statement of the Case

This is a suit for damages in the sum of $25,969.50 filed hy appellees Herbie Hawkins and B. B. Hawkins, his wife, against appellant Russell Fork Coal Co. and Peter Mitchell, Inc. The latter named company was let out on peremptory instructions at the conclusion of the evidence and there is no cross appeal as to it. The negligence complained of in the petition and amended petitions is that as the result of a strip mining operation conducted by appellant at the headwaters of Ferrells Creek -on Weddington Fork a large excavation covering three to four acres and six or seven feet deep was created by removal of the overburden and mining of the coal seam thereunder; that this excavation was allowed to fill with water making a lake or pond four or five feet deep; that on the night of August 1 and the early morning of August 2, 1945, as the result of a heavy rain, this *450 water broke through the wall of dirt and rocks and ran into Weddington Fork of Ferrells Creek carrying with it logs, tree laps, stumps, dirt and debris which had been cast over the mountain at the head of Weddington by appellant, its agents, servants and employees, and resulted in a flood tide down Ferrells Creek which destroyed the dwelling house, a tenant house, store house and stock of goods and fixtures therein. They further alleged that appellant was negligent in removing the overburden and throwing it over the hillside thereby creating obstructions in Weddington Fork, a tributary of Ferrells Creek, which helped cause the damage complained of.

Answer filed by appellant admitted it was engaged in the strip mining operation referred to in the petition, denied it was guilty of any negligence in its operation and pleaded that damage, if any, caused to appellee was the result of an unusual storm and rain of cloudburst proportions and not by any negligence of appellant.

A reply made up the issues and on the trial the jury brought in a verdict in favor of appellees in the sum of $10,000. Appellant prosecutes this appeal from the judgment based on that verdict.

Reversal is sought on three grounds: (1) That appellant was entitled to a directed verdict; (2) instructions were erroneous; (3) the court erred in refusing to allow the introduction of competent testimony offered by appellant.

The Setting of the Case

Appellees owned and lived in property at the mouth of Ferrells Creek where it empties into Russell Fork of Big Sandy River. Ferrells Creek is formed by the converging of two forks, Road Fork and Weddington Fork, and flows in an almost westerly direction to’ its confluence with Russell Fork. Many smaller streams or forks flow into it from the north' and south, the largest being Middle Fork, Honey Fork and Abner Fork from the north, and Blue Pond, Slip Rock, Spruce Pine and Brushy Fork from the south. It runs through a narrow valley with precipitous mountains on each side. • From its mouth to its source at the confluence of the two forks referred to there is a rise of about 360 feet (2.73%) *451 thus providing a natural setting for the flash floods that occasionally hit the mountain section. There is a state highway up Russell Fork on the Ferrells Creek side and this highway crosses over Ferrells Creek near its mouth on a fill about 18 feet high, and the creek is carried under the fill by a culvert which has three 10 x 10 flues through which all the water from the creek must go to reach Russell Fork. With its various tributaries Ferrells drains a watershed area of 4051 acres. About 346 acres of this watershed are on Weddington Fork, and appellant’s strip mining activity is confined to about 90 acres on top of the mountain at the head of Wedding-ton Fork. The actual operation involved in this suit covers less than 10 acres and is about 3% miles from the mouth of the creek at the point where the property of appellees is located. .

Strip mining is not a common practice in the mountain section of this state but in this instance the seam of coal owned or leased by appellant, known as the Upper Elkhorn seam, lies high on the mountain and the stripping process was adopted by appellant as the most feasible method of recovering the coal. The overburden of earth, rocks, roots and stumps of timber which had been cut off was removed by blasting, bulldozers and steam shovels and cast over the side of the mountain onto land owned by or under lease to appellant. The overburden was not stripped off the entire top of the mountain but in the particular operation here involved there was a stripping of the overburden about 60 feet wide around the southern or right hand side of the' mountain from a point known as Weddington Gap on the westerly side of the mountain to a point on the eastern side of the mountain. The overburden from this strip was cast over on the Beaver Creek or southern side of the mountain and this strip is not directly involved in this case. Another strip of approximately the same width and length went around the northern or left side of the mountain and the overburden from this strip was cast over the Weddington Fork or northern side of the mountain, and it is this ■ part of the overcasting that is here * complained of. The two strips converged at a point near the eastern side of the mountain and from this point of convergence the two strips widened out and from here to the eastern side of the mountain the stripping was complete, that is the entire top of *452 the mountain was removed, thus stripping all overburden on this eastern knob down to the coal seam. It is on this completely stripped knob on the eastern side of the mountain that tie so-called lake or pond or basin was formed when the coal was lifted or excavated after the stripping was completed and it is from water which allegedly came from this lake or pond on the night of the flood that appellees attribute their loss and the destruction which hit the valley on the night in question. To complete the picture of the stripping operation, it needs to be said that the 60 foot stripping around the mountain and the stripping on the knob on the eastern side did not run out to the outcrop since this outcrop coal was of poor quality and not worth recovering. This left a berm on the outer side of the strip, and on the inner side of the strip was the 40 foot wall which constituted the unstripped top of the mountain and is referred to in this record as “the island.”

Proof in the Case

We summarize as briefly as possible the voluminous testimony. The evidence of appellees was to the effect that this great mass of overburden had been thrown over the mountain at the headwaters of Ferrells Creek and that this mass contained tons of rock of all sizes, trees, stumps, logs, shale and dirt. Workmen who were on the'job the day of August 1 or the night of August 1 and 2 testified that water had accumulated in the pit' to a depth estimated at from 2 to 4 feet. Several persons who had lived on the creek, some for many years, testified that they had seen harder rains before than had fallen on this occasion, and some stated that the area had experienced harder rains since. Many stated that they had seen more water in the creek on previous occasions but had never seen as much debris and that the water and debris combined made the creek higher than ever before.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 887, 311 Ky. 449, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-fork-coal-co-v-hawkins-kyctapphigh-1949.