Span v. Jackson-Walker Coal & Mining Co.

16 S.W.2d 190, 322 Mo. 158, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 684
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 190 (Span v. Jackson-Walker Coal & Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Span v. Jackson-Walker Coal & Mining Co., 16 S.W.2d 190, 322 Mo. 158, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 684 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*164 WALKER, J.

This is an action for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a coal miner while in the employment of the defendant in a coal mine in the State of Kansas. The case was tried to a jury in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of fifty thousand dollars, from which the defendant appeals.

The action was based upon the statutes of the State of Kansas, which require that “every mine shall be supplied with sufficient prop timber of suitable length and size for the places where it is to be used, and kept in easy access to.” [See. 6276, G. S. Kansas: Sec. 49-205, R. S. Kan. 1923.]

The plaintiff went to work in defendant’s mine in February, 1921, and continued in its service to the date of his injury, September 7, 1921. His injury was due to the failure of defendant to supply him with props of suitable length to support the roof of the room where he was working, as required' by the Kansas statute above quoted. The plaintiff had called for three-foot props the afternoon before his injury, but instead was supplied with props three feet and four inches in length. He protested against this delivery and demanded that props of the required length be furnished, but his protest was ignored and his demand denied. He tried to use one of these props by digging a hole in the floor, but it was hard rock and he could not dig a hole of sufficient depth. At the depth reached by him he could not stand the prop straight up but only in a slanting position. When *165 lie tapped tlie prop lightly after placing it in the hole a rock in the roof weighing nineteen hundred or two thousand pounds fell and crushed him. H,e sustained a fracture of two lumbar vertebrae, had four or five ribs fractured, and received serious internal injuries. lie was in the hospital more than nine months and has been unable to walk since his injuries, without crutches. After being injured and before he was operated upon he was entirely paralyzed from the waist down. After the operation he has been partially paralyzed. His left leg has become atrophied and has little or no feeling. His right foot is stiff. There was also testimony as to a curvature of his spine caused by his injuries. The result of his injuries is to wholly incapacitate him from the performance of any labor.

A statement of the facts in detail are not only relevant, but necessary to a complete understanding of the case and' to aid in determining the credibility to be given the testimony of certain witnesses.

When the rock fell it entirely covered the plaintiff’s body. The rock had to be pried clear of his body before he could be pulled out from under it. His body was doubled up, that, is, bent over on his legs. His carbide lamp was tilted, but still lighted, and' the flame was burning his arm. His back was broken and crushed through the lumbar region, and he was paralyzed below the waist line. His chest was crushed., and he was unconscious for over a week following the injury; his memory did not return until some time after Christmas. Owing to his physical condition and consequent low vitality, the operation to remove the broken bones of his spine had to be deferred seven weeks, and the period he was confined to the hospital was more than nine months.

Murphy, a foreman of the defendant, entered the room where the rock had fallen a short time after plaintiff was taken to a hospital. He readjusted the situation in the room before the mine inspector arrived. No props were set up in it when the latter examined the room, but Murphy admitted in his deposition that he found props set up in the room when he arrived right after the occurrence. Murphy made measurements and drawings, locating the fallen rock as up against the face of the coal, so as to show plaintiff was “mining a shot” instead of propping the roof when the injury occurred. According to the mine inspector’s testimony under cross-examination, he stated that the rock was seven or eight feet back from the face of the coal. On the same or the succeeding day this inspector states that he took a stenographer to plaintiff’s bedside in the hospital, administered an oath to him and took his signature to the untranscribed stenographic notes, which were not read to the plaintiff, for the purpose of showing, as disclosed by the testimony, that the plaintiff was “mining a shot when the rock fell.” The defendant’s physician who was in attendance upon the plaintiff when he was brought to the hospital testified that he was unconscious at the time and was incapable of under *166 standing or giving any statement. The doctor’s testimony being that at that time plaintiff was not fit to talk, and not in a fit condition to give a sworn statement, and on account of his condition his history was not taken by the hospital authorities for over a week after he entered it.”

In February, 1921, the plaintiff was employed by Murphy, the defendant’s mine foreman, who entered his name on the list of employees. At the time he was hired there was some conversation between him and Murphy as to the plaintiff being out from under the Kansas Compensation Law and the plaintiff expressed a desire to remain so. Murphy assured him that McDivitt, the defendant’s underground superintendent, would “fix his paper for him.” The plaintiff went to McDivitt’s office, as directed by Murphy, and McDivitt asked him his name and that of his former employer and told him to come back in a few days and he would fix the paper for him. When the plaintiff went back to McDivitt’s office the latter took two papers from his desk. One of these was a duplicate of plaintiff’s election to come out from under the provisions of the compensation law, made in 1917, which McDivitt had obtained from the Western Coal & Mining Co.; the other paper was a declaration to go back under the compensation law, which McDivitt requested the plaintiff to sign. This he refused to do. Plaintiff then asked McDivitt if he was going to fix the paper he had asked for, and McDivitt, referring to the election of the defendant in 1917, stated that it Yas fixed already and that it was all right. It was under these circumstances, that the plaintiff went to work for the defendant, which employment continued until the date of the plaintiff’s injury.

The provisions of the Kansas Compensation Law in force before and after the plaintiff’s injury, relative to its application to employers and employees, are as. follows:

“Employer’s Election. Every employer entitled to come within the provisions of this act, as defined and provided by this act, shall be presumed to have done so, except such employer privileged to elect to come within the provisions of this act, as provided in Section 1 hereof and Section 5902 of the General Statutes of 1915, unless such employer phall file with the Secretary of State at Topeka, Kansas, a written statement that he elects not to accept thereunder, and thereafter any such employer desiring to change his. election shall only d,o so by filing a written declaration thereof with the Secretary of State. Notice of such election shall be forthwith posted by such employer in conspicuous places in and about his. place of business.
“Employee’s Election.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 190, 322 Mo. 158, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/span-v-jackson-walker-coal-mining-co-mo-1929.