Springside Coal Mining Co. v. Grogan

53 Ill. App. 60, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 295
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 Ill. App. 60 (Springside Coal Mining Co. v. Grogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springside Coal Mining Co. v. Grogan, 53 Ill. App. 60, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 295 (Ill. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 1st day of March, 1889, the appellant company began to sink a pit, which was intended to be used when completed as the shaft of a coal mine it designed to open and work. Thomas Grogan, husband of the appellee, was, among others, employed to aid in digging and removing the earth from the pit. He began work when the pit was of the depth of eight feet from the surface and continued to be so engaged until the depth of about 200 feet had been reached, when a heavy barrel, which a sudden gust of wind blew into the mouth of the pit, fell to the bottom where he was at work, and struck and instantly killed him. The eighth section of the act of the General Assembly, entitled, An act providing for the health and safety of persons employed in coal mines,” approved May 28, 1879, as amended by an act approved June 30, 1885, makes it the duty of the owner or operator of every coal mine to fence the top of each and every shaft of the mine, by gates properly protecting such top and the entrance thereto. The top or entrance to the pit in which appellee’s husband was working at the time of his death, had not been provided with or fenced by gates. The appellee contended -that had such gates been provided, the barrel which caused the death of her husband could not have been blown into the pit, and upon the theory that the work which the appellant company was prosecuting was a coal mine, and the appellant required by the statute to fence the same, brought an action under the statute, as his widow, to recover damages occasioned by his death. Hpon a trial before the Circuit Court and a jury, she recovered a judgment in the sum of $5,000, to reverse which this appeal was taken. The fourteenth section of the act under which the case is prosecuted, gives the appellee, as widow, a right of action only in the event that the death of her husband was occasioned by the willful failure of the appellant company to comply with the provision of the statute in question or by a willful violation of the act. If his death was caused by some mere neglect or default of the appellant, not willful in its character, the right of recovery, if any, is not in the appellee as widow, but in the administrator of the deceased, suing for the benefit of the widow and children, the next of kin of the deceased, under the provisions of Secs. 1 and 2, of Chap. 70, E. S. Further, the provisions of the statute by virtue whereof the appellee seeks to recover, apply only to coal mines; not to mines out of which are taken lead or other minerals or ores, nor to pits or excavations, not parts of a coal mine. S o it was essential to appellee’s case that the proof should show the appellant company willfully failed or willfully refused to fence by gates the top of the shaft of a coal mine, and that by reason of such willful failure her husband lost his life. The appellant company, as ground for reversal, insists that, first, the pit described in the declaration and as shown by the proofs, was not a coal mine, and that therefore the statutory duty to fence the mouth of it by gates did not arise; second, that the proofs did not show that the failure to fence was willful; third, that the court instructed the jury that the pit was a coal mine, and that every failure to fence its entrance or top was necessarily willful.

The court at the instance of the appellee, plaintiff below, gave the following instructions:

2. “ The court instructs you that the law is, the top of each and every shaft shall be securely fenced, and a failure to do so is a willful violation of the law; it is not to be understood that it is to be covered, but must be fenced to such height and in such manner, as to make it a reasonably safe, secure fence.”

3. “Even if the evidence shows that the barrel was blown into the air shaft, and was purely an accident, still, if the evidence shows that the shaft was not securely fenced as alleged, so as to reasonably protect the same, and prevent objects from falling therein, then the fact that the barrel was blown in, and was purely an accident, will be no defense to this suit, and would- not defeat a recovery, if the jury further believe that if the shaft had been securely fenced, so as to prevent objects falling therein, the injury would not have resulted.”

4. “ The court instructs you, in this case, if the defendant failed to securely fence the shaft as alleged, then the law is, that such failure, in law, is a willful violation of law, and that if by reason of such failure to fence the shaft, the barrel was suffered to blow or fall in such air shaft and kill deceased, then if the deceased left the plaintiff his widow and children as alleged, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff even though deceased was not entirely free from fault.”

Nothing in one other and the only other instruction given for the plaintiff below, in any respect cured the defects in those we have quoted. Each of the instructions assumes that the pit or hole in which the deceased was working, was a coal mine, and each declares that the statute required the mouth of the pit to be fenced. Whether it was a coal mine was a question of fact. The declaration alleged, and the proof indisputably showed, that the deceased, when killed, was engaged in digging the earth in the bottom of a pit or hole, which was intended, when completed, to be used as the shaft of a coal mine, which the appellant company designed to open and operate. No mine was being operated or worked; no coal had been mined; none had been found to mine; nor was it even shown that there were any indications of the existence of coal that the pit or hole would ever reach.

Lexicographers define a mine to be a pit or excavation in the earth from which ores or mineral substances are taken by digging. A colliery is defined by the same lexicographers to be a mine, pit or place where coals are dug, with the machinery used in discharging and raising the coal.

In the Westmoreland Coal Co’s. Appeal, 85 Pa. St. 344, it was ruled that the term, mine, when applied to coal, is equivalent to a worked vein; for it is there said, “ by working a vein, it becomes a mine.” In Astry v. Ballard, 2 Mining Reports, 291, it was held that a seam of coal, unopened, is not a coal mine. The pit or hole in which the deceased was killed was not a “ coal mine ” in the natural, obvious or popular meaning of those words. Statutes are to be interpreted according to the natural, obvious, popular meaning of the language employed. Potter, Dwarris, pp. 143-144. Counsel refer us to the case of Coal Run Co. v. Jones, 19 Ill. App. 365, which they contend holds that the statute applies to a work like that in which the deceased was engaged. We do not think it is so held. In the statement of facts in the case cited, it is said, “ the Coal Eun Company had just completed an extension of its shaft below a vein of coal that it had been working and mining and had reached and dug through a lower vein and had dug several feet below it for the purpose of collecting the drainage of the mine,” and in the opinion of the court says, “workmen were actually engaged in mining coal from the first vein. * * * The deceased himself was about to pick up and place in the cage a lump of coal when the explosion occurred.”

These facts were held sufficient to justify a finding that the place was a coal mine, within the meaning of the statute, and we think nothing beyond that is or was intended to be held.

It is argued that the object and purpose of the statute was to guard.

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Bluebook (online)
53 Ill. App. 60, 1892 Ill. App. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springside-coal-mining-co-v-grogan-illappct-1893.