State Ex Rel. Lay v. Clymer

182 S.W.2d 425, 27 Tenn. App. 518, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 10, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 425 (State Ex Rel. Lay v. Clymer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Lay v. Clymer, 182 S.W.2d 425, 27 Tenn. App. 518, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

KETCHUM, J.

These are three separate actions brought by the state for the use of William Foster Lay, John Bullard, administrator of the estate of Thomas Bullard, deceased, and Clarence William Hill, against W. W. Clymer, District Mine Inspector, and Joseph Allison Welch, Chief Mine Inspector, and the sureties on 'their official bonds, to recover for personal injuries *522 sustained by the said William Foster Lay and Clarence William Hill, and for the alleged wrongful death of Thomas Bullard, in an explosion in Peabody Mine No. 4, in Campbell County Tennessee, on May 4, 1940. All three cases grew out of the same explosion, and for convenience were tried before, the same jury. At the cIosq of the plaintiffs ’ proof a motion was made for a peremptory instruction in behalf of the defendants, which motion was denied and exceptions taken; the defendants then rested and introduced no proof in their behalf, but renewed their motion for a peremptory instruction, which was granted, and the plaintiffs ’ suits dismissed., The plaintiffs then seasonably filed their motions for a..hew trial, which motions were overruled and they have appealed in error to this court.

The declarations are in a single count and are substantially identical in form. It was alleged that the plaintiffs William Foster Lay and Clarence William Hill were injured, and that Thomas Bullard was killed, by said explosion; that the explosion was caused “from a combination of bad ventilation and accumulation of dust, and the general dilapidated condition of the mine, the lack of brattices, the lack of ventilating fans, the lack of an airway, and due to the presence of poisonous and noxious gases.”

It was alleged that the defendant Clymer was the District Mine Inspector of the district in which said mine was located, and the defendant Thomas Allison Welch was the Chief Mine'Inspector, duly appointed and qualified as such 'in the manner required by the statute, and that the two surety company defendants were the sureties on their official bonds; that the condition of said bonds was that the said 'principals “well and truly discharge the duties of the office or employment'to which he (they) *523 had. been appointed.” The duties of said Clymer as District Mine Inspector, and Welch as Chief Mine Inspector, respectively, as fixed by the statutes, were set out at length and in detail, and it was alleged that they had breached the condition of their bonds in failing to inspect said mine at least once in every sixty days, and in failing to put notices at the entrance to said mine warning the workers of the unsafe condition thereof, and in failing to require the owners or operators of said mine to repair and place it in safe condition, all as required by the statutes which are referred to at length and in detail; and that but for their neglect of their duties in this régard said mine would not have become unsafe and dangerous for the workers therein and said explosion would not have occurred; and that under the statute referred to they and their sureties on their official bonds were liable to the plaintiffs for the injuries sustained by Lay and Hill and for the death of Bullard.

The defendant filed pleas of not guilty, nil debet and non assumpsit.

The statutory provisions with which we are here concerned are found in chapter 24 of Title 12 of the Code. Title 12 relates to the police powers, and chapter 24 of said title relates to the regulation and inspection of mines; there are 100 sections in this chapter, beginning with section 5539' and ending with section 5638, and all of said sections were enacted “for the purpose of greater protection to the life and health of persons, employed in and around the mines, ’ ’ etc. The pertinent sections are referred to in the declarations and will be referred to herein as we deem necessary.

Section 5539 provides that the governor shall appoint one chief mine inspector “who, with the approval of the governor, shall appoint district mine inspectors.”

*524 Section 5544 provides that the chief mine inspector and the district inspectors shall give bonds, to be approved by the governor, conditioned “that they will faithfully discharge the duties of their offices” and make oath that they will faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of their respective offices, etc.

Section 5547 makes it the duty of the district inspectors “thoroughly and carefully to examine and inspect each mine in their- respective districts . . . and see that every provision of this chapter is strictly observed, by the owner, agent and employee. ’ ’

Section 5549 provides that the (district) inspectors shall make an accurate report of the mines inspected, setting out the details of their inspection and forward said reports to the chief mine inspector, monthly.

Section 5550' requires the chief mine inspector to make a complete record of such inspections and include them in his annual report to the governor.

Sections 5551 and 5552 require the district inspectors immediately to “notify the chief inspector, the owner, agent, or superintendent of any mine, found to be in a dangerous condition,” etc., and “on receipt of same, the chief inspector shall make a thorough personal examination of the mines at the earliest practicable time, ’ ’ etc.; and if the chief inspector then finds “dangerous conditions to exist in the mines, he shall notify the employees of the mine by posting notice near the entrance to the mine . . . and also notify the operator, agent, foreman, or superintendent of such mine as to the dangerous conditions found in the mine.”

'Section 5553 provides that if deemed necessary the chief inspector shall apply to a court of equity for an .injunction, etc.

*525 Section 5554 provides that if the said chief or district inspector in examining said mines find them to be unsafe or dangerous, “or in their opinion to threaten or tend to the bodily injury of any person,” then they shall notify such person, and shall notify, the owner or operator of the same to rectify such dangerous conditions.

Section 55551 makes it the duty of the chief inspector to bring suits when necessary to enforce the observance of the provisions of these statutes.

By section 5558 the chief inspector is authorized “with the consent of the governor, to remove a district inspector for a sufficient cause. Any malfeasance in office, disregard for rules, drunkenness or immoral conduct shall constitute a sufficient cause.”

Section 5559 makes it the duty of the chief inspector to render such assistance to the district inspectors as the circumstances may require, and to. make such personal inspections as he may deem necessary, etc.

Other sections relate to keeping of records, the classification of the various types of mines, and when and how they shall be inspected. Class B mines, such as Peabody No. 4, are those that are liable to dust explosions, and are required to be examined every sixty days or of tener. Sec. 5569:

There was evidence to show the following facts, from which it is very earnestly argued that the trial'judge erred in granting the peremptory instruction in favor of the defendants:

(1) That the Peabody No.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 425, 27 Tenn. App. 518, 1943 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lay-v-clymer-tennctapp-1943.