State Ex Rel. Storm v. Hought

219 N.W. 213, 56 N.D. 663, 58 A.L.R. 186, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 185
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 213 (State Ex Rel. Storm v. Hought) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Storm v. Hought, 219 N.W. 213, 56 N.D. 663, 58 A.L.R. 186, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 185 (N.D. 1928).

Opinions

Bikdzell, J.

On December 10, 1924, William J. Storm was killed while working in a mine near the village of Iianks. The mine was operated by one or more individuals under the name of Hanks Coal Company. By reason of the failure of the employer to comply with the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, the deceased was not insured. In January, 1925, his widow made application to the Workmen’s Compensation Bureau for an award under § 11 of the Compensation Act. Proceedings were thereafter had whereby, in March, 1925, an award was made. The award was not paid and in July of the following year this action was brought, with the consent of the state, to enforce the award as a liquidated claim. The only issues presented to the jury were as to the employment of Storm at the time • — whether he was employed by Kohlman, one of the defendants, or by all of the defendants — and whether the injuries resulting in his death were received by him in the course of his employment. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the de *666 fendants. Thereafter, upon motion of the defendants for judgment non obstante or for a new trial, judgment non obstante was ordered in favor of all the defendants except Kohlman, and as to him judgment was entered on the verdict. He appeals from the judgment and from the order denying the motion. The plaintiff has likewise appealed from the order granting judgment non obstante as to the defendants James Hought and David Hought. The principal question in both appeals concerns the sufficiency of the evidence; in the appeal of Kohlman, the sufficiency of the evidence to establish that the injury was received in the course of the employment of the deceased, and, in the appeal of the plaintiff, the sufficiency of the evidence to establish that the respondents were employers.

First considering Kohlman’s appeal: The undisputed evidence is to the effect that on the 10th day of December, 1924, William Storm went to work in the mine at about one o’clock in the afternoon; that he was found dead in the last room in entry No. 2 at about 2: 30. He was first found by one Shaw, an employee engaged as a mule driver, hauling coal as loaded by the various miners and distributing empty cars. He had supplied Storm with four empty cars about 1 o’clock, and about 2:30 he discovered Storm’s body. There was no one else working in that entry. Between 1 and 2: 30 o’clock Storm had loaded either one or two cars and part of another. One Jens Hagen, who had become a lessee of the mine shortly after the accident in question but who at the time of the accident was working in the mine, testified by deposition that he was working as pit boss; that it was his duty to go about the mine twice a day and investigate the places where the men were working; that he had been pit boss for three months before the accident occurred; that Storm’s working place on the 10th of December was the first and second room necks; and that the room farthest east, the one in which the body was found, was worked out and abandoned on the 9th of December in the morning. Storm had worked it out, and his working place on the 10th of December was a small room or coal bank adjacent to and immediately west of the room neck of the first room. On the morning of the 9th he had given Storm orders with respect to where he should work. He told him to stay out of the east room because it was not fit for one to be in there any longer; it was dangerous. The room had been abandoned because there was no more coal to get. *667 It had all been taken out except about one thousand pounds and that was cleaned up on the morning of the 9th. Storm had finished removing the pillars on the 9 th and had no work to do in that place on the 10th. He told him different times to stay out and told him once in the presence of Ted Gilbertson, another employee in the mine. Gilbertson did' not testify. When the body of Storm was found crushed beneath coal which had fallen from overhead, his pick was by his side. The evidence shows that the main entry to the mine runs from north to south; that entry No. 2 branches off the main entry toward the east; that along entry No. 2 there are four rooms along the south side of the entry, each approximately, including walls, twenty-four feet wide and approximately one hundred feet deep or long; that during the mining operations these rooms are made by mining out a narrow strip the length or depth of the proposed room and widening the operations so as to remove all coal from the room except sufficient to leave a substantial wall between the particular room and the adjacent room; also leaving a substantial block or pillar of coal toward the front of the room to protect the entry, so that when a room is mined out there is left a narrow room neck some twenty feet or less in length leading into the mined-out room. It seems that most of the large pillar or bank of coal adjacent to the room neck in the room farthest east of entry No. 2, where the body was found, had been mined out and removed and that the next working place assigned to Storm was upon the front bank or pillar of the room immediately west.

It is argued that, since the undisputed evidence shows that Storm’s work in the room where his body was found had ended the day before, that this room had been abandoned and that he had been ordered to remain out of it and assigned to a definite location elsewhere, it miist be held that the injuries resulting in his death weré received outside of the course of his employment. It is urged that it was the duty of the pit boss to assign the miners to their respective places of work and to direct their operations and the duty of the miners to work only at the places so assigned. Various sections of chapter 168 of the Laws of 1919, chapter 38, article 70a of the 1925 Supplement to the Compiled Laws of 1913, are relied upon to support the contentions advanced. Section 69 of this chapter (§ 3084a69 of the 1925 Supplement to the Compiled Laws of 1913) is cited as providing, among other things, that no *668 workman shall disobey an order given in pursuance of law, or do a wilful act whereby the lives and health of persons working therein or the security of a mine or machinery connected therewith may be endangered; and § 71 (§ 3084a71 of the 1925 Supplement to the Compiled Laws of 1913) as providing that each employee shall go to and from his place of duty by traveling the ways provided and that he shall not travel around the mine or the buildings where duty does not require.

The Workmen’s Compensation Law defines “injury,” for which compensation is intended to be provided, as meaning an injury arising in the course of employment, but as not including “injuries caused by the employee’s wilful intention to injure himself or to injure another.” Section 396a2 of the 1925 Supplement to the Compiled Laws of 1913. Does the fact that the employee at the time he received his injury was working in disregard of instructions and at a place other than that to which- he had been assigned render the injury one not arising in the course of employment or bring it within the class of injuries caused by the employee’s wilful intention to injure himself or to injure another ? It is the duty of employees to comply with and obey the orders of the employer. Workmen’s Compensation Acts, C. J. 86. But disobedience does not necessarily remove the employee from the course of his employment nor convict him of entertaining a wilful intention to injure himself or another.

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Bluebook (online)
219 N.W. 213, 56 N.D. 663, 58 A.L.R. 186, 1928 N.D. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-storm-v-hought-nd-1928.