State v. Murlin

38 S.W. 923, 137 Mo. 297, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 923 (State v. Murlin) 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
State v. Murlin, 38 S.W. 923, 137 Mo. 297, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 33 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

Upon the affidavit of Charles Evans, state mine inspector, the prosecuting attorney of Macon county filed the following information against the defendant:

“Robert W. Barrow, prosecuting attorney in and for Macon county and state of Missouri, informs the coui’t that at the county of Macon and state of Missouri, on the twenty-seventh day of June, 1895, one W. E. Murlin, then and there was the agent of the Kansas & Texas Coal Company, a corporation, the owner of the mine hereinafter mentioned, and that said W. E. Murlin then and there as said agent and as superintendent of the mine hereinafter named, was in charge of, managing and operating mine number 46, of the aforesaid company, and that said mine number 46 then and there was a coal mine, where the coal was removed and taken from its original stratum by blasting off of the solid, and that said W. E. Murlin then and there willfully and unlawfully directed, operated, and worked said mine number 46, then and there willfully and unlawfully having coal blasted off of the solid in said mine and removed therefrom in the various rooms thereof without then and there having and keeping shot-firers employed in said mine to fire all or any shots after the employees, miners, and other persons had retired from said mine, and without having any shot-firers whatever employed in or at work in said mine, while so blasting off of the solid as required by the laws and statutes of Missouri, in section 7077, of the session acts of 1895, at page 227 thereof, b.ut then and there willfully and unlawfully permitted, directed, and caused [301]*301the miners in the various rooms of said mine to fire their own shots, while other employees, miners, and persons were still in said mine, in blasting off of the solid as aforesaid against the peace and dignity of the state.”

The defendant filed his motion to quash the information.

The grounds of said motion are, briefly, that the information does not charge the violation of any law of this state; does not state the constituent facts constituting any crime; that the section under which it is drawn was not lawfully enacted; is unconstitutional and void, both under the constitution of the United States and of this state, in that it is unreasonable and oppressive.

This motion was sustained and the information quashed.

In due time a motion for new trial was filed and overruled and a bill of exceptions signed, sealed and made part of the record.

The act which defendant is charged with violating was approved April 11,1895. It provides that, “in all dry and dusty coal mines discharging light carbonated hydrogen gas, or mines where the coal is blasted off of the solid, shot-firers must be employed to fire all shots after the employees and other persons have retired from the mine.”

It is further provided that, “any agent, owner, or operator of any coal mine in this state violating the provisions of the preceding section [of which the foregoing provision is a ‘part] shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and for each offense, on conviction, shall be fined not less than fifty or more than two hundred dollars, or by imprisonment in the county jail not less than three nor more than twelve months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.”

[302]*302The manifest purpose of this legislation is the protection of the lives of coal miners who work in mines in which giant or blasting powder is used to dislodge the coal from its natural bed.

It is only in mines which are operated by blasting coal off of the solid that the duty is enjoined upon the owner, operator, or agent, operating such mine, of employing shot-firers to fire all shots and requiring that such blasts shall be made by the shot-firers after the other miners and operatives have retired from the mines.

Experience has demonstrated the necessity of establishing police regulations for the working of coal mines in order to protect the health and safety of persons employed therein.

So obvious were the dangers of mining coal that the parliament of Great Britain from time to time passed laws for the inspection of such mines and prescribed rules to be observed in the operation thereof. Thus, by 18 and 19 Victoria, ch. 108, it was provided that an adequate amount of ventilation should be constantly produced at all collieries to dilute and render harmless noxious gases and for fencing shafts not in use and air pits and for casing or lining certain shafts not deemed safe-, and for signals from the bottom to the surface and for adequate brakes upon all machines worked by steam or water for raising and lowering persons, and requiring all steam boilers to be provided with proper steam gauges, water gauge, and steam valve.

On March 3, 1871, the legislature of Pennsylvania passed a most elaborate act regulating the construction of mines, providing for the. safety of miners, and the inspection of mines and attaching penalties for failure to comply with the provisions thereof. Brightly’s Purdon’s Digest for 1700 to 1872, p. 1067.

[303]*303This act proceeded on the line of the act of parliament, but greatly extended the measures looking to the safety of miners. Similar enactments are to be found in Illinois, New York, Ohio, and many other states.

The constitutionality of the Pennsylvania act was assailed the next year after its passage. An injunction was sought by the commonwealth at the relation of a mine inspector-against Bonnell et al., to restrain them as owners and operators of a coal mine until they had complied with said act. The substance of the charge was that said Bonnell had not provided and maintained a metal tube from the top to the bottom of said shaft, suitably calculated and adapted for the free passage of sound therein, and through which conversation might be had between persons at the bottom and top of the shaft; nor had he provided a sufficient cover over the carriage used for letting down and hoisting up the persons employed in the said mine, and‘had not attached a suitable brake to the drum which was used by steam power for the purpose of letting down and hoisting up persons employed in said mine.

It was held that the law was constitutional. Said the learned judge who rendered the decision: “The act, as we view it, is nothing more nor less than a mandate to the operators of coal mines, that they shall so work them as not to injure the health, nor endanger the lives of persons employed in and about them. Of its constitutionality we have not the slightest doubt.” Com. ex rel. Williams v. Bonnell, 8 Phila. Rep. loc. cit. 536.

The act in Pennsylvania was the offspring of the mining disasters of “Avondale” and “West Pittston,” in which many miners lost their lives.

The legislature of this state was doubtless moved to require mine operators to employ shot-firers to discharge the blasts bY the explosion of the Keith and [304]*304Perry mine at Rich. Hill, on the- day of-, in the year 1888, by which twenty-three miners were killed and fifty others burned; the latter only being saved by the heroic action of the superintendent, who nearly lost his life in the effort to save the men. The testimony in that case tended to show that the explosion was caused by the firing of a “windy shot” which was fired at an hour when the.mine was full of miners. Each miner was allowed to bore his own hole in the solid, charge it with giant powder, adjust a fuse, and tamp it, and then fire it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 923, 137 Mo. 297, 1897 Mo. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-murlin-mo-1897.