Stevenson v. Avery Coal & Mining Co.

152 Ill. App. 565, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 779
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 11, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 152 Ill. App. 565 (Stevenson v. Avery Coal & Mining Co.) 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
Stevenson v. Avery Coal & Mining Co., 152 Ill. App. 565, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 779 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Higbee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case has been heretofore in this court, where a judgment of $2,000 in favor of appellee was reversed and the cause remanded. Stevenson v. Avery Coal & Mining Co., 143 Ill. App. 397. When the case was reinstated on the docket of the trial court, it was consolidated with the case of Blanche Hougland et al. v. The Avery Coal & Mining Company, which grew out of the same facts and circumstances, and the two cases were tried together, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff in each case, for the sum of $3,000, from which judgment separate appeals have been taken to this court.

Upon this trial it was stipulated that either party might read from the bill of exceptions filed in this cause on a former appeal and both sides took advantage of the agreement and read from said bill of exceptions. Appellant re-examined a few of its former witnesses but neither side produced a new witness concerning the conditions existing in the mine prior or subsequent to the explosion.

This suit was brought for damages resulting to plaintiff by reason of the death of her husband, William Stevenson, alleged to have been caused by the wilful failure of appellant to comply with certain provisions of the act in regard to Mines and Miners.

The case was tried upon the second, third and fourth counts of the declaration. The second count charged appellant with the wilful failure to comply with the requirements of the statute, that cross-cuts shall be made not more than sixty feet apart and no room opened in advance of the last open cross-cut, and alleged that by reason thereof great quantities of lamp and powder smoke, gases, mine dust and other deleterious air, accumulated and remained in certain ‘rooms and that while said Stevenson, a shot-firer, was waiting in one of said rooms for the firing of a shot lighted in the face of an entry near by, said shot fired and communicated the fire to said lamp and powder smoke, gases, mine dust and other deleterious air, causing an explosion and thereby killing him.

The third count charged a wilful violation of the provisions of the statute requiring that when the air becomes charged with dust, the operator must have the roadways regularly and thoroughly sprayed, sprinkled or cleaned; and the fourth was substantially the same as the third, but charged only a failure to frequently and thoroughly sprinkle the hauling roads of the mine. When the case was here before, it was reversed and remanded because the court below refused to admit in evidence counts five, six and seven of the original declaration, withdrawn by appellee and afterwards offered in evidence by appellant; also because the court refused to admit in evidence a certain letter written by an attorney of appellee to a proposed witness. The causes now assigned for reversal of the judgment, are that there was no substantial evidence upon which to base the verdict; that the court erred in permitting certain expert witnesses to answer interrogatories which called for conclusions as to ultimate facts; in permitting the attorney who wrote the letter above referred to, to explain what he intended thereby, and in giving appellee’s instruction No. 8.

The facts as disclosed by the record are substantially as follows: At the time of the death of Stevenson, appellant was mining coal from the face of the first and second west entries oft of the south entry and from rooms 1, 2 and 3 turned north off of said first west entry. As the first and second west entries were driven from the south entry, cross-cuts were made between them, the last cross-cut being 140 feet from the face of the first west entry and about thirty feet from the face of the second west entry. Fourteen feet west of this cross-cut, room No. 3 opened north off of the first west entry. From room 3 to the face of the entry was about 100 feet. At that time the course of the air current was west along the first west entry, then through the cross-cut into the second west entry, then east along that entry to the south entry. It did not go within 140 feet of the face of the'first west entry and lacked fourteen feet of reaching the mouth of room No. 3. Coal cars from the second west entry passed over a track laid through said cross-cut to the first west entry and thence to the bottom of the shaft. A cross-cut had been started on the south side of the first west entry between the one above mentioned and the face, but was not near completion. On the afternoon of the day in question, Stevenson and William Hougland, who were shot-firers in appellant’s mine and whose duty it was to fire shots in the two entries and three rooms above mentioned, went down to fire shots as usual. Subsequently a loud report was heard by those out in the vicinity of the top of the mine and volumes of smoke were seen ascending from the mouth of the shaft many feet in the air. When an entrance into the mine was effected, it was discovered that there had been a violent explosion. Props were blown down, tools and powder boxes blown open, powder cans blown to pieces, trap doors had been demolished and black damp and dangerous gases had begun to accumulate. Stevenson and Hougland were both found dead, the body of the former being discovered in room three about forty feet from the door and that of the latter in the first west entry about ten feet east of the cross-cut between the entries. The hair and clothing of the men were not burned but the flesh about the face appeared to be parched and baked. It was discovered that a shot lighted in the stub crosscut had not been fired, the fuse having gone out; that shots placed in the face of the first west entry and room 3 had exploded with the usual results, while one in the face of the second west entry had exploded and brought down about one-third of the cutting from the face and left the balance standing. This last shot had been prepared on that day by a miner named Heppe, who drilled and charged the hole and also made a cutting in the face of the entry. While he was preparing the shot Hougland examined the work, measured the hole, ascertained how much powder was going to be put in and approved the same.

The theory of appellant is that the hole was drilled a foot deeper than the cutting in the face of the entry, going into the “tight” or “solid” and the result was a “windy” or “blown out” shot; that thereby the force of the explosion came from the face out into the entry and not towards the cutting, causing large quantities of sparks and flames to be blown into the entry and cross-cut; that they directly ignited large quantities of powder which exploded and formed certain gases which destroyed the lives of the two men.

On the other hand appellee contends that the shot in question was a practical shot, and was drilled only a few inches deeper than the cutting in the face; that by reason of the opening of room 3 in advance of the cross-cut and air current and the failure to open crosscuts every sixty feet and to keep the roadways sprayed, sprinkled and cleaned as provided by the statute, the air become charged with mine dust and gases; that this dust became ignited by the shot fired and a general explosion followed; and that there was not sufficient powder in the mine to produce of itself the result claimed by appellant.

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Related

Davis v. Illinois Collieries Co.
83 N.E. 836 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Stevenson v. Avery Coal & Mining Co.
143 Ill. App. 397 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
152 Ill. App. 565, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-avery-coal-mining-co-illappct-1910.