Szotak v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co.

36 Misc. 98, 72 N.Y.S. 647
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Misc. 98 (Szotak v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Szotak v. Berwind-White Coal Mining Co., 36 Misc. 98, 72 N.Y.S. 647 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Hascall, J.

The action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries, alleged to have been caused by negligence' in permitting to exist an unsafe and dangerous exit from a coal mine, owned and operated by defendant in Dunlo, Pennsylvania. In this mine plaintiff labored, and was in daily use of the passage ip. question.

Entrance to the mine was by means of a cage, operated in a shaft leading into a slope, or haulage way. This slope was principally used for the purpose of transporting coal, out of the mine, by means of railroad cars upon a single track, hauled and controlled by a cable, operated by an engineer in charge of a steam engine located near the entrance to the mine. Corridors, or headings, ran from this slope, in various parts where the coal was dug. In these headings, other cars, for carrying out the excavated coal, were hauled by mules, from and to the slope, where they were attached to the cable. In consequence of the operation of a railroad in this slope, it was considered a dangerous place, and it was commanded by law that a traveling, or manway, should be provided by the operator of the mine, and that persons, employed as miners, should “ not travel to and from their work except by the traveling way assigned for that purpose.” Penn. Law, Act May 15, 1893, article XX, rule 71. A proper manway had been provided by defendant, which followed the general direction of the slope and railway, and some feet away from it, on-the opposite side from the entrance to the heading, mentioned in the testimony, where plaintiff worked. This manway was used by miners who were walking to and from performance of their daily tasks.

The plaintiff alleges that he was leaving his place of work, March 9, 1900, at the close of day; was proceeding through the heading, in the direction of the slope; had reached the point of intersection of the heading with the slope, going towards the exit of the mine; and, while in the act of carefully stepping on the tracks in the slope, was unexpectedly and without any warning, run upon, struck and knocked down by a train- of descending cars, [100]*100and sustained severe and permanent injuries; that immediately before he so stepped upon the track in. the slope, his foot became, through no fault on his part, caught and fastened in an insecure and dangerous place, by the side of the track, obstructed by a steam pipe laid near by, which was defective and out of repair. Eor further specification of acts of negligence on defendant’s part, plaintiff charges, in rather vague averment, that this defective pipe permitted steam to escape and obscure the view of persons going out of the mine; that it was negligently and carelessly allowed to remain there, for a long time prior to the day of the accident, with the result, that, before plaintiff could extricate his foot, his collision with the cars occurred; that the train was proceeding on a down grade; that defendant had negligently omitted to furnish brakes, or other proper facilities, for stopping or controlling the cars, and furnishing to employees an unsafe and dangerous exit.” .

The defendant denies its carelessness; alleges contributory negligence by plaintiff, or fault of a fellow sérvant; asserts the operation of its mine under general laws and statutory rules, conformity therewith, and freedom from liability.

. No direct personal negligence is alleged against the owner, only a resulting liability because of omissions on the part of-its superintendent, its direct representative. "We have to consider whether the allegations are sustained against one duly charged in place of the owner. Whether there was carelessness or improper conduct on the part of a co-workman? Whether or not there was contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part?

In liis testimony plaintiff declares that he entered the mine, in the morning, by way of the cage and walked down, not the manway but the slope, about 150 yards, until he reached the heading where' he was going to work; that there was a pipe, passing the heading, leading down from the cage along the slope, used to convey steam to pumps at a lower point in the mine; that, thus going to his work, this steam pipe was on his right hand, and, coming from his work, on his left; that he carne down safely in the morning; that he had to pass this pipe, in order to get out from the heading into the slope, and he went down and out the same way he went in, in the morning; that he had a light in his cap; that he was about crossing the tracks in the slope, to get into the manway, when the car struck him. With regard to his own [101]*101vigilance and freedom from negligence, the plaintiff said that he looked and listened before going on the track; that steam from the alleged defective pipe and noise it made in escaping, prevented him from seeing or hearing the cars as they came towards him; that he knew at what time the cars would pass; that he saw the steam, yet he kept right on; that these defects he had, some days before, brought to the attention of Mr. Griffiths, the mine foreman, that the hole, in which he says he caught his foot, was made partly by water and partly by the feet of the mules that drew the cars: (“the mules’ feet had worn holes along between the ties”) that, about a week before the accident, he saw two or three holes at the same place; that he called the attention of the foreman to them and said, “ I can’t work there ”; that again, two days before the accident, he called attention to them and the foreman promised to fix them “ right away ”; that he had called attention to the hole in the pipe and escaping steam a week before the accident, and, again, two days before; that he was proceeding out of the heading, in which he worked, at five o’clock, p. sr.; that the place was lighted only by the lamp- on his cap; that when struck, his cap was on his head; that he was made unconscious, and hence did not know whether he was knocked, or was carried up the slope, on the left side, over twenty feet away from where he alleges he had been struck, and where he was found; that it was the custom of the employees, against orders, to walk on the ties in the slope, and the foreman himself had walked that way; that, at the time of the accident, the darkness of the mine and the escaping steam concealed the hole from view; that he knew it, yet went on; that he had worked in the mine eighteen months before he was hurt; that the foreman, who employed him, was in the mine about three times a week, going around from one place to another and inspecting; he did not claim that his foot got caught by reason of the steam pipe, but was allowed, contravening his sworn allegation of particulars and over objection, to say, that he got fastened in a hole between the ties of the track leading to the slope, made by nudes tramping in water between the rails, while his complaint alleged that “ while in the act of'.carefully stepping on the tracks in Hie slope ” he was struck.

It was shown by others, that this steam pipe ran along the slope tracks, but was underground where the plaintiff said his foot got fast; that mules only went over the place described by him, in [102]

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36 Misc. 98, 72 N.Y.S. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szotak-v-berwind-white-coal-mining-co-nynyccityct-1901.