Turner v. Manufacturer's & Consumer's Coal Co.

98 N.E. 234, 254 Ill. 187
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 234 (Turner v. Manufacturer's & Consumer's Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Manufacturer's & Consumer's Coal Co., 98 N.E. 234, 254 Ill. 187 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case is brought to this court upon a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Appellate Court for the Third District affirming a judgment of the circuit court of Macon county in an action brought by defendant in error to recover damages from plaintiff in error for injuries received in the coal mine of plaintiff in error. The first three counts of the declaration are for common law negligence, and charged that plaintiff in error negligently failed and refused to furnish defendant in error with a safe place to work; that plaintiff in error negligently permitted large quantities of gas to accumulate in its mine, of which defendant in error' was ignorant, and that while he was in the exercise of due care for his own safety he was severely burned by an explosion, caused by his lamp coming in contact with the gas. The other four counts charge willful failure upon the part of plaintiff in error to comply with certain requirements of sections 18 and 19 of the Mines and Miners act, by reason of which it is alleged the injury occurred.

Defendant in error was employed in the mine of plaintiff in error as a “roustabout” or “company man,” and was engaged in cleaning up roads, tracks and passageways. At' the time of his injury he was working on the night shift, and he and his buddy, Tanzius, were directed by plaintiff in error’s foreman to clean up a fall that had occurred some time previous in the’third south off the main entry. Near the place where the fall occurred was the first room of the third south off the fifth west passageway, which was no longer used for mining purposes. After filling one or two places in other parts of the mine, defendant in error and Tanzius selected this room as the next place in which to throw the refuse, or “gob.” The room had been excavated a distance of about one hundred and twenty-five feet and rails had been laid from the entry to the face of the coal. About two or three "months prior to the injury of defendant in error a fall occurred in the roof of this room, leaving a pocket in the roof, in which gas accumulated. The room was abandoned for digging coal and was partially filled, next to the face of the coal, with slate, stone and dirt. About two weeks before the injury the rails were removed from the room except from sixteen to twenty feet at the entrance and a tie was placed across the end of the track. The distance from the end of the track to the hole in the roof was variously estimated by the witnesses at from thirty to seventy feet. The mine manager wrote on the tie, with chalk, “Gas in the hole; don’t go by this tie.” The word “gas,” and according to the testimony of the mine manager the word “dangerous,” also, were written on a slab or cap-piece at the neck or entrance to the room. At about four or five o’clock on the morning of the 29th of October, 1907, defendant in error and his buddy, Tanzius, pushed a car loaded with gob into said room 1 as far as the end of the rails, removed the tie that had been placed across the end of the rails, and defendant in error stepped into the room beyond the end of the rails and began unloading the car while Tanzius returned to load another car. To unload the car defendant in error testified he stood at the end of the car farthest in the room, and when he lifted a shovelful of dirt from the car he stepped four or five feet further into the room and threw the dirt "as far as he could. While thus engaged the explosion occurred, seriously burning and injuring him.

At the close of the evidence for defendant in error the plaintiff in error moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor, and again made the same motion at the conclusion of all the evidence. These motions were denied. The jury found for defendant in error, and the court overruled a motion for a new trial and rendered judgment on the verdict, which judgment was affirmed by the Appellate Court.

The principal errors assigned are upon the action of the court in denying plaintiff in error’s motions to direct a verdiet, the rulings of the court on the admission and exclusion of testimony, and in giving and refusing instructions. In the view we take of this case it is unnecessary to determine whether defendant in error made a case by his proof that would, in the absence of a release of the cause of action, have justified submission of it to a jury, or to pass upon the errors assigned upon the court’s action in admitting and rejecting testimony or giving and refusing instructions, except as hereinafter mentioned.

On the trial of the case plaintiff in error introduced in evidence a release and settlement of' the cause of action. The release is as follows:

“I, Frank Turner, hereby acknowledge payment to me in hand this day by Manufacturers’ and Consumers’ Coal Co. of the sum of four hundred eighty-seven 50/100 dollars, in full settlement of all my claims or demands which Tnow have or hereafter may have against the said payor Manufacturers’ and Consumers’ Co. on account of an accident which occurred to me on or about the 29th of October, 1907, causing injury to me.
“In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this eleventh day of January, 1908.
“Witness my mark. 3
Í1/ w „ rc, , _ Frank X Turner. [Seal.] mark
Witnesses to Frank Turner’s mark: John Muncie, Tyler Meri-
weather.
“The. foregoing agreement was read by Frank Turner, who said that he understood it; that he knew that in signing it he was signing away his right to further claim for the injuries therein referred to; that he was satisfied with the settlement, and that he signed it of his own free will.
O. K.—M. & C. Lewis Overholt,
John Muncie,
Tyler Meriweather.”

To impeach the release defendant in error attempted to show that when he signed it his mental condition was such that he did not know and understand what he was. doing or what he signed. Defendant in error and four witnesses testified upon this subject, but the testimony of three of said witnesses was stricken out by the court and the jury were told to disregard it. Defendant in error (who will be referred to in the testimony as Turner) testified, on direct examination, that after being injured he was taken to St. Mary’s Hospital. He first remembered being attended by Dr. Meriweather two weeks afterward, and the doctor continued to attend him until June 2. The only thing he remembered happening the day the release was signed was a knock at his door, and Overholt, (the plaintiff in error’s superintendent,) Dr. Meriweather and a man named Muncie came into the room. The Sister attending him as nurse stepped outside into the hall. Overholt asked him how he was feeling, and he replied not very well; that his ears were bothering him, and one of them had been lanced about thirteen times. He testified his face and hands were bandaged, his eyes covered and he was in bed; that before that he had been sitting up once or twice, about an hour at a time. Overholt said he had a paper he wanted him to sign; that the company was.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 234, 254 Ill. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-manufacturers-consumers-coal-co-ill-1912.