Winco Block Coal Co. v. Stewart

125 S.W.2d 738, 277 Ky. 125, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 606
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 738 (Winco Block Coal Co. v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winco Block Coal Co. v. Stewart, 125 S.W.2d 738, 277 Ky. 125, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 606 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This action was brought September 26, 1936, in the Martin circuit court by the appellee, Robert Stewart, as Inspector of Scales' and Weights, for recovery of damages against the appellants, Winco Block Coal Company .and its superintendent, Charles Lambert, allegedly sustained by him as the result of appellants’ violation of the provisions of the penal statute, Section 2739-48, Kentucky Statutes (Baldwin’s 1936 .Revision), forbidding the company or its agents from hindering or preventing him in the proper performance of his official duties as check weighman for the coal loaders at the appellants ’ mine, by and for whom he was elected under and pursuant to the provision and authority of the statute, supra.

Upon submission of the cause to the jury upon the evidence and the instructions of the court, it returned a verdict awarding recovery of damages, in the sum of $800, to the plaintiff, on which judgment was entered.

Appellants appeal, seeking a reversal of this judgment on various grounds of error assigned, but principally upon the one ground that the court erred in refusing to give the peremptory instruction they moved for at the conclusion of the introduction of evidence for plaintiff and renewed at the conclusion of all the evidence.

*126 The appellee, by his petition filed in this action, alleges that the defendant coal company, during the years 1935 and 1936, was operating a coal mine at Oppy, Martin county, Kentucky, and that Charles Lambert, named in the petition as co-defendant with the coal company, was the superintendent of said mine during said years; further, that on June 30, 1935, he was, in accordance with the provisions of Section 2739-48, Kentucky Statutes, duly elected and designated as check weigh-man by the miners and coal loaders employed at said mine for a period of one year and that upon his election being duly certified to the Martin county court, he ¡was by its order, duly entered of record as required, i appointed and approved by the court as said check weighman for the miners of the Union Local No. 6194, maintained at the defendant coal company’s mine, for the period of one year; also, that by reason of his having been elected and appointed as check weighman at the mine in the manner provided by the statute, he was, as the coal loaders’ chosen check weighman, thereby given and vested with the right of free access to the company’s mine scales while same were in operation or being tested and, as was also expressly provided by the statute, that the mine operator and any of its agents were prohibited, under penalty of fine, from preventing or hindering him in the proper performance of his duties as such elected and serving official.

Further, he alleged that on October 15, 1935, following his election and appointment in June as check weighman at the defendant coal company’s mine, the appellants, while he was attempting to perform the duties of check weighman, came to the place at the mine where he was working and with force and arms, and in a boisterous and threatening manner, did unlawfully molest and drive him from his work and told him not to come upon their premises again, under threat of death or great bodily harm; that he at the time protested their preventing him from working, and requested that he be permitted to perform his duties of check weigh-man, but was by the defendant Lambert, in violation of the statutes, refused the opportunity to do his work and that, after having been thus threatened and driven from the mine, he was afraid, lest he would be killed, to again go back to reclaim his job and perform its duties during the remainder of the year for which appointed; that at ¡the time he was driven from his work, he was earning *127 from $6.50 to $7.50 a day, (computed upon the basis of. a commission, paid out of the miner’s wage, of l%c per ton of coal, check weighed by him) and that by reason of the defendants’ wrongful acts in refusing to permit and in hindering him from carrying out his contract of employment made with the miners, to check weigh the coal they mined, that he was deprived of the wages he would have earned, at the rate and average amount per day as stated, had he not been unlawfully prevented by appellants from serving for the remainder of his year’s term of some nine months, and because of which he alleged that he had been damaged in the sum of $1,000, for the recovery of which he sued and prayed judgment against the defendants, the Wineo.Block Coal Company and Charles Lambert, with interest and costs.

Defendants responded with a joint and separate answer of three paragraphs, by the first of which the material allegations of the petition were denied; by the second they affirmatively pleaded that following the election and appointment of the plaintiff as check weigh-man in June, 1935, as alleged in the petition, he was in August next following so badly injured in a railroad accident that he was thereby prevented from performing the duties of his check weighman’s position during the period of his convalescence of some two months, and that by reason of such disability, rendering him for the time unable to continue at his work, the miners had elected, as his successor to the position, Joe Johnson, also a fellow employee, who was thereupon duly approved and appointed by the county court as such for the remainder of the term of one year; that later, on October 15, 1935, when the plaintiff, Albert Stewart, having recovered from his injury, returned to the mine, where .he sought to resume his duties as check weigh-man, he was prevented from so doing by the defendant, Lambert, the mine superintendent, for the reason, as he told him, that Joe Johnson had, during his illness, been elected by the miners to succeed him as their check weighman at the mines and was then holding such position; that thereupon confusion arose among the miners as to which of the two was then entitled to serve for the remainder of the term as check weighman at the mine, and a meeting of the miners was called for settling the controversy, at which they by their votes had designated and elected, as their check weighman, Joe Johnson to complete the year for which he had been *128 originally appointed to serve, upon the happening of plaintiff’s accident and injury in August.

By the third paragraph, appellants stated that plaintiff had been paid for the services rendered by him following his election in June up to the time he became disqualified for the job by injury, in August, when Joe Johnson had been elected and appointed to succeed him as check weighman, and that defendants had taken no part in the election of Johnson, as the election of check weighman for the coal loaders was a matter resting entirely in the miners’ hands for determination.

A reply traversed the allegations of the answer.

• The defendants were then permitted to file an amended answer, whereby they alleged that the defendant company was and is a member of the operators association of Williamson Field and operating coal property within the territory embraced in District No. 17, United Mine Workers of America, and that plaintiff was a member of District No. 17, United Mine Workers; that on October 1, 1935, the operators’ association, consisting of coal operators, mining coal properties within the territory embraced in District No.

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Related

Williams v. United Mine Workers of America
172 S.W.2d 202 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 738, 277 Ky. 125, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winco-block-coal-co-v-stewart-kyctapphigh-1939.