Wyoming Coal Mining Co. v. Stanko

135 P. 1090, 22 Wyo. 110, 1913 Wyo. LEXIS 40
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1913
DocketNo. 727
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 P. 1090 (Wyoming Coal Mining Co. v. Stanko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyoming Coal Mining Co. v. Stanko, 135 P. 1090, 22 Wyo. 110, 1913 Wyo. LEXIS 40 (Wyo. 1913).

Opinions

Beard, Justice.

This was an action brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligence of plaintiff in error. The case was tried to a jury in the District Court of Sheridan county and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff below for $3,200. Seeking a reversal of that judgment defendant below brings the case here on error.

The plaintiff in his petition, after alleging that defendant was operating a coal mine, that he was employed therein as a driver, and the duty of defendant to furnish and keep in repair reasonably safe cars and appliances for the use of plaintiff, alleged, “That on or about January 25, 1910, while plaintiff was so employed as aforesaid by the defendant company in its said mine, and while plaintiff was conveying [121]*121two loaded coal cars in the usual and regular manner from one place in the mine to another place therein, in the course of his said employment, it became necessary for the plaintiff to set the brhkes upon said cars. That the situation was such that the plaintiff was required,in order to control the said coal cars, to pass ahead of the rear car and to set the brake upon the front car, which plaintiff attempted to do, and in attempting to set the brake upon the said front car, in the course of his employment aforesaid, and while this plaintiff was attempting to set the said brake upon the front car, the said brake broke by reason of being in disrepair, and being in an unsafe and dangerous condition, and threw this plaintiff between the cars undereath the wheels of the rear car, which ran over plaintiff’s left arm, breaking, bruising, crushing and shattering his arm so that it became necessary to have said arm amputated between the elbow and the shoulder, totally and permanently disabling this plaintiff, and bruising and injuring the body of this plaintiff, by reason of which said injuries, the plaintiff suffered great pain,” etc. “That plaintiff had no knowledge of the defective condition of the said brake, car brakes or cars or conditions causing said injury and was without fault or negligence on his part causing or contributing to said injury. That the injuries to the plaintiff as aforesaid were caused by the negligence and carelessness of the defendant company, in that the defendant company did not furnish or provide the said plaintiff with safe machinery and appliances with which to work, and did not repair the brake and appliances upon said coal cars, with which this plaintiff was required to work, and did not exercise reasonable care in the furnishing of said coal cars and appliances to this plaintiff, and that if the said defendant company had exercised due care and diligence in the inspection and repair of said cars, that the same would have been in .safe condition for this plaintiff to have used, and by reason of the said negligence and carelessness of the said defendant company in the matters aforesaid, the plaintiff was injured as aforesaid; that at the time of furnishing the said coal cars to [122]*122plaintiff for use in said mine, the said defendant knew or by the exercise of proper care would have known that such coal cars and the brakes thereon were in disrepair and dangerous and unsafe. That immediately before and at the time of receiving the said injuries as aforesaid, as herein before set forth, this plaintiff was a robust, strong, and healthy young man, twenty years of age, and that he was earning at said time $88.00 per month, but by reason of said injuries, he has been totallyr and permanently disabled and has been required to expend money for surgical attendance, all to his damage in the sum of-$40,000.”

The answer of defendant admitted that it was a corporation engaged in the coal mining business; that it used railroads and coal cars for the purpose of transporting coal from where it was mined to the surface of the ground; that plaintiff was in the employ of defendant on or about January 25, 1910, and that while so employed and working for defendant he met with an accident and received some, injury; and denied the other allegations of the petition. Alleged that the injury to plaintiff, on which the action was based, was due solely and alone to the negligence and want of proper care on the part of plaintiff and was not caused or contributed to by the defendant. “That said plaintiff had full, actual, complete personal notice and knowledge of the condition of defendant’s said mine, of its mine cars, the manner in which the same were kept and operated by defendant, the general method and manner in which defendant conducted its said business and of all dangers incident to and connected with .said business, including the danger of the accident and injury to plaintiff referred to in his petition herein, and with such knowledge, on his part, said plaintiff assumed all risk of accident and injury to himself by reason of his said employment including the risk and danger of the accident and injury to him, as set forth in his petition herein.” •

The reply denied the new matters set up in the answer.

The plaintiff’s account of the accident as detailed in his testimony is, in brief, that he had been working for the [123]*123defendant at the mines for about a year and a half and at the mine where he was injured for six months. That at the time he was injured and for about two weeks prior thereto he was employed as a regular driver in the ninth west entry in the mine, hauling empty coal cars from the parting on the main slope to room thirty-four and hauling the loaded cars from the room to the parting, a distance of about a quarter of a mile, using a horse for that purpose, and that he took two cars at each trip. That prior to this time he had been helping as an extra driver at different times. That part of the track from the room to the parting was down grade rendering it necessary to use the'brakes on the loaded cars to regulate their speed. That he worked eight hours a day and made a trip about every twenty or twenty-five minutes. That on the day he was injured he started with two loaded cars from the room to the parting, riding on the bumper of the rear car, and when he tried, to set the brake on that car he could not set it “because that lever was a bad one and wouldn't feed into the ratchet.” That the cars commenced to run fast and he jumped off and ran along side the cars to the front car and tried to set the brake on it when something gave way in the brake and he fell between the cars and the rear one ran over his arm causing the injury. It appears from the testimony of other witnesses for plaintiff, who were also drivers in the mine, that the cars were derailed some distance further on toward the parting; that a bolt in the brake of the front car was missing and that the rear car was marked “shop” and the blocks were worn down. That cars so marked were out of repair and should be sent to the shop for repairs. As one of plaintiff’s' witnesses'put it, “That means they had to take that car out and fix it.” There was testimony on part of plaintiff that cars marked “shop” were frequently sent into the mine and used by the drivers unless they themselves saw something out of repair on such cars. As to the method of inspection of cars, the instructions given' to drivers with reference to examining cars before using them and what they were to do with cars marked “shop,” the evidence is conflicting.

[124]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Matney v. Webster
808 P.2d 212 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1991)
Davis v. Consolidated Oil & Gas, Inc.
802 P.2d 840 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1990)
Garland v. Samson
237 F. 31 (Eighth Circuit, 1916)
Wyoming Coal Mining Co. v. Stanko
135 P. 1090 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 1090, 22 Wyo. 110, 1913 Wyo. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyoming-coal-mining-co-v-stanko-wyo-1913.