December 8, 1903, appellee was a coal miner by occupation, and mining coal for appellant in its mine near South McAlester. At 3 o’clock in the morning, while in the act of leaving his work, on his way homeward, going through the entry leading out of the mine, he was thrown with great force forward and down to the ground, and the mine .and entry were immediately filled with blazing gas. For protection therefrom he lay flat, with his face upon the floor of the entry. He was severely burned about his face, neck, ears, hands, and wrists, from which he suffered great pain for a number of weeks. The burning resulted in the drawing up of his fingers and hands, permanently to prevent him from performing any manual labor therewith. The top of one ear was burned off, and the other ear was burned. His nose was badly burned, and likewise his face and neck, whereby he was permanently injured and deprived of thereafter following his business of coal mining, or any other than the lightest sort of manual labor. He brought his action to.recover damages for these injuries, and asked judgment for $25,000. The cause was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of appellee for $12,500. Judgment was rendered thereon. Appeal w'as prayed and granted therefrom, and is now before us for review.
Appellant complains of 27 specific errors committed by the trial court. The first 4 are the usual and formal assignments made in the motion for new trial; the fifth, overruling|'motion for an order requiring plaintiff to reform his complaint by reducing the eight paragraphs to one, “in ordinary and concise language, without repetition of the facts constituting jilaintiff’s cause of action;” sixth, the overruling of the motion for an order *651that plaintiff make his complaint more definite and certain, by-stating the point in the mine at which the alleged explosion-, issued and the proximate cause of the injury; seventh, the-overruling of .motion for an order requiring plaintiff to elect as to whether the alleged injuries were the result of defendant’s-negligence in permitting dry and inflammable coal dust to; accumulate, or in allowing explosive gas, in dangerous amount,, to accumulate in the mine; eighth, the overruling of defendant’s-motion for new trial because of absence of witnesses; the ninth* is embraced in the sixth assignment; tenth, in permitting the-plaintiff, Walter Williams, to testify that the flame which, burned him “seemed to come right up '-the slope;” eleventh,, permitting witness Vaught to give expert evidence as to the-c'apability of a machine by which the watering of the mine w as-done; twelfth, permitting said Vaught to testify, to the best of his belief, the direction of the wind of the explosion; thirteenth,, the asking of a witness “whether the soot would have been on* the track if the explosion had not come over there;” fourteenth,, the refusal of the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict-for defendant; the fifteenth to the eighteenth, inclusive, relate-to the instructions given the jury by the court; the nineteenth* to the twenty-sixth, inclusive, relate to the refusal of the court-to give instructions asked by the defendant; and the twenty-seventh, the denial of the motion for new trial. It is wholly unnecessary, in the disposal of this case, to take up the assignments of error severalty, as they may be grouped into those which relate to the alleged defects in the pleading, the motion* for continuance, the rulings of the court upon the admission and exclusion of evidence, the giving of instructions to the jury and refusing to instruct it, and the alleged excessive damages; given by the jury and confirmed by the court's judgment thereon:
The criticism of the complaint by appellant, and its-strenuous effort, by divers motions, to haye it conform to its *652views of correct pleading, is not without ground. The general principles of pleading must necessarily be the same undei •every rational system of jurisprudence. They are the precise statements of the cause for the relief asked by the plaintiff on the one side, and the like denial, either negative or affirmative, of such cause by the other side, and They must be sufficient, in the absence of such denial, to entitle the plaintiff to the relief asked, without evidence .in their support. Under the rule of ■common-law pleading they were required to be in proper and legal form. Hale, in his History of the Common Law, says: ■“It is admirably calculated for anatyzing a cause, and extracting, like the roots of an equation, the true points in dispute, and referring them, with all imaginable simplicity, to the court or jury.” Sir William Jones, the scholar, philosopher, and lawyer, •observed that “our rules of special pleading are founded on •exquisite logic.” The great Lord Mansfield declared that ■“the substantial rules'of pleading are founded in strong sense, .and in the strongest and closest logic, and so appear, when well understood and explained, though, by being misunderstood .and misapplied, they are often made use of as instruments of chicane.” 1 Burrows, 319. These expressions of opinion as to •correct pleading are as applicable in this jurisdiction as they were a century and a half ago under the common law. Our statute provides that “the pleadings are the written statements, by the parties, of the facts constituting their respective claims and defenses. * * * The complaint must contain a statement, in ordinary and concise language, without repetition -of the facts constituting the plaintiff's cause of action. * * * ■Where the complaint contains more than one cause- of action, •each shall be distinctly stated in- a separate paragraph and numbered.” Sections 3225, 3231, 3233, Carter's Ind. Ter. Ann. St. 1899. The complaint in question contained eight so-called paragraphs, and were so named and numbered by the plaintiff, when it is manifest that the statements therein con-*653ained are mere parts of one cause-of action — the alleged negligence of the defendant in the operation of its mine, which caused ilaintiff to receive the injuries of which he complains. However, his was a mere error as to form, and the court could properly have' sustained defendant’s motion to reform his complaint; but its-■efusal was not- more than harmless error. 'If the entire com-fiaint stated a cause of action, in language and construction that me of ordinary intelligence would be able to understand, it vould not be fatally defective.
The refusal of the court to require the complaint to be-nade more definite and certain, by stating the point in de-endant’s mine at which the explosion originated and the-iroximate cause of the injury, presents a more serious question. Towever, upon the' argument made by appellant as to this sixth assignment of error, a demurrer was the proper mode of ittack upon this alleged defect in the pleading. _ If he is correct hat the complaint must specifically set forth a state of facts-howing the proximate cause, for the reason that there cannot )e a recovery in the absence of the allegation of acts of neg-igence upon the part of defendant that clearly show they were-he proximate cause of the injury, and if the case be one that it sannot be certainly known, “then it is necessary that the-somplaint develop some theory as to how the fire was caused tnd furnish proof to support that theory” — citing Hawes vs barren (C. C.) 119 Fed. 978. Conceding that the view of ippellant, supported by the authority cited, is correct, does not ;he complaint state facts sufficient to show, prima facie, that he injury was caused by an explosion of gas, and, further, that :uch explosion, prima facie, in a coal mine, in view of the statute md, in fact, from common knowledge, was the result of negligence m part of the mine owner and operator, and therefore, necessarily, the proximate cause of the injury?
The complaint states: “That while plaintiff was in his ■egular course of employment a terrific explosion occurred in *654«aid mine, and poisonous gas, -smoke, coal dust, and fire rushed up the slope of said mine, reaching the point where plaintiff was, on the main slope, in said mine, at a point between the •seventh east entry and the sixth east entry "in said mine, and ■on the main slope, seriously and permanently burning and ■otherwise injuring plaintiff. That plaintiff does not know at what point on the main slope in said mine said explosion first . began and occurred, but plaintiff alleges that the explosion was of both coal dust and standing gas that defendant had ■carelessly and negligently permitted to accumulate on the said slope and in the working places in the said mine. Plaintiff •says that he is unable to state how the said coal dust or gas, or either or both of them, first became ignited, causing the said explosion. * - * * That said mine was being operated at a depth of more than 100 feet beneath the surface, and that defendant carelessly and negligently permitted poisonous, noxious, and inflammable gas to collect and stand at the working "places in said mine in great and dangerous quantities, and es-jiecially in the said air course. That it negligently and carelessly allowed great quantities of inflammable coal dust to .accumulate on the main slope in said entry, and the seventh east entry, and at and near the face of the main slope, which said coal dust became ignited, in some manner to the plaintiff unknown, causing plaintiff to receive the said injuries. That defendant carelessly and negligently failed to remove the inflammable coal dust that it had permitted to accumulate on said main slope, in the seventh east entry, at the face of the main slope, or. to properly dampen or wet the same; so as to make it safe, and to prevent explosion. That it allowed, carelessly and negligently, a. large body of gas to accumulate and stand in the seventh east air course, the said quantity being dangerous, and carelessly and negligently failed to provide, by means of battice or other proper appliance, a means of forcing n sufficient quantity of fresh, pure air, so as to dilute, render *655harmless, and expel therefrom the inflammable gas it had thus permitted to accumulate. That defendant knew, or by use of reasonable and ordinary care might have known, that a large quantity of inflammable and explosive gas had accumulated in the seventh east air course, and further knew, or might have known by use of ordinary and reasonable care, that a large and dangerous quantity of inflammable coal dust had accumulated at the face and along the main slope of said mine. That defendant carelessly and negligently failed, by the use of proper machinery and appliances, and by a proper system and method of conducting pure air, to force enough of it to t.he face of each working place therein as to expel therefrom, dilute, and make harmless the said poisonous, noxious, and. inflammable gas therein accumulated as aforesaid. That by reason of said acts of carelessness and negligence on part of defendant, and without fault on part of plaintiff, the said coal dust became ignited at some point along said slope, to said'plaintiff unknown, a large sheet of flame, followed by after damp and other poisonous fumes, swept over and upon the place aforesaid where plaintiff was, seriously and permanently injuring him, almost suffocating him, by means whereof he was seriously and permanently burned about the face, ears, neck, head, arms, and body, and the top of his left ear was burned off,” etc.
It will be observed that by the above concluding clause of the statement an'd charging part of the complaint the language is used: “That by reason of said acts, and without fault on part of plaintiff, the said coal dust became ignited, * * * whereby'he became and was injured,” etc.; which disposes of the entire argument of appellant as to the failure to allege a proximate cause,, and is in harmony with the- case of Matz vs Chicago &. A. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 88 Fed. 772, which he cites and quotes, as follows: “It is observable that the petition does not allege in its conclusion that the injury or death of the party resulted from all the causes of negligence combined, co-acting *656to produce a common result. But it alleges 'that by reason of said negligence/ but by which of them, or whether all of them combined, is not stated.” While this complaint may be subject to the technical objection of repetition, yet, taken as a whole, it makes a clear, connected, concise, and legal statement of a single cause of action, and co nip lies with the requirement of the statute abo-ve quoted. It would not lie vulnerable to general demurrer, and likewise, upon default for want of an answer, would have entitled the plaintiff below to a judgment upon damages to be assessed by a jury. There is no prejudicial error in overruling the motion to make complaint more definite and certain.
The seventh assignment is embraced in the sixth assignment of errors, and what we have above said applies to it; it being a matter of pleading.
The eighth assignment is wholly without merit, being a complaint of the action of the court in overruling appellant's motion for continuance because of the absence of alleged material witnesses, Watkins and Worthen. These persons were not subpoenaed, but plaintiff relied upon their appearance. No reason was shown why their presence could not have been secured by subpoena, and, if present, what they would testify to, or if they could be obtained at a subsequent term of the court, and whether or not the same facts sought to be proved by them could be proved by others.
The ninth assignment of error is determined in the consideration of the sixth assignment.
The tenth assignment is frivolous, being an objection to the testimony of the apjrellee stating when testifying, that “the flame which burned him seemed to come right up the slope. ”
The eleventh assignment, to the permission by the court for the witness Vaught to give expert. testimony as to the capabilities of the machine by which the watering of the mine was done, is not well taken, for the reason that his testimony *657lows that he is a coal miner of 11 years' experience, and had worked in this mine 18 months, and presumptively should know whether a sprinkling machine to keep down dust therein was of sufficient capacity to do it. Furthermore, the witness stated that he saw the machine in operation, and described minutely how it did the watering; hence the jury had the facts, with his opinion, which removed the vice of the testimony, if any existed.
The same answer can be made to the twelfth assignment of error as to the expert testimony of same witness (Vaught) as to his opinion of the direction of the wind produced by the explosion — manifestly immediately in front of the explosive force.'
The thirteenth assignment of error is in the same line with the three preceding, being to the action of the court in asking the witness “if the soot would have been on the track if the explosion had not come over there.”
The second, third, and fourth assignments are passed by appellant without argument, and are the stereotype fo'rm as to the verdict being contrary to the evidence, .not sustained by the evidence, and contrary to the law.
The fourteenth assignment of error- is the refusal of the court to instruct the jury to return á verdict for defendant because of failure of proof of proximate cause, that the proximate cause of the injuries was due to defendant's negligence, and that it appeared from the evidence that plaintiff was fully informed of the conditions under which he worked, and he thereby assumed the risk. An act of Congress entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act for the protection of the lives of the miners in the Indian Territory,' ” approved July 1, 1902 (32 St at. 631, c. 1356), provides in positive terms that “the owners and managers of every coal mine shall furnish their miners with pure air, which shall be forced through such mine by proper machinery to the face of every working place, so as to *658dilute and render harmless, and expel therefrom the noxiousl or poisonous gases, and wherever practicable, the entries, rooms and all openings shall be kept well dampened with water to cause the coal dust to settle, and when not so practicable for this purpose, accumulation of dust shall be taken out of the mine.” It further provides that a violation of this act shall constitute a misdemeanor, and any person convicted shall pay a fine of $500. In view of this statute, the appellant is not in a favorable situation to raise the question of assumed risk or contributory negligence on part of the injured person. Under a similar statute in Illinois, providing that the mouths of all mine shafts shall be protected by specifically described gates, it was held, in Catlett et al vs Young, 143 Ill. 74, 32 N. E. 447, that it was no defense to a failure to furnish such protection to the miner that the miner carelessly and negligently fell down the shaft, for the reason that the act was expressly for the protection of the miner, and therefore the doctrine of contributory negligence and assumed risk did not apply.
The court did not err in refusing appellant's instructions, complained of. in his twenty-second, twenty-third and twenty-fourth assignments of- error, for the reason above given bjr us in regard to the fourteenth assignment, and sustained by the Illinois Supreme Court decision cited. A further reason ma}r be given that the instructions are defective in omitting to state that the burthen -of proving contributory negligence, when alleged as a defense, which was done in this case, is upon the defendant. See Ireland & Seaboard Coasting Co. vs Tolson, 139 U. S. 557, 11 Sup. Ct. 653, 35 L. Ed. 270. A careful examination of the charge given by the court to the jury satisfies us that under the rigid provisions of the act of Congress, requiring the utmost care upon the part of mine owners and operators of mines to guard their employes in the mines from injuries because of dust, bad air, gas, and explosions, and fixing severe penalties for failure of such requirements, it was most *659favorable to the appellant. If the law be as we have herein indicated, und'er this act of Congress, upon the matters therein expressed, then the questions of contributory negligence and assumed risk are eliminated. The act is for the protection of the lives of miners in the Indian Territory, and, in' order to make it effective, it expressly provides that, all mine owners and operators shall provide, under a severe penalty, certain well-defined means for protection, and this necessarily estops the owner and operator from interposing the defense of contributory negligence and assumed risk.
The only questions for the consideration of the jury were whether or not the appellant had complied with the terms of the statute, and, if not, then the measure of plaintiff's damages. They are questions of fact to be determined by the jury. Our attention has not been called, in argument of counsel, to any special disregard by the jury of the evidence thereon. The rule is familiar that the one who alleges error by the trial court has the burthen of establishing it in the court of review. The appellant has failed to bring his appeal within the application of that rule which shows the jury was unwarranted in finding a verdict upon the first above question of fact as to the failure of appellant to operate its mine within the provisions of the statute.
The only other error which we deem necessary to consider is the first one — “that excessive damages appear to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice.'.' At first blush, this error would seem to be well taken. Twelve and a half thousand dollars for the personal injury suffered by this appellee is a fortune to one in his station in life. The annual lowest rate of interest upon it would exceed, in all probability, what he could earn at $3 per day at his work as a coal miner, annually, during the rest of his natural life. He is not totally disabled from earning something toward a livelihood. He is furnished an amount of capital, the production of which will *660yield.him for life an income that would be greater than could be realized by him, under the most reasonably favorable circumstances, from his labor as a coal miner. Under the law, only compensatory damages can be allowed in cases of this sort. Had the case been tried by the court, it is highly probable the finding of damages would have been less. But under the law the allowance of damages must be left to the judgment of 12 men. The uniform rule governing the court in regard to a finding thus made is that the verdict will not be disturbed upon the sole ground of being excessive,;but it must be so excessive as convinces the mind of the court that it could only have been the result of passion or prejudice of the jury. There is not a thing on the face of this record calculated to arouse such prejudice or passion. The appellant was given a fair trial in every particular, as expressed in the foregoing opiniQn, afteNa painstaking reading and consideration of it. The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of The City of Panama vs John S. Phelps, 101 U. S. 453, 25 L. Ed. 1061, says: “Damages in such a case must depend very much upon the facts and circumstances proved at thejtrial. When suit is brought by parties for personal injuries, there cannot be any fixed measure of compensation for the pain and anguish of bodjr and mind, nor for the permanent injury for health and constitution; but the result must be left to turn mainly upon the good sense and deliberate judgment of the tribunal set by law to ascertain what is a just compensation for the injuries inflicted.” The appellee was not only entitled to recover for his permanent disabilüy and inability to make a living, but the jury, under the law and the instructions given, that in estimating the damages he should recover for the pain and suffering he endured, and the humiliation and embarrassment of being handicapped thi'ough life by the distorted and disfigured features and body,, produced by the willful negligence of appellant, so found by its verdict. Therefore we cannot say that the ground alleged *661for a reversal in the first assignment should be sustained.
The judgment is affirmed.
Gill, C. J., and TowNSEnd, J., concur. Clayton, J., not participating.