Action for damages for injury'to plaintiff caused by rock and dirt falling from the roof of a mine while plaintiff was at work therein. Judgment for plaintiff for $200' and defendant has appealed.
Defendant is the owner of a mine near Neck City in Jasper county in which plaintiff was employed and at work at the time of the alleged injury. All the men in the mine were under a ground foreman and he directed and controlled all the work. Plaintiff’s usual duties were to run a machine used in drilling holes for blasting but he was also required to do whatever he was told to do by the ground foreman. On the 12th of March, 1910, plaintiff was directed to assist in timbering a reach in a drift of this mine and while he was thus engaged rock and dirt fell from the roof of the drift, struck and injured him. The ground of negligence upon which plaintiff’s action is based is a failure of defendant to perform its duty to him in not furnishing him a reasonably safe place to work. The specific 'negligence in that regard is alleged to be a failure to inspect and trim the roof of the drift and pull down the loose stuff, rocks and boulders therefrom.
Appellant’s counsel with commendable frankness concedes the well settled rule of law that it was the ¡duty of defendant to use ordinary care to furnish plaintiff a reasonably safe place in which to work and that the instructions to the jury in this case fairly submitted the issue as to whether or not that duty was properly performed, but contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict'and insists that the demurrer to the testimony should have been sustained, and this is the. only question for our determination. The rule of law by which we are to be guided in determining this question is also well settled. We cannot weigh the testimony for that duty is placed upon the jury alone, but we must give the plaintiff the benefit of the testimony most
If when the testimony is considered in the light of the above rule it is found that a case is made, or if it appear that reasonable minds might differ as to the effect of the evidence, the question is one for the jury. [Eckhard v. Transit Co., 190 Mo. 593, 611, 89 S. W. 602; Powers v. Transit Co., 202 Mo. 267, 280, 100 S. W. 655; Williamson v. Transit Co., 202 Mo 345, 376, 100 S. W. 1072.]
Keeping these rules of law in mind and looking to the testimony we find the following state of facts: This mine had several drifts. These were 12 to 14 feet wide and 12 to 14 feet high. The composition in which the mineral was found was not hard but the mining was done- by boring holes therein with a drill machine and blasting. The roof of the drift was of a soap-stone and mendic formation and liable to loosen at any time, then take weight, as the witnesses describe it, and fiñally fall of its own weight. When a drift had been run back for 12 or 14 feet timbers were then placed in it to brace the roof and prevent caving. Until the timbering was done and the drift made secure against the possibility of caving it was the custom to inspect and trim the roof at intervals and take down the loose stuff before it would gather enough weight to fall, and in this way the safety of the drift for the workmen was maintained until the timbering was done. The inspection was usually done by prodding the roof with some metallic tool and its condition wa,s determined by the sound. If it gave a dead sound it was safe and if it gave a drummy sound, that indicated looseness and it was then the duty of the trimmer to take down the loose material. There were two men in this mine that did all the inspecting and trim
Was there sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury? To hold a master liable, the evidence must show that the defect complained of was known to the master or by the use of ordinary care could have been known in time to have removed or remedied it before the injury. [Wojtylak v. Coal Co., 188 Mo. 260, 87 S. W. 506; Abbott v. Mining Co., 112 Mo. App. 550, 8 S. W. 110; Clonts v. Laclede Gas Light Co., 144 Mo. App. 582, 589, 129 S. W. 238.]
The defendant in this case seems to have realized that it was its duty to use some care to protect its workmen from injury for it had a ground boss overseeing the entire work and had placed two men at his disposal who at his bidding were required to inspect