Darby Coal Mining Co. v. Shoop

Cabdwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error is a corporation engaged in the mining of coal in Lee county, Virginia, and while so engaged it had in its employment, as a hostler, or helper, on coal mining machines, defendant in error, W. H. Shoop, whose duty it was, among others, to help take coal mining machines into the working rooms of the mine, help unload same from the trucks thereunder, help undercut the coal with the machine, remove and throw back the coal dust, and help reload the machine on to the trucks, and to place the tools thereupon and remove same from the working room. While so engaged in reloading one of said machines upon its trucks, and placing tools thereupon in a room, or neck of a room with one Garrett Osborne, the machine runner and a fellow-workman of Shoop, a large piece of slate, about *854seven feet wide, nine feet long and six inches thick, fell from the roof of the room or neck on the machine and on Osborne and Shoop whereby each of them were hurt, Shoop sustaining certain injuries to his hip and hand, as well as other minor injuries. To recover damages for his injuries, Shoop brought this action against plaintiff in error and at a trial of the cause the jury returned a verdict for $3,000, in favor of Shoop, which verdict the court refused to set aside and entered judgment thereon, to which judgment plaintiff in error was awarded this writ of error.

For convenience defendant in error will be spoken of in this opinion as plaintiff, and plaintiff in error as defendant.

The assignments of error relied on for a reversal of the judgment complained of are three—First, the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict as' contrary to the law and the evidence; Second, the admission of certain evidence for the plaintiff over the objection of the defendant; and, Third, the giving and refusing of certain instructions to the jury.

Plaintiff bases the liability of the defendant to bim in this action upon the ground that the place in which he was sent to work was in an unsafe and dangerous condition, of which the defendant, through its’mine foreman, had knowledge, and he, the plaintiff, was ignorant; while the defendant defends the action upon the grounds, (1) that it was not guilty of negligence; (2) that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence; and (3) that he assumed the risk of the danger of his employment.

It appears that while the plaintiff, twenty-nine years of age, was a miner of thirteen years experience, he had been in the employ of the defendant but three days when the accident to him of which he complains happened. The coal cutting machines in use by the defendant, and in *855the operation of which plaintiff was put to work as a helper, are operated by two men, one of whom is called the machine runner and who has charge of the work, and with him is a helper or hostler. One Mart Merritt was the defendant’s machine foreman, and had general charge of all machine crews, directing them where to work, etc., and one John Edwards was the defendant’s general mine foreman.

On the morning of the third day of plaintiff’s employment, he was directed to hostle for Osborne, a machine runner, who had been ordered" by Merritt to take his machine to a certain place in the mine, known as second right entry off of third face heading, and “cut all the coal of John Oonkens that was ready for icutting.” Conken was a contractor who had a number of men working for him, and had charge of a number of working places on that entry. When plaintiff and Osborne arrived at Conken’s place with the machine, they found Conken there, and Osborne inquired of him vhat places he had ready for cutting. He told Osborne and plaintiff that second roadway or neck of No. 3 room was ready, and that by the time they finished that place he would have two more places ready for them.

It appears that the regular manner of operating the rooms in the mine was to drive two parallel roadways, or necks, to a distance of from 30 to 31 feet from the entry so as to leave a pillar of coal 21 feet in length after cutting a “break-through” between the two necks, which “break-throughs” were ordinarily driven from both sides at the same time, and after the necks had been driven the necessary distance in the face, the machine would make “cross-cuts” for5 the “break-throughs.” Before taking the machine into this second roadway or neck, Osborne went in, and Conken went into the adjoining neck (first roadway), and by sounding back and *856forth to each other through the intervening pillar of coal and communicating with each other through the plaintiff, who remained out on the entry, they ascertained that the neck would have to he driven some distance further in the face before it would be far enough to catch the “break-through” which had already been started from the first roadway. Osborne, testifying for plaintiff, states that he found the place cleaned up and ready for the cut, “as good as the average clean-up;” that while he was in the neck he examined the roof, and found some draw slate some distance back from the face which sounded “drummy” and seemed to be a little loose, but he concluded that there was no immediate danger of its falling, being led to this conclusion by the presumption that the contractor in charge of the room would have taken it down if it could have been gotten down. Up next to the face of the coal, and for a distance of about seven feet back from the face, Osborne found the roof to be solid sandstone, and he and plaintiff took the machine in, and, before making the cut, plaintiff examined the roof up next to the face of the coal and entirely over the space necessary to be occupied by him while the machine was in actual operation, and found it solid sandstone, but did not inspect the roof further back towards the entry. As already stated, they made the cut, loaded the machine back on the trucks and were loading up their tools when the slate fell on them, causing the injury complained of in this action. At the moment the slate fell both men were at or about the point where the cutter head part of the machine joins the motor part, or about the middle of.the trucks, which point was from 20 to 23 feet back from the face of the coal, depending upon the distance the trucks rolled back towards the entry when the machine was loaded. It further appears that in loading the machine back on the trucks it was necessary *857for plaintiff to place a jackprop at a point near the front end of tlie trucks, a distance of from twelve to fourteen feet from the face, and it is the contention of the defendant that a part of the slate which fell must have fallen from this point, but this contention cannot be considered since Osborne, testifying for the plaintiff, stated that no slate could have fallen from the point where the jack-prop was set.

Until about three or four days prior to the accident, this part of the mine was being worked by ¥m. Wallen, who was also a contractor with a number of men working for him, and about a week or ten days prior to the accident and when Wallen was loading out the last cut made in this neck, he examined the roof and found it to be bad, and on account of this fact and the further fact that the roadway was steep, and presuming, without measurement, that the place had been driven in far enough, he decided to abandon the neck and drive the “breakthrough” entirely from the first roadway, instead of driving it partly from the second roadway, as would have been done ordinarily. Wallen, as it appears, reported the facts, including the condition of the roof, to Edwards, the mine foreman, who consented to the change in the plan of working the room, and Wallen left about a mine carload of coal remaining in the neck when he loaded out the last cut, to warn the machine men that the place had been abandoned, but neither Wallen nor Edwards said anything about the place to Conken when the work was turned over to him, nor to anyone else, so far as the evidence discloses.

On the morning of the accident to plaintiff, one Frank Hickson, a “back-hand” working under Conken, went into the mine before Conken, and finding the pile of coal in the neck loaded it up in a car and pushed it out, and reported the same to Conken before the plaintiff and *858Osborne arrived with the cutting machine shortly after-wards, when the conversation between them and Conken, already related, took place.

The foregoing are the salient facts in the case appearing from the evidence considered as upon a demurrer thereto, and from these facts it is readily to be observed that the liability, if any, of the defendant to the plaintiff for damages in this action has to be based upon the ground that the place in which the plaintiff was sent to work was in an unsafe and dangerous condition; that the defendant, through its mine foreman, Edwards, had actual knowledge of the danger; that the plaintiff was ignorant of the danger, and was without fault in not discovering it; that the defendant negligently failed to warn the plaintiff of the danger, or of the change in its plans with reference to the working of the place in which plaintiff was directed to work; and that such failure was the proximate cause of the injuries to plaintiff.

On the other hand, it is insisted by the defendant that, even if it was guilty of negligence in failing to exercise ordinary care to provide and maintain a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff to do the work of his employment, he was guilty of contributory negligence in failing to exercise due care for his own safety, and that by reason of his failure to exercise such care he is without the right of recovery of damages for his injuries in this action.

These being the issues of fact presented by the evidence, we cannot say as a matter of law,-that the injuries complained of were not more naturally to be attributed to the negligence of the defendant than to any other cause, and, therefore, it only remains to be determined whether or not those issues have been, by the trial court’s rulings in the admission or rejection of evidence, and in giving or refusing instructions, fairly submitted to the consideration of the jury.

*859At the trial the court gave four instructions to the jury at the instance of the plaintiff, numbered 1, 2, 4 and 5; two of the court’s own motion, marked respectively “A” and “B”; and three of the instructions asked by the defendant, numbered 4, 5 and 11, (all of which instructions are hereinbefore set out), but refused.to give instructions Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10, asked by the defendant. To the giving of plaintiff’s instructions Nos. 1, 2, 4 and 5, the court’s mstructions “A” and “B”, and the refusal of defendant’s instructions Nos. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7,, 8, 9 and 10, the defendant duly excepted, and these several rulings of the court are assigned as error.

“Whether or not a master has discharged his duty of exercising ordinary care to maintain a reasonably safe place in which his servant is to work, and if not whether his neglect is the proximate cause of the injury to his servant, and whether the servant has been guilty of contributory negligence, are questions for the jury, whose verdict will not be disturbed unless plainly wrong.” Black v. Va. P. Cement Co., 106 Va. 121, 55 S. E. 587, and authorities cited.

In the report of the case above cited, 104 Va. 450, 51 S. E. 831, the opinion by Keith, P., says: “It is true that a workman or servant on entering into an employment, by implication agrees that he will undertake the ordinary risks incident to the service in which he is to be engaged. But it is also true that a servant does not assume any risk which may be obviated by the exercise of reasonable care on the master’s part. Labatt on M. & S., secs. 1 and 2.

“Negligence, in a legal sense, is a ‘failure to observe for the protection of the interests of another person that degree of care, precaution and vigilance which the circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers injury.’ Cooley on Torts, p. 630.

*860“Any failure upon the part of the master to observe for the protection of his servant that reasonable degree of care Avhich the circumstances of the particular case demand is actionable negligence, and is not within the influence of the doctrine of assumed risks. ’ ’

While the defendant in the case in judgment assigns as error the giving of plaintiff’s instructions Nos. 1, 2, 4 and 5, and the court’s oAvn instructions “A” and “B”, specific objection is only urged against instructions Nos. l.and 2 and instructions “A” and “B”; it being claimed that these instructions are misleading and incomplete, in that they ignore the duty of the plaintiff to have made an inspection of the roof of the mine Avhere he Avas directed to work, or else be bound by Osborne’s inspection. We do not so interpret those instructions when the instructions given by the court are read as a whole, which presumably the jury did; and not only so, but it is to be observed that instruction “A” given by the court plainly told the jury, in a manner that they could not have misunderstood it, that if they believed that it was plaintiff’s duty to have inspected the roof of the room in which he was sent to work, and that such inspection disclosed, or if made would have disclosed, the danger, but that he failed to make such inspection, and that such fault Avas the proximate cause of his injury, he was guilty of contributory negligence, and could not recover. We do not think that, the jury could have been misled by the instructions on the question whether or not it was plaintiff’s duty to make inspection of the place in which he Avas put to work, and if it was his duty under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence to have made such inspection ■ and he failed to make it, it was immaterial whether he relied upon some one else to make it or not, the jury being told in the instructions that if he failed to perforin his duty in this respect he was guilty of contributory negligence.

*861Defendant makes objection to plaintiff’s instruction No. 4 solely on the ground that it ignores defendant’s theory that it had the right to abandon places in its mines which it had completed according to its plan of work, and was no longer required to keep them in a safe condition.

It is not questioned that defendant “had the right to abandon places in its mine which it had completed according to its plan of work, ’ ’ but the question presented by the evidence was, if the room into which plaintiff was directed to work had, in fact, been abandoned, there being no sufficient visible indications of its abandonment, whether or not it was the duty of the defendant to use reasonable care for the protection of its servants who were sent there to work. In other words, if the room in question had been, in fact, abandoned and there were no visible indications of its abandonment, was if or not the duty of the defendant to give notice and warning to all of its servants who, having no knowledge of the changed plans, would be likely to be led into the room in the performance of their duties?

The instruction, No. 4, was given in the alternative, telling the jury that it was the defendant’s duty to use reasonable care to see that the slate overhanging the roof of the room in question was secured or taken down, or to warn its servants of the danger; and the instruction also submitted to the jury the question whether or not the plaintiff and Osborne went into this room to work in the course of the performance of the duties of their employment. The evidence in the case tended to prove a peculiar situation in the room in which plaintiff was sent to work and where he was injured, and we are of opinion that this instruction was not only proper, but "necessary to guide the jury in the consideration of this evidence. It was for the jury to say whether or not the defendant *862could have, by the exercise of reasonable or ordinary care, known of the danger to which the plaintiff was subjected at the time and place where and when he was injured, and to find, if the defendant could have known of the danger by such care, that it knew of the danger.

It was also for the jury to determine whether or not the negligence of the defendant was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, and whether or not he was guilty of contributory negligence. These questions of fact were, by the instructions given by the trial court, fully and fairly submitted to the jury, and as favorably to the defendant as it could reasonably have asked; therefore, we are of opinion that there was no error in the instructions given, or in refusing further instructions in the case.

The remaining question in the case is whether or not it was reversible error of the trial court in permitting cértain evidence of the plaintiff’s family dependent upon him for support to be introduced.

This evidence was given by plaintiff himself on examination as a witness in his own behalf. He was asked: “What is your age, Mr. Shoop? • A. Twenty-nine. Q. Are you married? A. Yes. Q. Have you a family? A. Yes, sir. Q. How many children have you? A. Haven’t any child with me. My father has one. Just one living. Q. What is its age? A. Its age is five years. ’ ’

Exception was not taken to the question which brought the answer from the plaintiff that he was married, but to the evidence given by him that he had a child which was living with his father. Defendant in asking that the verdict of the jury be set aside, made no charge or suggestion that the damages assessed in favor of the plaintiff were” excessive.

While the authorities condemn the practice in actions for personal injuries of permitting evidence of the plain*863tiff’s family dependent upon him for support to be introduced, and hold that such evidence is not admissible, the latest expression by this court on that subject being in Simmons v. Southern Ry Co., 105 Va. 651, 55 S. E. 459, we do not think that the evidence in question here is of such character and importance as to bring it within the letter or spirit of the rule sanctioned in the case just referred to, for it does not seem reasonable to infer or even to suppose that the jury could have been influenced in .assessing damages to the plaintiff for his injuries by the mere fact that he testified, “Haven’t any child with me. My father has one. Just one living.” The fact does not appear in the evidence, but it is a reasonable inference to be drawn from the statements made by the plaintiff, that his only child is living permanently with the plaintiff’s father, and had been taken by the latter to care for and raise. The evidence in the case shows very clearly that the injuries of which plaintiff complains are not only serious in their nature, but of a permanent character, and such as will follow him through life, seriously impairing his capacity to perform the physical labor upon which he must depend for his support, and when these facts are considered, together with his comparative youth, little or no room was left the defendant for complaint of the amount of damages awarded him by the jury.

We are of opinion that there is no error in the record for which the judgment of the trial court should be reversed, and it is, therefore, affirmed.

Affirmed.