Angel v. Jellico Coal Mining Co.

Court of Appeals of Kentucky
Angel v. Jellico Coal Mining Co., 115 Ky. 728 (1903)
74 S.W. 714; 1903 Ky. LEXIS 146
Settle

Angel v. Jellico Coal Mining Co.

Opinion of the Court

Opinion oe the court by

JU'DGE SETTLE

Reversing.

This action was instituted by appellant in the Whitley circuit court to recover of appellee damages for personal injuries alleged in the petition to have been sustained by an explosion of dynamite which servants of appellee, in a different line of service to that in which appellant was en*731gaged, had negligently placed near and in front of the fire of a furnace in the air shaft of its mine, that appellant, as its servant, was required to keep up. It is also averred in the petition that the dynamite was put in front of the fire to thaw, the heat of which caused it to explode, and that it was a very dangerous explosive, though its dangerous character was at the time unknown to him, but was known to appellee’s servants who placed it 'near the fire. The answer denies the negligence complained of in the petition, and, in addition, alleges contributory negligence on the part of appellant, which latter plea is controverted by reply. Upon the conclusion of appellant’s evidence, the jury, in obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court, returned a verdict for appellee. Appellant complains of the giving of the peremptory instruction by the lower court, and of its refusing him a new trial, and by this appeal asks relief at the hands of this court.

It appears from the evidence that one Gofford was the foreman of the appellee, and in control of its servants charged with the duty of track-laying in the mine, and that, in the performance of that work, dynamite was used in removing slate and other obstructions. It was used for no other purpose in the mine, and was under the exclusive control of Gofford, who sometimes caused it to be placed in front of the furnace fire to thaw. The furnace fires were kept up by appellant, who testified that he had never used dynamite, or seen it used, but that he was afraid of its exploding in the process of thawing, and expressed his fear of it to Gofford, and also to John and Howard Jenkins, each of whom had occasionally placed it near the furnace fire. But they assured him that there was no danger of an explosion, and John Jenkins said it could not explode unless there was a cap on it. It also appears that the dyna*732mite that caused appellant’s injuries was placed before the fire by Howard Jenkins, one of Oofford’s hands, by the latter’s direction. It does not appear that appellant saw or knew of it being so placed on that occasion, but it is not material whether or not its presence was known to him. The explosion occurred while appellant, Howard Jenkins, and other employes of appellee then present, were eating their noon meal. Appellant’s neck and shoulders were wounded, and his hand badly burned., by the explosion. In fact, his injuries caused thereby.were so serious and painful as to compel him to keep his bed for more than a month, and his hand was so injured that he has never since been able to close it, and that member is therefore permanently injured.

It is the duty of the master to supply the servant with' reasonably safe and suitable tools and machinery to perform the work required of him, and equally his duty to furnish the servant a reasonably safe place to work, and to see that it is kept so. Appellant, in undertaking for appellee the work of keeping up the furnace fires in the air shaft of its mine, assumed the risks that are necessarily or usually incident to such service, but it can not be contended that danger or risks such as arise from the use of dynamite by other servants of tho same master in a wholly distinct department of service were in any way connected with or incident to appellant’s work as fireman. In the case of Ohio Valley Railway Company v. McKinley, 17 R., 1028, 33 S. W., 186, this court applied the principle here announced. McKinley was injured by the premature explosion of dynamite which was then being used by him and other servants of the railway company in blasting rock. It appears that he was furnished an iron rod by his employer for tamping dynamite in the hole drilled for that purpose, *733and that its use was highly dangerous, because of the violence of the concussion produced thereby, and in fact that the premature explosion resulted from its use. It was alleged in the petition that the danger of using the iron rod was known to the railway company, its agents, and the superintendent then in charge of the quarry, but was unknown to McKinley, although he had for several months used the iron rod for tamping. This court, upon these facts, held that it was the plain duty of the defendant to have furnished its employes a wooden rod, instead of the iron, and that it was clearly negligent in providing only the iron rod, as the evidence all tended to prove that the danger was greatly diminished in tamping with a wooden rod. Continuing the discussion on this point, the court said: “It is hardly accurate to say that the servant so employed assumes the risk incident to his employment. It may be the law to say that he assumes the risks necessarily incident to his employment, when the risk is considered with reference to the primary duty of his employer to furnish tools, and in fact all other instruments, means, and agencies necessary to be used in the prosecution of his business, reasonably safe and secure for the purpose used. But this duty of the employer is the first and primary duty, and should at all times by the trial courts be kept steadily in view, and no construction of the law should be tolerated that needlessly exposes the servant to danger in the prosecution of the business of the master. Humanity itself, demands this much consideration by the employer for the lives and safety of his servants, and, the greater the danger to the servant, the greater should be the care and caution demanded by the law of his employer.” The appellant’s only duty was to keep the fire in the air shaft burning. There was no risk whatever in the performance of that *734duty. He was practically as secure from all danger from injury there as he would have been in his own home, but for the placing of the dynamite in proximity to the fire at his post of duty. He had no control over those who thus placed it, or of the deadly explosive itself, and his apprehension of an explosion had doubtless been removed by the repeated assurances of Gofford and the two Jenkinses of the absence of all danger.

Evidence was introduced by appellee to prove that the dynamite would not explode upon being subjected to heat, and that it had even been consumed without exploding. Be that as it may, it did in this instance explode, either from the action of the heat, or by concussion produced by some object striking or falling upon it unknown to those present at the time. But in view of the evidence, it is hard to understand how it could have occurred, if not from the action of the heat. At any rate, it was the province of the jury to determine the cause. Howard Jenkins, who is evidently experienced in the use of dynamite, testified upon the trial that a jar or concussion of 60 pounds’ weight would cause it to explode, and the manufacturer, in order to warn the public of its dangerous character, labels each box of it, “Highly explosive.” It must be presumed, therefore, that appellee’s servants intrusted with the use of the dynamite knew it to be a highly dangerous explosive; and it was their duty to have provided some place other than the air shaft of the mine, where it could be thawed without risk of injury to appellant or other employes of appellee, and in placing it in the air shaft they were guilty of gross negligence, .in that they made the further performance of the duties of appellant’s employment dangerous in the extreme, thereby violating the primary duty which appellee owed *735him — to provide and maintain a reasonably safe place for the performance of the work required of him.

There is nothing in the evidence conducing to prove contributory negligence on the part of appellant; nor can it be contended that his injuries were caused by the negligence of his fellow servants, as the negligent parties, though servants of appellee, were in a department of its service wholly different from that in which appellant was engaged. But if they were fellow servants, it would not relieve appellee in this case, as its duty to appellant required it to provide him a reasonably safe place in which to work, and the negligence of those who placed the dynamite before the furnace fire was and is imputable in such a case to it, as master. Tradewater Coal Co. v. Johnson, 24 R., 1777, 72 S. W., 274.

Being of opinion that the lower court erred in giving the peremptory instruction, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to the court to set aside the verdict and judgment, and grant the appellant a new trial, consistent with the opinion herein.

Reference

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