Dobra v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.
Dobra v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This was an action of trespass brought by George Dobra, acting through his next friend and mother, Susie Dobra, and by Susie Dobra in her own right, against the Lehigh Valley Coal Company. In the year 1909, the plaintiff, George Dobra, then seventeen years of age, was employed as a car runner in defendant’s anthracite coal mine. On June 24th, of that year he was seriously and permanently injured while at work, by being, as he alleged, caught and squeezed between the side of a car and two props, which it was claimed were negligently maintained too close to the track in one of the gangways in the mine, in violation of the provisions of the Anthracite Coal Mine Act of June 2,1891, P. L. 176. The suit was brought by George Dobra, and his mother, Susie Dobra, who is a widow, to recover damages for his injuries. The case was submitted to the jury, who found a verdict for George Dobra in the sum of $10,000, and for Susie Dobra in the sum of $1,500. From the judgments entered upon these verdicts the defendant has appealed.
. The first question raised is, “whether a parent may recover indirect damages for personal injuries occasioned to a minor child by the violation of the Act of June 2, 1891, P. L. 176, and not resulting in death.” It is provided in the act in question that for any injury caused by a violation of or failure to comply with the provisions of the act “a right of action shall accrue to the party injured against said owner or operator for any direct damages he may have sustained thereby.” It will be noticed that the right of action is given only to “the party injured,” and then only for “direct damages.” It is evident that the parent was not the party here injured within the meaning of the act, and that even if the term could be held to include a parent, the damage to the parent would not be “direct.” The court below permitted the mother to recover on the ground that she had a right of action at common law. That question has not,
The second question raised on behalf of appellant is, “whether the operator of a mine, who has constructed and provided a passageway of proper width, is liable to an employee for an injury resulting from an insufficiency of space between the side of a car and a prop subsequently located by the mine foreman in charge of the mine.” That the responsibility for the care of the passageways in a mine rests upon the owner and cannot be shifted to the mine foreman, has been settled by our decisions. In Simmons v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 240 Pa. 354, which was an action brought under the Act of June 2,1891, P. L. 176, Mr. Justice Mestrezat said (p. 358) : “The fact that the company had placed in the mine a competent, certified mine foreman did not relieve it from the liability imposed by the statute. To provide a
The judgment for the plaintiff, Susie Dobra, the mother, is reversed. The judgment for the plaintiff, George Dobra, is affirmed.
Reference
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- Dobra v. Lehigh Valley Coal Company
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- Syllabus
- ■Negligenee — Mines and mining — Personal injuries — Violation of .Anthracite Coal Mine Act of June 2, 1891, P. L. 176 — Right of parent to recover — Common law liability — Duties of mine owner— Assumption of rislc. 1. Where the negligenee charged and proven is the disregard oi a statutory duty, the defense of assumption of risk is not open to defendant. 2. The responsibility for the care of the passageways in a mine rests upon the owner, and cannot be shifted to the mine foreman. 3. A parent cannot recover damages for personal injuries sustained by a minor child and not resulting in death, in consequence of a mine owner’s violation of the Anthracite Coal Mine Act of June 2, 1891, P. L..176, giving a right of action to “the party injured” for “direct damages.” The damage to the parent is indirect and the parent’s right of action must rest upon the common law. 4. In order to overcome the defense of assumption of risk in an action under the common law, the employee must show affirmatively not only that he complained of the danger, and that the employer promised to correct it, but that, in continuing to work, he relied on that promise, otherwise he must be held to have assumed the risk. 5. In an action by a minor, seventeen years of age, and his mother, to recover damages for injuries sustained by the minor, it appeared that the minor was employed as a coal runner in defendant’s anthracite coal mine, and was injured by being caught and squeezed between the side of a car and certain mine props which were negligently maintained too close to the tracks, in one of the gangways, in violation of the Act of June 2,1891, P. L. 176. There was evidence that plaintiff had complained of the condition to defendant’s superintendent, and that the latter had promised to remove the props. Plaintiff did not say, however, that he relied on the alleged promise in continuing his work. There was evidence that defendant knew of the alleged obstruction in the passageway. Held (1) that the minor had made out a case, entitling him to recover by reason of defendant’s violation of a statutory duty, and a verdict and judgment in his favor was sustained; (2) that by reason of the minor’s assumption of risk, there could be no recovery at common law by the mother, for the indirect damages sustained by her, and a verdict and judgment in her favor was reversed.