The duty of the master to use reasonable diligence to provide a
safe place for the employees to work is a continuing one which is
discharged only when he provides and maintains a place of that
character.
Where workmen are engaged in a hazardous occupation, such as
underground mining, it is the duty of the master to exercise
reasonable care for their safety, and not to expose them to injury
by use of dangerous appliances or unsafe places to work when such
appliances and places can, by the exercise of due care, be made
reasonably safe.
Where, on the evidence, reasonable men might well find that a
man, found in a mangled and dying condition in a mine on a track
beneath an overhead wire was killed by negligence, and it cannot be
said that no such conclusion could be reached on the testimony, it
is not error to submit the question to the jury, and where, as in
this case, the testimony can fairly support the verdict, it should
not be set aside.
Where the court clearly instructed the jury that the defendant
mine owner was not liable in case the haulage system alleged to
have caused the accident was in charge of a person for whose
conduct the owner was not responsible under the law, and that the
owner was only liable in case that system was under charge of a
person for whose conduct the owner was responsible, the charge in
this respect is not unfavorable to the owner, and affords no ground
for reversal.
It is not error for the court to refuse to affirm a particular
and immaterial point in regard to the alleged negligence of the
defendant when it would only serve to possibly confuse the jury and
the point has already been covered by the charge.
Where the court was not requested to charge that the employee
had assumed the risk of want of proper appliances, and no exception
was taken to the failure to charge as to assumption of risk, the
appellate court is not called on to consider that question.
The trial court having entered judgment on a verdict for
plaintiff, and the circuit court of appeals having reversed, and,
without remanding or directing a new trial, ordered judgment for
defendant,
Page 233 U. S. 185
this Court, finding there was no reversible error in the conduct
of the trial, reverses the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeal
and affirms the judgment of the trial court and remands the case to
the district court which has succeeded to the jurisdiction of the
circuit court which tried the case.
203 F. 221 reversed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a verdict for death of
an employee claimed to have been occasioned by the negligence of
the master, are stated in the opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 189
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Annie Myers brought an action in the United States Circuit Court
for the Western District of Pennsylvania to recover for the death
of her husband, John Myers, alleged to have been caused by the
negligence of the defendant, the Pittsburgh Coal Company. Under the
law of Pennsylvania, she might bring this action for the benefit of
herself and minor children. A verdict was rendered against the Coal
Company; on writ of error, the case was reversed by the Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (203 F. 221), and it was
brought here on writ of certiorari to that court.
The circuit court of appeals was of the opinion that, upon the
facts shown, the plaintiff had not made out the right to recover,
and the judgment was reversed without directing a new trial, and
without sending the case back to the district court, which had
succeeded to the jurisdiction of the circuit court, for that
purpose. This was error within the doctrine of
Slocum v. New
York Life Ins. Co., 228 U. S. 364;
Pedersen v. Del., Lack. & West. R. Co., 229 U.
S. 146,
229 U. S. 153.
It is further contended that, apart from the question just noticed,
the circuit court of appeals erred in reversing the judgment of the
district court, as it did, upon the ground that there was not
sufficient testimony in the case to show that the deceased came to
his death by the negligence charged in the petition. To determine
this question involves a brief consideration of the facts in the
case.
Page 233 U. S. 190
John Myers, at the time of his death, was and for several months
had been, in the employ of the Coal Company as "snapper" or
brakeman in underground operations, taking part in the movement of
cars in and about the mine. It appears that, on the morning of the
injury, a train of empty coal cars, some thirty or forty in number,
was being taken down the main entry and then further down a side
entry into the mine, where the cars were to be subsequently
distributed in the work. The manner of operation was that empty
cars were hauled by a large electric motor car down the main entry
to a side entry where a flying switch was made by which the motor
car continued in the main entry beyond the junction of the side
entry, and the cars ran down the side entry for a considerable
distance, then, upon signal from Myers, whose duty it was to ride
upon the rear car of the train, by the waving of his cap, which
contained a lamp, or by the movement of his head with cap on, the
motor car followed on down the entry, the purpose being to overtake
the empty cars and distribute them in the mine. Down the side
entry, about 157 feet from the main entry, was an automatic switch,
which would turn the current into the trolley wire and permit the
motor car to proceed farther into the mine. It was not working
properly, and the motorman alighted and turned the switch by hand,
returned to the motor car, and proceeded. Up to the time the motor
car reached the automatic switch, Myers had been seen signaling for
the motor car to come on. Some distance further, there was a branch
of the trolley system running into another entry, and the trolley
wire passed over the tracks in the side entry at a distance of
about 5 feet, 7 1/2 inches above the rail, making it necessary for
one of ordinary height to remain seated in the car or to stoop
down. The roof of the entry was about 9 feet above the rail at this
point. There was no light at this switch, nor was the wire guarded
in any
Page 233 U. S. 191
way. It also appears that, because of ineffective carbons, the
headlight on the motor car was not burning, and had not been
burning for several days; that requisition had been made upon the
superintendent of the mine for new carbons, but that there were
none at the mine. The motorman testified that, when the headlight
was burning, he could see objects on the track clearly at a
distance of 25 or 30 yards, and that the could stop his car in
about 13 feet. Continuing on from the switch, as we have said, the
motor car suddenly ran upon something, was stopped, and it was
found that Myers had been run over. He was lying in the middle of
the track with his head toward the motor and his cap, upright, with
the light still burning, was lying beside the track. Myers' body
was badly torn and mangled before the motor car could be stopped.
His tongue was found to be moving, but he shortly died from his
injuries. It was also shown that Myers was a man of unusual
strength and vigor, twenty-nine years of age, and to all
appearances in full health and strength shortly before the
injury.
The trial court submitted the case to the jury to determine
whether the defendant had failed to discharge its duty of using
reasonable care to provide a proper and safe place for Myers to
work -- that is, in failing to provide adequate lights at a
dangerous place and permitting the motor car to be operated without
the headlight, and also in permitting an exposed live trolley wire
to cross the main track at insufficient elevation. An inspection of
the record satisfies us that there was testimony enough in the case
to carry these questions to the jury under the instructions which
were given. The duty of the master to use reasonable diligence to
provide a safe place for the employees to work, to carry on the
occupation in which they are employed, is too well settled to
require much consideration now. This duty is a continuing one, and
discharged only when the master provides and maintains a place of
that
Page 233 U. S. 192
character.
Baltimore & Potomac R. Co. v. Mackey,
157 U. S. 72,
157 U. S. 87;
Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. O'Brien, 161 U.
S. 451;
Choctaw, Oklahoma &c. R. Co. v.
McDade, 191 U. S. 64;
Kreigh v. Westinghouse & Co., 214 U.
S. 249,
214 U. S. 255.
Under the case made, the jury might well have found that the
overhead wire was hung too low for the safety of the men; that
there was want of adequate light at this place, and that it was
negligence to run the motor car into such a place without the light
which it was its duty to provide. Where workmen are engaged in such
mines in occupations more or less hazardous, it is the duty of the
master to exercise reasonable care for their safety, and not to
expose them to injury by use of dangerous appliances or unsafe
places to work when the exercise of due skill and care will make
the appliances and places reasonably safe.
Choctaw, Oklahoma
&c. R. Co. v. McDade, supra, 191 U. S. 66;
Kreigh v. Westinghouse & Co., supra, 214 U. S.
256.
The opinion of the circuit court of appeals placed the reversal
largely upon the want of definite proof as to the manner in which
Myers came to his death -- whether by contact with the wire or, if
so, whether that merely disabled him or he was only injured or
stunned by the fall, was seized with vertigo or other sudden
sickness and fell from the car for that reason, or lost his footing
by some unexpected movement of the train, or voluntarily got off
the car and stumbled and fell upon the track, or became bewildered
in the dark, and mistakenly supposed himself to be in a place of
safety. The court held that all these situations were more or less
probable, and, in the absence of some more accurate means of
ascertaining the true condition in this regard, no recovery could
be had for the wrongful causing of his death, and that an
examination of the testimony brought the court to the conclusion
that the jury should not have been permitted to guess as to the
proximate cause of death. This question, however, was submitted to
the jury and found against the defendant in
Page 233 U. S. 193
the trial court. Unless the testimony was such that no recovery
can be had upon the facts shown in any view which can be properly
taken of them, the verdict and judgment of the district court must
be affirmed.
That there was ample testimony to carry the question of
negligence to the jury we have already said, and in any case it
cannot be said as a matter of law that there was no evidence
tending to show that Myers came to his death by the negligence of
defendant in one or more of the ways charged in the petition.
Considering the testimony, as it must be considered in determining
questions of this character in appellate courts, in its most
favorable aspect to the plaintiff below, we think the jury might
well have found, in view of the place at which the body of Myers
was found near to the wire, with his cap gone from his head, that
he came in contact with that wire and was thrown to the ground, and
that he survived from contact with the wire, carrying the voltage
which it did, and while in this situation was run over and killed
by the approaching motor car, the operator being unable to see his
body upon the track because of the want of efficient light in the
entry or in the motor car. We think reasonable men, considering the
testimony adduced, might well have come to this conclusion, and
that it was error in the appellate court to set aside the verdict
for entire absence of testimony upon this subject. In our opinion,
the trial court properly left the question to the jury upon
testimony which, when fairly considered, might sustain the verdict.
See Humes v. United States, 170 U.
S. 210.
As to the contention that the trial court erred in refusing to
give the instruction requested by the Coal Company to the effect
that the equipment and operation of the electric haulage plant and
all persons employed in the mine were in charge and subject to the
orders and direction of a duly qualified mine foreman, and that, if
decedent's death occurred by reason of negligence, such
negligence
Page 233 U. S. 194
was that of the mine foreman, and the Coal Company could not be
held liable: the record shows that there was testimony tending to
show that the electrical system was in charge of the electrician of
the Coal Company employed as superintendent of electrical
equipment, who had charge of the purchase, installation, care,
operation, and maintenance of the electrical equipment used by the
Company, and who was not subject to the mine foreman. The court
submitted to the jury the question whether the Coal Company had
committed to the mine foreman the electric system of hauling in the
interior of the mine, or whether such system was in charge of an
electrical engineer not accountable to the mine foreman, distinctly
telling the jury that, if the mine foreman was in charge in this
respect, the company would not be responsible, but if they found
that the Coal Company had excluded from the control of the mine
foreman the electric haulage system, and that the negligence of the
Coal Company was the direct and proximate cause of the death of the
plaintiff's husband, there must be a recovery. The charge in this
respect was as favorable as the company was entitled to have
given.
As to the objection that the court erred in failing to give the
instruction requested by the defendant concerning the operation of
the automatic switch, to the effect that, if it did not work on the
trip on which the decedent was run over, and even if it was out of
order, those conditions would not contribute to the running over of
the decedent by the motor car or to his death, it is sufficient to
say that the court, in its charge to the jury, did not submit a
question of negligence specifically concerning this automatic
switch and its effect if out of repair, and to have affirmed this
point by giving it to the jury would only have served to possibly
confuse the jury upon a point immaterial to the plaintiff's
recovery, in view of the manner in which the case was given in
charge to the jury.
Page 233 U. S. 195
We have examined the charge and the exceptions thereto and
requests for instructions, and are of opinion that the trial court
fairly submitted the questions involved to the jury in a charge to
which there was no substantial objection.
As to the suggestion that the deceased had assumed the risk of
the want of proper appliances and the defective character of the
light at the place in which he worked and was injured, we do not
find that the court was requested to make any charge upon that
subject, or that any exception was taken to the court's failure to
charge as to assumption of risk. In that state of the record, the
appellate court was not called upon to consider that question.
See Humes v. United States, supra. The circuit court of
appeals reversed the case for the reason, which we have stated,
that there was an entire failure of adequate testimony to show that
Myers came to his death by the negligence of the company in the
manner charged. As we have said, we think that was an erroneous
conclusion.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
must be reversed, and the judgment of the district court affirmed,
and the case remanded to that court.