Citation Numbers: 175 Ky. 650, 194 S.W. 791, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 360
Judges: Carroll
Filed Date: 5/15/1917
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
The appellant, as administratrix of her deceased' husband, Alvie Kitchen, instituted this action in the Muhlenberg circuit court to recover damages for the alleged wrongful death of her husband, which occurred in the mine of the appellee coal company. The right óf recovery was based upon the failure of the coal company to furnish the decedent with a safe place, safe tools and safe appliances in which and with which to perform his labors as hostler on a coal cutting machine used in the mine.
The answer was a denial, a plea of contributory negligence, and assumed risk.
After the issues had been made up, the case went to trial before a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence for the administratrix the court directed the jury to return a verdict for the coal company, and from the judgment upon this verdict this appeal is prosecuted.
There was in use in the mine a machine for undercutting coal, which was run by electrical power. The electric current was conveyed from a power-house on the outside of the mine by what was called a main cable to a point about 75 feet distant from where the decedent was working at the time of his death. From the main.
The decedent was a hostler or helper to the operator of the machine, and it was his duty to look after the reel cable and disconnect it whenever it was necessary to do! so. The mining machine at which decedent was working weighed several thousand pounds, and was conveyed' from one room to another in the mine on a truck, which ran" on' a track. When the machine was to be put in operation' cutting coal, it was taken off the truck, and reloaded when necessary to move it to another room. The machine could be and was loaded on the truck by implements attached to the truck, and not by electrical power. ' i
. /On the occasion of this accident the reel cable had. not been disconnected from the main' cable and the decedent came to his death, when as hostler he was helping to, load the machine on the truck, by stepping on the reel cable, at a point on the cable from which the. insulation had worn off, so that when he stepped on the cable his foot came in contact with the live wire.
' /William Griggs, the operator of the machine, putting his evidence iñ narrative form, testified that the decedent," as they were loading the machine on the' truck, stepped on a naked place on the reel cable and was al-' most instantly killed. That the reel cable was in bad condition. That it had been used a good while and .the insulation had worn off in places, and had worn off about four'inches at the point where decedent stepped on it. He said the reel cable was laid on the floor of the entry,
He further said that if the cable had been insulated, the decedent could have stepped on it with safety. In reference to the custom of loading the machine on the truck, he said it was usual to load the machine before disconnecting the reel cable from the main cable. That when the machine was loaded the hostler disconnected the cable. He further said that the reel cable could be disconnected from the main cable at the machine by giving the reel cable a jerk which would straighten out the ends of the wires and cause the reel cable to slip off the main cable, and that if the reel cable had been disconnected before they undertook to load the machine on the truck, the decedent could have walked and worked about the machine and truck without danger from electricity, as the current, if the disconnection had been made, would have been confined to the main cable, which was 75 feet away. He also said it was the duty of the hostler to make disconnection. Other miners gave testimony substantially the same as Griggs’.
The effect of this evidence was: (a) that the insulation on the reel cable, which was lying on the wet floor of the mine near the machine, was worn off in places to such an extent that the heavily charged wire was exposed, and this defective condition was known to the mine boss some two weeks before Kitchen came to his death; (lb) that the decedent, although a miner of some experience, had been working at this particular machine for only a few minutes before he was killed and did not know of the defective insulation or that it had worn entirely off in places; (c) that it was the duty of the decedent as hostler to disconnect the reel cable from the
On these facts the argument is made by counsel for the coal company that the trial judge properly took the case from the jury, because the decedent had two courses he might have pursued, one a safe and the other an unsafe one, and voluntarily chose the unsafe method. Or, in other words, that he attempted to load the machine on the truck with the current on the reel cable, which was the unsafe way, when he could have pursued the safe plan of disconnecting the reel cable from the main cable before undertaking to help load the machine.
It is a very well established principle in the law of master and servant that when there is a safe way and an unsafe way of doing a thing, and the servant voluntarily selects the unsafe way, when he knows and appreciates, or in the exercise of ordinary care for his own safety should know and appreciate, the danger attending the unsafe method,'the master will not be liable for any injury or accident which may happen to him. But we do not think this principle should be applied to the facts of this case, because the unsafety of the place was caused by the negligence of the master in not keeping the wire insulated, of which negligence the servant was ignorant.
In this case a safe place was made unsafe by the negligence of the master, and the servant did not know or appreciate, and in the exercise of ordinary care could not have known or appreciated under the circumstances, that it was unsafe. The safe and unsafe rule is applied only to states of case in which two ways are open to the servant, one safe, the other unsafe, and he voluntarily selects the unsafe way when he knows and appreciates or in the exercise of ordinary care could knowo and appreciate, the danger of adopting the unsafe way or method. That it was negligence on the part of the coal company to knowingly leave this electric wire uninsulated
Nor should the coal company he exonerated from liability for its negligence because the decedent failed to disconnect the reel wire before loading the machine. There was no rule- of the company requiring this to be done. On the contrary, it was customary not to do it, and under these circumstances it cannot be said that the decedent was guilty of such negligence as would defeat a recovery merely because he followed a custom of the mine and did not disconnect the reel cable before attempting to load the machine. What we have said is, we think, sufficient to dispose of the only question before us. Without expressing any opinion as to the merits of the ease, or what the verdict of the jury should be with all the evidence before them, we are yet satisfied that the case was one for the jury.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, with directions to proceed in conformity with this opinion.