The Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, concerning coal mines,
makes three requirements: (1) ventilation of not less than
fifty-five feet of pure air per second, or 3300 cubic feet per
minute for every fifty men at work, and in like proportions fur a
greater number; (2) proper appliances and machinery to force the
air through the mine to the face of working places; (3) keeping all
workings free from standing gas, and if either of these three
requirements was neglected, to the injury of the plaintiff's
intestates, the defendant was liable.
The act does not give to mine owners the privilege of reasoning
on the sufficiency of appliances for ventilation, or leave to their
judgment the amount of ventilation that is sufficient for the
protection of miners.
It does not allow standing gas, but requires the mine to be kept
clear of it, and if this is not done, the consequence of neglecting
it cannot be excused because some workman may disregard
instructions.
It is the master's duty to furnish safe appliances and safe
working places, and if the neglect of this duty concurs with that
of the negligence of a fellow-servant, the master is liable.
On the issues made, and on the evidence, and regarding the
provisions of the act of Congress, the instructions given by the
trial court to the jury were erroneous.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action is consolidated of three, brought by plaintiff in
error, who was plaintiff in the court below and may be so
called
Page 178 U. S. 410
here, as administratrix of the estates respectively of her
husband, Henri Deserant, and her sons Jules Deserant and Henri
Deserant, Jr.
The actions were for damages for the deaths of her said
intestates by an explosion in a mine owned by defendant, and which
explosion was alleged to have been caused by the negligence of
plaintiff in error. The action was based upon a statute of New
Mexico which gives an action for damages to the personal
representatives of a person whose death is caused by the wrongful
act of another if the person causing the injury would have been
liable to an action for damages if death had not ensued.
There were two trials, both by jury, in the district court of
the territory. The first resulted in a verdict and judgment for
plaintiff. They were reversed by the supreme court of the
territory. 9 N.M. 49. The second resulted in a verdict and judgment
for defendant. They were affirmed by the supreme court of the
territory. 9 N.M. 495. This writ of error was then sued out.
There is no dispute about the explosion or that the deaths of
plaintiff's intestates were caused by it. The dispute is as to the
cause of the explosion and the responsibility of defendant for
it.
The evidence presents long and elaborate descriptions of the
mine, with its "slopes, air shafts, entries, cross-cuts, air
courses, conduits, and breakthroughs."
We do not think that it is necessary to repeat the descriptions.
There is no controversy about them. The issue between the parties
is as to the amount and sufficiency of ventilation, its
obstruction, the accumulation of explosive gases, their negligent
ignition, whether by a fellow servant of plaintiff's intestates or
by a representative of the defendant, making it liable, or whether
the explosion was of powder accidentally ignited.
The method of ventilation was by machinery causing a circulation
of air through the mine and up to the face of the working places,
for the purpose of rendering harmless or expelling the noxious
gases.
It is contended by plaintiff that the machinery was insufficient
for that purpose, the employees of the defendant
Page 178 U. S. 411
inefficient and negligent, and that the air shafts had been
permitted to become obstructed, whereby gases accumulated, and
stood in the mine and exploded on the 27th of February, 1895,
causing the deaths of plaintiff's intestates.
The means of ventilation was a fan at the entrance of the mine,
which by its revolutions exhausted the air in the mine, and outside
air rushed in and through the passages of the mine, and was
directed where desired by means of curtains called "brattices."
It is claimed there were defects in those appliances whereby
there were leaks in the circulation of the air, and besides that
water had been allowed to accumulate in the fourth left air course
which so interrupted the quantity of air which passed into room 8
of the fourth left entry that the air did not go to the face of
that room, but feebly passed around the brattice at a distance of
twelve to fourteen feet, thus permitting the accumulation of a
dangerous body of gas until it passed beyond the danger signals,
which may have been put into the room by the fire boss, and that
Donahoe, the day foreman, and Flick and Kelly, all miners, entered
the room on the day of the explosion, with naked lamps, and ignited
the gas before they saw or had an opportunity to see the danger
signal. The employees of the mine consisted of miners, rope riders,
mule drivers, track men, and "company men." The latter were paid by
the day, and worked under the order and immediate supervision of
the foreman or pit boss, while the miners were paid by the ton, and
were subject to general supervision by the foreman. Besides these,
there was a mine superintendent, day foreman or pit boss, night
foreman or pit boss, day fire boss and night boss. There was also a
mine inspector, who lived in Kansas and periodically visited the
mine and other mines owned by defendant.
It is claimed that the mine foreman and fire bosses knew of the
gas in room 8, and that the deceased miners did not know it, nor
have means of knowing it.
The mine was inspected day and night, respectively, by the day
and night fire bosses, and it was the duty of each to advise each
miner as he came in of the condition of his working place, and no
miner was permitted into the mine to wok until so advised.
Page 178 U. S. 412
The gas is explosive when mixed with certain proportions of
atmospheric air. It is lighter than air, and therefore dispelled by
a current of air, and this was the means necessary to be employed
to disperse the gas. The gas when it explodes moves against the
opposing current of air. In other words, expends its force in the
direction from which the air comes.
On Sunday night Kilpatrick, the foreman, discovered enough gas
in room 8 to crack his safety lamp, but he did not regard it as
sufficient to mark the place dangerous.
On Monday morning (the explosion was on Wednesday), the day fire
boss found gas in room 8, and put a danger mark above the last
cross cut, but did not go back to the room again, although he knew
that it was one of the worst rooms in the mine for gas. He
testified that he considered the danger mark sufficient.
On Monday night before the explosion, Ray, the night fire boss,
was at the face of room 8, and found no fire marks, but found a
little gas, and put fire marks in the room. He inspected the mine
on Tuesday, but did not visit room 8.
Donahoe, mine foreman, Flick and Kelly, two "company men," were
killed by the explosion, and their bodies were found in or near
room 8.
The conclusion which plaintiff claimed to be established by the
evidence is that Flick and Kelly went with Donahoe, under whose
direction they worked, into room 8 with naked lights, and that an
explosion was caused by the gas in the room coming in contact with
the lights.
The defendant, on the contrary, contended that the
"explosion was of some kind or other at or in the neighborhood
of room 16 in the fourth left entry of the mine, where the deceased
were working as coal miners."
It is claimed that the cause of the explosion is altogether of
conjecture and surmise, and that the greatest evidence or effect of
explosion and fire appeared in the neighborhood of rooms 16 and 17,
in the entryway thereabout, and that some powder cans were found
exploded, and coal dust was found coked on some of the pillars on
the back of a car, and a car loaded with coal was moved several
feet off the track. It is hence conjectured that the explosion
Page 178 U. S. 413
was caused by some negligent or accidental ignition of powder
which instantly set fire to the coal dust, which more or less
impregnated the air and the entryways, and of particles of gas
which might be found in the hollows and crevices, so that death
would be caused by concussion, or by the after damp caused by the
explosion. Or it is conjectured again that the explosion might have
been caused by some miner, while working, suddenly striking a seam
or body of gas, which was ignited by his light, and thus ignited
powder near at hand.
At the close of the testimony, the plaintiff and the defendant
asked for peremptory instructions for their respective sides, which
was refused.
The assignments of error are based on exceptions to evidence and
on exceptions to instructions.
In passing on the case, the supreme court of the territory said
that it was
"unnecessary for us to consider the objections urged to the
instructions given by the court below. In our opinion, they were
all in favor of the plaintiff, as the court should have granted the
motion of the defendant and instructed the jury to find the
defendant not guilty."
In support of this conclusion, it stated the theory of the
plaintiff to be that the explosion was caused by an
"accumulation of water previous to the explosion in a low place
in the fourth left air course -- a sufficient quantity of pure air
was not going to the face of the workings in the fourth left entry
to remove and expel the noxious gases; that Kelly and Flick, who
were company men -- that is, men who were paid by the day and not
according to what work they did -- acting under instructions from
Donahoe, the day pit boss, went with him or by his direction into
room 8 to remove a railroad track, carrying naked lights, and that
such lights set fire to the gas which had accumulated there by
reason of the insufficiency of air, and caused the explosion. This
theory is purely speculative, and is not supported by the evidence.
It cannot be positively proved what was the initial point of the
explosion or what caused it. In fact, the evidence goes to show,
from measurements taken at various times by the superintendent of
the mine, the pit boss, and the United States inspector, that
sufficient air was going through the fourth
Page 178 U. S. 414
air course and mine to make it safe. Indeed, the evidence goes
further, and shows that, after the explosion and on the day of the
investigation by the coroner's jury, and while much of the debris
caused by the explosion was still in the fourth left air course, a
sufficiency of air was passing through it over the water and debris
through the low place, which is claimed by the plaintiff to have
been obstructed by water, for the proper ventilation of the entry
and its rooms and the expulsion of all harmful gases, and for the
men and animals working there at the time of the explosion. There
is no evidence that the condition of the fourth left air course was
the direct or proximate cause of the explosion, and for the
plaintiff to recover this must be proved by a preponderance of
evidence."
The court also held that Flick, Kelly, and Donahoe were fellow
servants of the deceased; therefore, if the contention of the
plaintiff was true, that the gas was ignited by their negligence,
the defendant had no cause of action.
We have read the evidence, and we cannot concur with the supreme
court of the territory that the trial court "should have granted
the motion of the defendant, and instructed the jury to find the
defendant not guilty." It was for the jury to determine from the
evidence the place of the explosion and its cause, and what, if
any, negligence the defendant was guilty of, and the evidence
offered on the issues required the submission of those questions to
the jury.
The effect of the act of Flick, Kelly, and Donahoe we will
consider hereafter.
The trial court, in giving instructions to the jury, read
section 6 of the act of Congress of March 3, 1891, which is as
follows:
"By section 6 of an Act of Congress, approved March 3, 1891, 26
Stat. 1104, c. 564, it is provided as follows:"
"SEC. 6. That the owners or managers of every coal mine at a
depth of one hundred feet or more shall provide an adequate amount
of ventilation of not less than fifty-five cubic feet of pure air
per second, or thirty-three hundred cubic feet per minute, for
every fifty men at work in said mine and in like proportion for a
greater number, which air shall by proper
Page 178 U. S. 415
appliances or machinery be forced through such mine to the face
of each and every working place so as to dilute and render harmless
and expel therefrom the noxious or poisonous gases, and all
workings shall be kept clear of standing gas."
The court then instructed the jury as follows:
"If, therefore, the jury believe from the evidence that the
defendant, the Cerillos Coal Railroad Company, was operating a coal
mine at a depth of more than one hundred feet below the surface of
the earth, and that the plaintiff's intestates respectively were
employed by the defendant in the operation of said coal mine, it
was, by reason of said act of Congress, the duty of the defendant
to provide an adequate amount of ventilation of not less than
thirty-five cubic feet of pure air per second and thirty-three
hundred cubic feet per minute for every fifty men who worked in
said mine, which air should have been, by proper appliances or
machinery, forced through such mine to the face of each and every
working place therein, so as to dilute and render harmless and
expel therefrom the noxious or poisonous gases, and all workings of
such mine should have been kept clear of standing gas in dangerous
quantities, and if the jury believe from the evidence that the
defendant, the Cerillos Coal Railroad Company, failed or neglected
to provide an adequate amount of ventilation so as to dilute and
render harmless and expel from the said mine the noxious poisonous
gases which were generated therein, or to keep the working places
of said mine clear of standing gas, such failure on the part of the
defendant may be considered by the jury as evidence of negligence
on the part of the defendant."
"
* * * *"
"9. Negligence is defined to be the omission to do something
which a reasonable man, guided by those considerations which
ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or the
doing something which a prudent and reasonable man would not do. It
must be determined in all cases by reference to the situation and
knowledge of the parties and all the attending circumstances. If an
occupation attended with danger can be prosecuted by proper
precautions without fatal results, such precautions must be taken
by the promoters of the pursuit
Page 178 U. S. 416
or employers of laborers therein. All occupations producing
articles or works of necessity, utility, or convenience may
undoubtedly be carried on, and competent persons, familiar with the
business and having sufficient skill therein, may properly be
employed upon them, but in such cases where the occupation is
attended with danger to life or limb, it is incumbent on the
promoters thereof, and the employers or others thereon, to take all
reasonable and needed precautions to secure safety to the persons
engaged in their prosecution, and for any negligence in this
respect from which injury follows to the persons engaged, such
promoters and employers may be held responsible and mulcted to the
extent of the injury inflicted, if any. Occupations, however
important, which cannot be conducted without necessary danger to
life, body, or limb should not be prosecuted at all without
reasonable precautions against such dangers afforded by science.
The necessary danger attending them should operate as a prohibition
of their pursuit without such safeguards. Indeed, it may be laid
down as a legal principle that in all occupations attended with
great and unusual danger there must be used all appliances readily
attainable known to science for the prevention of accidents, and
that a neglect to provide such readily attainable appliances, and
to keep the same in fit and suitable condition, will be regarded as
proof of culpable negligence."
"10. I charge you, gentlemen, that it is the duty of the master
to use reasonable care and diligence to provide a reasonably safe
place in which his servants shall perform their respective duties,
and also to use reasonable care and diligence to provide reasonably
safe appliances for the protection of his servants, and to use
reasonable care and diligence to keep such appliances in a
reasonably safe condition for the protection of his servants, and
the master cannot, by the delegation of any part of his duty to an
agent or servant, relieve himself of responsibility for injuries to
his servants arising from the neglect of this duty. Any agent or
servant of the master, appointed by him for the purpose of looking
to the safety of such appliances without regard to the rank or
station of such agent or servant, is the representative of the
master for such purpose,
Page 178 U. S. 417
and the negligence of any such agent or servant in such matters
is, in contemplation of the law, the negligence of the master, and
the master is liable for any damage occasioned thereby."
"11. Although you may believe from the evidence that the fellow
servants of the deceased by their negligence contributed to the
bringing about of the explosion in which deceased were killed, yet
if you also believe from the evidence that the negligence of
defendant also contributed to the same result, you must find a
verdict in favor of the plaintiff unless you believe from the
evidence that plaintiff's intestates, or one of them, knew, or had
means of knowledge of such negligence of defendant, and,
notwithstanding such knowledge or means of knowledge, continued to
work in the mine of defendant."
"12. The law requires that the defendant shall keep the workings
in its mine clear of standing gas, and if you believe from the
evidence the defendant failed to keep the workings in its mine
clear of standing gas, and that such failure contributed to the
deaths of the deceased, then you are justified in believing
defendant guilty of negligence, and you must find a verdict in
favor of the plaintiff, unless you believe from the evidence that
the plaintiff's intestates or one of them knew of the existence of
such gas and continued to work in the mine of defendant with such
knowledge."
"13. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff's
intestates knew or had reason to know that dangerous bodies of gas
were permitted to accumulate in the open places of defendant's mine
and to remain for a period of thirty-six hours or more without any
effort on the part of the agents and the servants of defendant to
move the same, and that no precautions against the explosion of
such gases were accustomed to be taken except to mark the open
place where such gas might be with a danger mark, and plaintiff's
intestates, notwithstanding such knowledge or means of knowledge,
continued to work in said mine, the plaintiff's intestates thereby
assumed the risk incident to such method, and cannot recover if
their fellow servants ignited such gas by going over or
disregarding such fire mark. "
Page 178 U. S. 418
"14. If you believe from the evidence that the explosion
originated in room 8 of the fourth left entry of the mine in
consequence of the accumulation in said room of a body of dangerous
gas, merely guarded by a fire mark or danger signal for thirty-six
or forty-eight hours before the explosion, and that plaintiff's
intestates did not consent or agree to work in said mine with
places dangerous because of gas merely guarded by fire marks or
danger signals for thirty-six or forty-eight hours, then plaintiff
is entitled to recover in each case, although you may also believe
that said body of dangerous gas was ignited by the negligence of
fellow servants of plaintiff's intestates."
The main charge of the court was not objected to. The objections
were to certain instructions given at the request of the
defendant.
They were as follows:
"1. The jury are instructed that what was required of the
defendant in the conduct of its mining business, in caring for the
miners employed by and engaged in working its mine, was the
adoption and use of appliances and methods reasonably sufficient
for the protection of the miners against any dangers attending the
operation of its mine that were obvious or might with reasonable
diligence have become known; and, in the absence of evidence to the
contrary, it is presumed that the defendant performed its entire
duty towards the miners in that respect."
"6. Although the jury may believe from the evidence that gas of
the quantity mentioned in the evidence had accumulated and was
allowed to remain in room 8 for the time stated in the evidence,
and believe from the evidence that the explosion testified to
originated in room 8, and further believe from the evidence that
signals of the kind described in the evidence warning against entry
into said room were placed in such a manner as to be observed by
the deceased Flick and Kelly, and the meaning and significance of
such signal was understood by them, and such signal was known to be
in use by the miners engaged in working in said mine, and that the
use of such signal was understood by such miners to inform them of
the presence of gas in dangerous quantity, then, if the jury
believe from the evidence that such explosion was caused by Flick
and Kelly
Page 178 U. S. 419
entering said room with a naked light, the defendant is entitled
to, and you should render, a verdict in its favor."
"10. The burden of showing negligence on the part of the
defendant, that caused the death of the persons for which this
action is brought, is upon the plaintiffs, and evidence has been
introduced for the purpose of showing an obstruction of the air
course through which that portion of the mine where the deceased
persons worked was ventilated. The presumption is that the mine was
properly and sufficiently supplied with air unless the evidence
offered establishes the contrary, and to do this, the jury must
find not only a partial obstruction of the air course, but that the
obstruction was of such a nature and to such an extent as to
prevent the passage of the necessary quantity of air, and if, upon
the whole testimony, the jury believe that, notwithstanding the
partial obstruction existed, there still was space enough in the
air course unobstructed to allow the proper and sufficient
ventilation of the mine and of the fourth left entry where such
deceased persons were at work, you will find a verdict for the
defendant, unless you find from the evidence that the negligence of
the defendant in some other way caused or contributed to the death
of such persons."
"11. If the jury shall believe from the evidence that the
defendant permitted fire gas to accumulate in room 8 of its mine,
and that such gas would not produce any injury until ignited, and
that it was ignited by Flick and Kelly, or either of them, by going
into the said room with a naked light (contrary to the rules and
orders of the defendant), and by such naked light the fire gas was
ignited and exploded, causing the death of plaintiff's intestates,
such explosion and injury were directly and immediately caused by
the act of the fellow servants of plaintiff's intestates, and not
by the negligence of defendant, and defendant is not liable
therefor, and a verdict should be rendered for the defendant."
The act of Congress makes three requirements--
(1) Ventilation of not less than fifty-five feet of pure air per
second, or 3,300 cubic feet per minute, for every fifty men at
work, and in like proportions for a greater number; (2) proper
appliances and machinery to force the air through the mine
Page 178 U. S. 420
to the face of working places; (3) keeping all workings free
from standing gas. If either of these three requirements was
neglected, to the injury of plaintiff's intestates, the defendant
was liable.
We think the instructions numbered 1, 6, and 11, given at the
request of the defendant, ignored the obligations of the act of
Congress, and are so far inconsistent with the other instructions
that they tended to confusion and misapprehension, making the duty
of the mine owner relative, not absolute, and its test what a
reasonable person would do, instead of making the test and measure
of duty the command of the statute. The act of Congress does not
give to mine owners the privilege of reasoning on the sufficiency
of appliances for ventilation or leave to their judgment the amount
of ventilation that is sufficient for the protection of miners. It
prescribes the amount of ventilation to be not less than fifty-five
cubic feet per second; it prescribes the machinery to be adequate
to force that amount of air through the mine to the face of every
working place. Nor does it allow standing gas. It prescribes, on
the contrary, that the mine shall be kept clear of standing gas.
This is an imperative duty, and the consequence of neglecting it
cannot be excused because some workman may disregard instructions.
Congress has prescribed that duty, and it cannot be omitted and the
lives of the miners committed to the chance that the care or duty
of someone else will counteract the neglect and disregard of the
legislative mandate.
But, aside from the statute, it is very disputable if the
instructions were correct. It is undoubtedly the master's duty to
furnish safe appliances and safe working places, and if the neglect
of this duty concurs with that of the negligence of a fellow
servant, the master has been held to be liable.
Clark v.
Soule, 137 Mass. 380;
Cowan v. Chicago, Milwaukee &
St. Paul Railway Co., 80 Wis. 284;
Sherman v. Menominee
River Lumber Co., 72 Wis. 122.
See also Hayes v. Michigan
Central Railway Co., 111 U. S. 228;
Atchison, T. & S.F. R. Co. v. Reesman, 60 F. 370;
Sommer v. Carbon Hill Coal Co., 89 F. 54;
Flike v.
Boston & Albany Railroad, 53 N.Y. 550;
Booth v.
Railroad Co.,
Page 178 U. S. 421
73 N.Y. 38;
Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Cummings,
106 U. S. 700.
This principle was stated in the general charge of the court,
but it was materially modified in the application, and not at all
considered in giving the instructions requested by the
defendant.
No exceptions, however, were taken to any portion of the general
charge of the court, and no question arising thereon is open to our
review on this writ of error. But as we remand the case for a new
trial on account of the errors which we have pointed out
irrespective of the general charge, we deem it best to say that we
must not be understood as affirming anything contained in
instructions numbered 11 and 12, or any other instruction which
conflicts with the principles announced in
Texas & Pacific
Railway Co. v. Archibald, 170 U. S. 665,
170 U. S.
671.
We do not intend to express an opinion as to the facts of the
case, or of any fact, or of any of the theories of the explosion.
We only mean to decide that, on the issues made and on the
evidence, and regarding the provisions of the act of Congress, the
instructions given by the trial court to the jury were
erroneous.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the territory is
reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to reverse the
judgment of the district court and direct a new trial.