Lord Young —I regard this as a serious and important case. This was a workman in the sense of the statute, and he sustained an injury in the course of his work by which he was instantly killed, and the consequence of his death was that he left behind him a widow and five children. They, as wholly dependent upon him, are entitled to compensation under the statute unless it is shown that his death was attributable to his serious and wilful misconduct. The Sheriff who tried the case was of opinion that it was not attributable to his serious and wilful misconduct, and has therefore allowed compensation to the deceased's widow and children. The appeal to us is on a question of law which involves two questions. Stated generally, it is whether the Sheriff was wrong in law in not finding that this man's death was attributable to his serious and wilful misconduct. Prima facie the question whether the accident was or was not attributable to the serious and wilful misconduct of the workman himself is a question of fact. But we were referred to a case of some importance— Dailly v. John Watson, Limited , 2 F. 1044, in which the facts stated by the Sheriff were that a workman who suffered through an explosion had himself occasioned it by proceeding through the mine with a lighted lamp on his head, carrying cartridges in his hand which were not enclosed in a case or canister. The Court held there that the Sheriff was wrong in law in not attributing that calamity to the serious and wilful misconduct of the man who, contrary to the rules of the pit, was proceeding along with a lighted lamp on his head and these explosives in his hand. In the opinion which I expressed in that case—for I was one of the Judges—I concurred in the judgment, but I think my impression was that I could not say that a question of serious and wilful misconduct was exclusively a question of law, though in that case I held with my brethren that law was involved in the question. But to say that it is exclusively a question of law in every case is a proposition to which I could not assent. But I observe that two errors in law are imputed to the Sheriff here. One is that he did not hold that there was a violation here of Rule 9. I am disposed to hold that upon the facts stated to us we cannot hold that there was a breach of the Coal Mines Regulation Act. We have no facts except those which are stated here. Your Lordship has read the Rule of the Coal Mines Regulation Act, which is that props shall be put in at no greater distance one from another than six feet, or such less distance as may be ordered by those in charge of the pit. Now, here there were at the time of the accident five men engaged holing, the space holed being over twenty feet in all. The man O'Hara, who was killed, was at the time of the accident working at one end of a continuous line of holing, and three of the five men “had holed a considerable portion” of that continuous line “before O'Hara and the remaining man began to hole coal;” and “at the time of the accident these two had holed only about three feet,” so that the other three men had holed up to within three feet of the twenty feet at the time when O'Hara began. What was the state of the holing immediately at the place where O'Hara and his companion began to work at the time when they began we are not told.
The other three men were working at the portion of the continuous line which had been holed before O'Hara began. And how long O'Hara had been working—whether for an hour, or half-an-hour, or for ten minutes, or for five minutes before the accident happened we are not told. He and the man who was with him had during the time that they were working holed about 3 feet, about 1 1 2 feet each if the total is divided equally between them. You cannot tell how long before the accident happened O'Hara began to work. In the course of the discussion I put the question—“What should O'Hara have done; what is that which it was serious and wilful misconduct on his part to omit doing?” It was said he should not have begun his work at all but should have
Page: 357 ↓
But where should he have put up a prop? Is there any requirement on a workman to put up a prop except where he has holed the place himself? Must he put up a prop or props at his neighbouring workmen's place, or is he to put up a prop only where he is holing himself? And where is he to put it? Is he just to make room for a prop and then put one in? I really cannot pronounce the Sheriff's judgment wrong in point of law upon the facts which are stated.
We have heard a long argument from counsel, and taken the case to avizandum to see whether we could hold on the information given to us that this workman during the short time he was engaged in holing had violated the statute. Now, the result of hearing that argument and consideration at avizandum is that we differ in opinion on the subject, at least I differ from your Lordship, for I agree with the Sheriff. Then are we to affirm that it was serious and wilful misconduct on the part of this miner to take the view that he did and begin his work? I cannot so hold. I think, in order to set aside a judgment of this kind, we should have distinct and clear grounds for affirming that, taking the facts to be as stated by the Sheriff, it was pronounced upon such an erroneous view of the law that we must recal it and impute the accident that happened to this workman's serious and wilful misconduct. I cannot do that, and must therefore express my distinct opinion to be that there are no grounds for interfering with the judgment of the Sheriff.
The Sheriff says, “that the total space holed where all five men were working was over 20 feet, and that no sprags had been erected by anyone, although there was ample room for the erection of sprags.” I think his statement that there was ample room for the erection of sprags is applicable to the 20 feet. I do not understand him as meaning, and there is nothing to indicate that he meant, that there was room, ample room, for sprags in any space that had been holed by O'Hara. No doubt, where you have a space of 3 feet holed, there is room to put up a sprag, and it may be that after 1 foot is holed you could put up a sprag there; but the question is whether O'Hara had room to put up a sprag before the 3 feet were cleared, and if so, what quantity of the 3 feet had been cleared when there was room for a sprag and it became his duty to put it up? After the 3 feet were out he may have been proceeding to put up a sprag—there was plenty of room for it then—when the accident happened.
Lord Trayner —The second branch of the question put to us is not well expressed, but it was stated at the bar that it would be corrected. Taking the question put to us to be, whether O'Hara was in breach of special rule No. 9, and if so, whether what happened was attributable to his serious and wilful misconduct, I am of opinion that the answer to both branches of the question should be in the affirmative. I think it plain on the facts as stated that the deceased was in breach of No. 9 of the additional special rules framed in pursuance of the Coal Mines Regulation Act at the time when he was killed, because he was working at an open face, opened up to the extent of 17 feet, before he began, and thereafter to the extent of 3 feet by himself and his companion without any sprag being put in by himself or others. Now, the rule is quite explicit that where holing is being done sprags or props shall be set up as soon as there is room. I think this man's plain duty was, if he saw 17 feet of holing without a sprag, to put up a sprag before he began. The Sheriff says there was ample room for the erection of sprags. But if he did not put up a sprag before beginning, he had plenty of room to put one up in the space which he opened before the accident occurred. His failure so to sprag his working was a wilful violation of the statutory rule, and amounted to wilful and serious misconduct on his part.
I would like to say that a strict enforcement of these rules appears to me to be a duty on the part of the Court. The rules are devised for the express purpose of protecting the miners themselves. The result of these miners working 3 feet with a 17 feet hole behind might have been to bring down the roof on the whole five men. The neglect of any one of these men was not merely a neglect of his own safety but a neglect of the safety of every man at that particular place, and in the interest of the miners themselves I regard it as a duty to enforce these rules with the greatest strictness.
Lord Moncreiff —The ninth additional special rule is framed for the purpose of protecting miners from danger when holing is being done of the head coal of the roof coming down upon them. The seriousness of the danger is sufficiently shown by the accident which occurred in this case. In this case the respondent's husband James O'Hara was killed instantaneously by a fall of head coal from the roof.
The questions which are put to us are first, whether James O'Hara committed a breach of the rule; and secondly, whether in doing so he was guilty of serious and wilful
Page: 358 ↓
I think that O'Hara committed a distinct breach of additional special rule No. 9. That rule provides that where holing is being done sprags or holing props shall be set as soon as there is room, and the distance between such sprags or holing props shall not exceed 6 feet. Now, when O'Hara went to work three other men of the gang had holed a considerable portion before he arrived. O'Hara and a fifth man set to work and had holed 3 feet when the fall took place. By that time no less than 20 continuous feet had been holed and no sprags erected. This cannot but have been apparent to O'Hara, and the question of law put to us, which the Sheriff and the parties concur in presenting as a question of law is, I understand, in substance this, whether, on a proper construction of the rule, he was excused from propping, because the danger and accident was in part caused by work which had been done by others before he arrived. I cannot hold that to be a sufficient excuse. The danger must have been apparent to him, and he must have worked for an appreciable time before the accident occurred. I think he was bound either himself to insert a prop, or at least to stop work and complain to the oversman or other superior official.
The statute fixes on employers heavy liability without proof of fault on their part. But in order to protect them from gross negligence on the part of the workman it is provided that they shall not be liable if, after they have taken all reasonable care for the protection of the workman, the workman wilfully disregards and neglects the rules for his safety which they have established. The result is that in my opinion the deceased clearly committed a breach of the 9th additional special rule, and it follows from what I have said that he must have done so wilfully as the danger was apparent.
The Court answered the question as amended in the affirmative.
Counsel for the Claimant and Respondent— Watt, K.C.— A. Moncrieff. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondents and Appellants— Campbell, K.C.— Hunter. Agents— W. & J. Burness, W.S.