Adams v. Dollar Steamship Lines, Ltd., Inc.

67 P.2d 394, 20 Cal. App. 2d 572, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 845
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1937
DocketCiv. 10128
StatusPublished

This text of 67 P.2d 394 (Adams v. Dollar Steamship Lines, Ltd., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Dollar Steamship Lines, Ltd., Inc., 67 P.2d 394, 20 Cal. App. 2d 572, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 845 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment entered in defendant’s favor pursuant to an order granting defendant’s motion for nonsuit.

The action was for damages arising out of a permanent siclmess contracted by plaintiff while in defendant’s employ as a seaman aboard the ship “President Garfield” on a voyage around the world. The voyage began and was to have ended in San Francisco, and the route followed was via the orient, across the Indian Ocean, through the Suez Canal, and across the Mediterranean Sea to the United States via New York; thence on to San Francisco by way of the Panama Canal. On the night of May 28, 1930, the ship sailed from Marseilles, the last port of call before reaching New York, and soon after it passed through the Straits of Gibraltar plaintiff was taken sick; but he remained in the ship’s hospital for only four days and then resumed his regular duties. The ship arrived in New York on June 10th, proceeded to Boston on June 12th, and returned to New York on June 16th, and remained there until June 20th, when it sailed for the west coast. A few hours before its departure plaintiff while working on deck was taken violently ill and sent to the United States *574 Marine Hospital at Stapleton, Staten Island, New York, for treatment. After being examined he was instructed to return in three days, at which time he entered the hospital as a patient. His case was tentatively diagnosed as acute gastritis; subsequently it was changed to food poisoning, and later, after extensive laboratory work had. been done, it was ascertained he was suffering from typhoid fever. On July 19th he was operated upon for intestinal perforations produced by typhoid ulcers. This was followed by an attack of pleurisy. He was released from the hospital on October 27, 1930, and remained in New York until November 6th, awaiting transportation by ship back to San Francisco. On his arrival in San Francisco he went to his home in Seattle; but in March, 1931, returned to San Francisco to enter the Marine Hospital, where it was found he was afflicted with pulmonary tuberculosis. He remained there until July, 1932, and was then sent to the tuberculosis hospital at Fort Stanton, New Mexico. After being a patient there twenty months he returned to his home in Seattle, and remained under medical treatment until February, 1935, when he returned to San Francisco to attend the trial of this action. At that time he was still seriously ill and unable to perform any kind of work.

Under the shipping articles pursuant to which plaintiff was employed, defendant agreed to furnish the crew with proper food and water, and plaintiff’s cause of action was based upon allegations that defendant ‘1 failed so to do but on the contrary carelessly and negligently furnished putrid food and water contaminated with some bacteria . . . capable of conveying typhoid fever germs”; that plaintiff partook of said food and water, and as a result thereof contracted typhoid fever. There is ample evidence to prove that plaintiff’s pleuritical and tubercular ailments were the outgrowth of the typhoid fever with which he was originally stricken; therefore the principal question involved is whether there are any circumstances shown by the evidence from which it may be reasonably inferred that the typhoid fever was traceable to the ship’s water or food. If so, and regardless of whether it appears also that he may have contracted the disease from other sources, the court erred in taking the case from the jury.

According to the medical testimony, typhoid fever is an acute infection of the intestines, caused by typhoid germs taken into the system by drinking water contaminated with *575 sewage; also by eating uncooked food contaminated with such polluted water. The germs may be taken into the system in various other ways, for example, by touching the lips with the hands or with eating or drinking utensils or other articles which have contacted typhoid germs. The germs may be transmitted also by a so-called typhoid carrier, that is, a person who has had typhoid fever and completely recovered, except that the germs remain alive, usually in the gall bladder, and these people pass out the germs in feces and contaminate food and sewage which gets into the water. The medical testimony further shows that the incubation period of typhoid fever is fourteen days after consuming the germs. Some cases, the “walking type”, may go a little longer, but two weeks is the average. Furthermore, it appears from the medical testimony that typhoid germs are quite prevalent in all Asiatic ports, and to some extent in many other foreign ports; that typhoid fever is a preventable disease, and may be avoided by drinking only boiled or distilled water and eating only cooked food.

The “President Garfield” was used altogether for round-the-world cruises, each trip consuming approximately four months. The ports of call were Honolulu, ports of Japan, Shanghai, Hongkong, Manila, Singapore, Penang, Colombo, Suez, Alexandria, Naples, Genoa, Marseilles, New York and Boston; thence back to New York and on to San Francisco via the Panama Canal, stopping at ports en route. The ship’s water supply, for both passengers and crew, was carried in six large tanks, and on each trip two of these tanks were emptied and cleaned, one at Shanghai and one at Singapore, the work being done by resident Chinese labor. The work consisted of scaling the cement coating from the inside of the tanks, and then recoating them with cement. The water supply was replenished as needed at different ports of call. On this particular trip it was taken on at every port of call except Shanghai. The ship was provided with evaporators for distilling water, but they were intended to be used only in cases of emergency, it being cheaper to buy the water than to heat steam to evaporate it. Before taking water at ports of call the ship’s doctor ascertains from the public health doctor at the local port whether the water is suitable, and if it is the chief engineer is directed to fill the tanks. As to the food used on the voyage, there was no evidence introduced *576 showing where or under what circumstances it was obtained; but it was shown that passengers and crew ate the same food.

The ship sailed from Manila on April 22d, and when about four days out serious sickness developed among members of the crew, so that by the time the ship reached the Gulf of Aden, some two or three weeks later, there were fifteen or sixteen crew patients in the ship’s hospital. No .complaint was made about the ship’s water; it had no bad odor, and was always fresh. But soon after leaving Shanghai complaint was made to the captain by certain members' of the crew about the food. It was claimed that it was not only putrid, but improperly cooked; and after the ship entered the Red Sea the ship’s doctor also complained to the captain about the matter, saying that there must be something wrong because of the increasing number of cases of sickness among the crew; and the doctor demanded that he be allowed to inspect the refrigerator where the food was kept. After having done so, and at his direction, certain quantities thereof consisting of meats, cheese, and other foodstuffs, were thrown overboard. The federal law (sec. 201, tit. 46, U. S. C.

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67 P.2d 394, 20 Cal. App. 2d 572, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-dollar-steamship-lines-ltd-inc-calctapp-1937.