B. A. Carroll Stevedoring Co. v. United States

25 F. Supp. 6, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1549
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNo. 319
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 F. Supp. 6 (B. A. Carroll Stevedoring Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. A. Carroll Stevedoring Co. v. United States, 25 F. Supp. 6, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1549 (D. Mass. 1938).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

This is a suit in admiralty brought by the libellant under the provisions of Section 33 of the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.A. Section 933, for the benefit of itself and one John Kehoe, a stevedore in its employ, for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him in an accident aboard the S.S. “West Harcuvar,” a vessel owned by the United States and operated for the United States by Rogers and Webb, of Boston, under the trade name of the “Yankee Line.”

The findings of facts and conclusions of law appearing herein are intended as a compliance with Admiralty Rule 46%, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723.

John Kehoe, a stevedore, on April 9, 1929, was employed by the libellant as a foreman of a group of longshoremen whose [7]*7duty it was to unload the S.S. “West Harcuvar” while it was tied up at Pier 44, Mystic Wharf, in the City of Boston. The accident happened shortly after 1 p. m., just after the injured man had seen to it that his men had begun their afternoon duties in No. 4 hatch of the vessel. They had begun to unload the ship on the day previous to the accident. The vessel was docked with the port side of the ship alongside the dock, and an ordinary wooden painters’ ladder was furnished to allow the longshoremen, officers, and crew to board and leave the ship. The ladder was about thirty feet long, rested on the dock, and leaned against the rail of the ship at an angle which varied with the rise and fall of the tide.

The injured man, John Kehoe, had just left his gang in No. 4 hatch of the vessel, had crossed the deck and gone up a four-foot stationary ladder that ran from the deck to the top of the ship’s rail which brought him on top of the latter facing the dock. Having reached the rail he turned around, grasped hold of the ladder, and started down the ladder toward the dock. These facts are undisputed. He 'further testified that when he reached the fourth rung of the ladder, he felt the ladder turn and he fell into a space about four feet wide between the dock and the ship upon some logs which had been placed in the water between the ship and the piling of the wharf for the purpose of serving as fenders to keep the ship away from the dock. He fell a distance of about twenty-five feet.

No question of jurisdiction was raised by the libellee in this case. It would avail little to have done so. The Admiral Peoples, 295 U.S. 649, 55 S.Ct. 885, 79 L.Ed. 1633; The Shangho, 9 Cir., 88 F.2d 42; The Berwindglen, D.C., 14 F.Supp. 992.

The plaintiff relied upon two grounds in order to recover, viz.:

(1) That the ladder that was furnished for the purpose of boarding and leaving the ship was not properly lashed; and

(2) That Kehoe was caused to fall because of the negligence of the defendant in failing to provide a proper gangway or other proper means of boarding and leaving the steamship.

Although there was no dispute that Kehoe had fallen from the ladder a distance of twenty-five feet onto the logs mentioned above and was injured thereby, yet the evidence in the case as to the cause of his fall was very conflicting.

The injured man testified that the painters’ ladder was in use on Monday, the day before the accident, and he had used it several times to board and leave the ship and in doing so had observed before the accident, from the time he commenced to use it, that the ladder was not fastened or lashed to any part of the vessel. He produced several witnesses, some of whom had not seen the accident, who testified that they saw the ladder a short time before the accident and it was not lashed. Some of these witnesses said it was hot lashed on Monday and others, some of them officers in the Longshoremen’s Union, testified they went aboard after the accident by the same ladder from which the injured man fell and that it was not lashed to the ship in any manner. It appeared, however, that at no time was any complaint made on this score to any of the officers of the ship. One Daniel J. Coughlin, who worked as a time-keeper for the libellant, and called as a witness for it, in a statement given at the time of the accident stated that he could not say whether the ladder was made fast or not, that it might have been and might not; that the ladder rested on the vessel just before the accident at an angle of forty-five degrees and that he had no difficulty in getting on and off the ship. This same witness, whose duty it was to investigate the accident and make a report to his superiors, the libellant in this case, stated, in his report that there were only two eyewitnesses to the accident, one of whom, Luke Long, was deceased at the time of trial, but from whom a statement was taken at the time of the accident and which will be discussed later. The Log Book of the ship listed Long and Hanlon as the witnesses to the accident as also did the reports of the libellant to the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission. The other eyewitness, one Walter J. Hanlon, testified at the trial that he saw the accident; that the ladder tipped and slid on the ship’s rail for five or six feet; and that it was not tied or lashed to the rail or any other part of the ship. However, in a statement given to one Captain Christopher Kennedy, an investigator for the United States Protection and Indemnity Insurance Company on April 24, 1929, which was about two weeks after the accident, Hanlon stated: “He (Kehoe) apparently took a couple of steps down and then what [8]*8actually happened, I cannot say, but the next thing I saw was Kehoe falling from the ladder and in between the ship’s side and the pier. I thought at the time that the gangway half turned around with him, but am not sure. * * * The manner in which it was made fast I cannot tell, nor did I take any particular notice having no occasion to use it.” This statement would give the impression that the question in dispute was not whether or not the ladder was made fast, but the manner in which it was made fast, and it seems to me the witness Hanlon assumed in his statement that it was made fast in some manner, but that he had not paid any particular attention as to how it was fastened. It is necessary in this case, because of the divergent stories told by the witnesses, to subject the statements that were made immediately after the accident to close scrutiny in order to get at the actual facts. The witness, Coughlin, the time-keeper mentioned above, testified at the trial that the same witness Hanlon made a statement to him immediately after the accident and he wrote down what Hanlon said. In this account of the accident given to Coughlin, Hanlon stated that the injured man, “turned to go down the ladder to the dock became overbalanced and fell between the ship and the dock.”

The libellee introduced evidence of the Master of the vessel, other officers of the ship and seamen, including one of the latter who was the first person down the ladder after the accident, and all these witnesses testified that they saw the ladder immediately after the accident from which Kehoe fell and that it rested on the bulwark of the ship and was made fast by a heaving line passed over the top of the ladder to secure it. The line was made fast to an angle iron on the inside of the ship, used to support the bulwark.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Supp. 6, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-a-carroll-stevedoring-co-v-united-states-mad-1938.