Bolden v. Jensen

70 F. 505, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80
CourtDistrict Court, D. Washington
DecidedOctober 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 70 F. 505 (Bolden v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolden v. Jensen, 70 F. 505, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80 (washd 1895).

Opinion

HANFORD, District Judge.

The libelant, who is a North Carolina negro, came to Port Townsend from Valparaiso, as a member of the crew of the Chilian ship Atacama. On account of injury to his wrists and hands, he is in a most deplorable condition. The actual physical condition of those members, and the uncontradicted testimony of the physicians who have examined and treated him, proves that he has been subjected to torture, by having both wrists so tightly bound by handcuffs or cords as to arrest circulation for such length of time as to produce what the doctors term "strangulation.” The skin and flesh of both palms have been blistered, caus[506]*506ing decay, and the skin oí his knuckles has, by severe bruising or chafing, been destroyed. Just above each wrist joint there are deep scars, completely encircling the wrists. The cords are so affected that his fingers remain bent, and the testimony shows that some of them, at least, can never be straightened. He is probably permanently disabled from performing any labor requiring him to grasp ropes or implements, so that it will be unsafe for him to ever attémpt to perform the duties of a sailor.

By whom and in what manner were these injuries inflicted? These are the principal questions which I must determine from the evidence. The libelant has testified that his injuries are the result of his being triced up in the ship, during the voyage, by the defendants. Both of the defendants and other witnesses whom they have .produced have given testimony contradicting the libel-ant’s version of his treatment, and they deny that he was triced up or that his wrists were bound in any way to cause such injury, but they have failed to offer any testimony whatever explaining how or in what manner the injuries were inflicted. I have nothing in opposition to the libelant’s plain sworn statement, except the argument of the defendants’ attorney, who advances the theory that the injuries were self-inflicted by the libelant. This theory is built mainly upon the lack of evidence to prove that the defendants were actuated by any spirit of malevolence against the libelant, and the evidence tending to prove that he received humane treatment at their hands after the infliction of the injuries, and the negative testimony of the defendants and the second mate and the carpenter of the ship. The uncontradicted testimony proves that, after the ship sailed from Valparaiso, the first mate was taken ill, and, in consequence, was left at the port of Iquiqui, at which place the defendant McLean and his wife came on board as passengers. On arrival at Port Townsend, McLean represented himself to the Chilian consul and others as being the agent of the owner of the vessel, and transacted business as such agent, and declared his purpose to have the libelant imprisoned until the vessel should return to Chili, and then returned in the ship, to be dealt with according to Chilian laws, for misconduct during the 'voyage. At different times during the early part of the voyage, the libelant disputed with the defendant Jensen, who was the nominal master of the ship, and the second mate, and he was considered by them to be insolent and dangerous. These occurrences culminated one afternoon, when the libelant was at work on the fore topmast yard; and, being sharply and roughly reproved by the second mate for dilatoriness in his work, he answered in such a way as to bring on a quarrel. After cursing each other aloft, the second mate descended to the deck, followed by the libelant; and there, after a sheath knife, which was the only weapon the libelant had possession of, had been thrown aside by him, or taken from him by McLean, the two engaged in a fight, in which the second mate was getting worsted, when Capt. Jensen came to his rescue with a be[507]*507laying pin. While the negro had the second mate down upon the deck, and was striking him with his first, the captain, who is a large, powerful man, seized him by the shirt collar with his left hand, and endeavored to, if he did not actually, strike him with the pin, and then, with the help of McLean, led him aft to the cabin, put him in irons, and shut him up in a small room, where he was kept in that fix until the next day.

The negro’s description of the manner of his imprisonment is to the effect that, when the captain interfered in the tight, he was struck three heavy blows witli the pin on the back of his neck and head; that, in the small room off the cabin, his wrists were handcuffed behind his back, a rope was rove through the handcuffs, or a connecting link, and three turns of it were taken around his neck, and it was then passed through the handcuffs or link, and then to a ringbolt in the ceiling or wall of the room, and made fast, so that his position was such 'as to compel Mm to keep his head drawn backward, and to stand on his toes in order to relieve his arms from the pain of being drawn up behind his back, and he was kept in that position, without relief and without water, until nearly noon of the following day, during all of which time he was in terrible pain. The vessel was at that time in the tropics, and the room in which he was shut up was close and hot. He called and begged for wafer to drink, but none was given to him. When he was finally relieved, his hands were swollen and slinking. The second mate, a witness for the defendants, has testified that the negro did call for water while the witness was at supper, and that he arose from the table, and gave the negro water to drink. In this he is contradicted by the carpenter, also a witness for the defendants, who states that he ate supper with the second mate, and that that officer did not go froan the table to answer any call of the negro. The defendants and their witnesses testify that the negro spent the whole night howling, cursing, threatening, and striking his head and body violently against the wall of the room, and surging to free himself from the irons and rope which held him. They have introduced, as exhibits, three ankle irons, which they claim were used instead of the handcuffs. One of the three cannot be locked, and they are all so large when closed and locked that the libelant’s hands and elbows can- easily pass through them. It is simply impossible that the wounds upon (he negro’s wrists could have been produced by these irons. It is claimed that the negro was secured by placing one of the anklets upon each of his arms, connecting the two with the third iron, passing a rope through this, in front of his shoulders, and leading back in such a way as to draw the irons up so high that his arms could not be drawn out, and that the end of the rope was then secured to a bunk in the room, leaving 18 inches of slack, so that he could stand up, sit down, or lie upon the bunk. They claim that the negro was at the time so enraged and violent'that it was necessary to secure him thus, to prevent injury to himself and others in the ship. They deny most positively that the rope was used to bind his wrists, or [508]*508that any irons or rope were placed upon Mm which could in any way prevent circulation or cause strangulation. The attorney’s theory is that the negro, in his rage, managed in some way to so entangle the rope about his wrists as to cause strangulation; but the witnesses have failed to support this theory, by testifying that they found the negro at any time entangled in the meshes of the rope, and tó me the theory seems to be as unreasonable as the description given by the defendants of the manner in which they secured the negro with such irons as they have produced in court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 F. 505, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolden-v-jensen-washd-1895.