Chesapeake Stevedoring Co. v. Hufnagel

87 A. 4, 120 Md. 53, 1913 Md. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 A. 4 (Chesapeake Stevedoring Co. v. Hufnagel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chesapeake Stevedoring Co. v. Hufnagel, 87 A. 4, 120 Md. 53, 1913 Md. LEXIS 93 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

Burice, T.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This an action bz*ought to recover damages for personal injuries received by the appellee, an employee of the Chesapeake Stevedozdng Company, a coz’poration engaged in the I usiness of loading azzd unloading ships at the port of Baltimore.

The appellee is a stevedore, and on the night of the 25th of Eebruary, 1911, while engaged in the performance of his duties in loading a vessel, was severely injzzred by the act of one of the servants of the defendant dropping upon him through the hatchway of a vessel called the “Sloterdyke,” a sling load of. flour weighing .about eighteen hundred pounds. *58 The verdict and judgment were in his favor, and the defendant has appealed.

The amended declaration upon which the case was- tried contained four counts, — the fourth count; however, was abandoned at the trial. It is unnecessary to set out the allegations of the declaration. It alleged facts sufficient, if proved, to render the master liable for the negligent act of a fellow servant of the plaintiff by which the injuries complained of were occasioned.

On the night the plaintiff was injured, he was working in the hold of the vessel in obedience to the directions of the foreman in charge of the ship. In doing the work assigned him, it was proper for him to stand directly under the hatchway, which occupied a space about eighteen feet wide and thirty feet long, through which the cargo was lowered into the hold from the upper deck. He had charge of a number of men in the hold, and, as he was in a stooping condition laying some hoards upon grain in the bottom of the vessel, a sling load of flour was thrown upon him from the upper deck.

The plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove that the man in charge of lowering the cargo into the ship must he a competent and skilful man. He is called a deck man, and one of the witnesses testified, “he is a man who shall he a seaman, and have experience on a vessel, and he has got to take care of twenty-one men. That calls for truckers and slingers and men down in the hold, and at the same time for everybody that is around there. He has to look out for everything that is on the ship, and if anybody comes by he has to keep his eye open because the sling comes around there.” The testimony shows that the position of deckman is one of responsibility, and should he filled only by a capable and experienced man. Evidence was offered on behalf of the plaintiff tending to prove that it was the duty of the deck-man to stand close to the hatchway when lowering cargo, and to give timely notice or warning to the men below, and further it was his duty to refrain from sending the cargo *59 down until lie had first been notified by the leader of the men in the bold to send it.

On the night preceding the injury to the plaintiff, an experienced man named Lange was in charge as deckman, and the plaintiff thought that he was also in charge at the time of the injury. The deckman in charge, however, at the time the plaintiff was injured was Charles Sadoski, and the slingload which fell upon and injured the plaintiff was the first one lowered that night into the hold of the vessel. There is ample evidence in the record tending to show that the plaintiff’s injuries resulted directly from the negligence of Charles Sadoski, — that negligence consisting in his breach of duty in lowering the slingload of flour into the hold without warning or notice of any kind to the plaintiff. There is also evidence in the case from which the jury might have reasonably found that 'Sadoski was inexperienced and incapable of properly discharging the duties of deckman. The crucial question in the case, which arises upon exceptions to testimony, upon a motion to strike out testimony, and the rulings upon the prayers, is whether the defendant is liable for the negligence of Sadoski, who upon the undisputed evidence, was a fellow servant of the plaintiff. This question, which is not always easy of solution, must he determined by the application to the facts of well settled principles of law. There has been a great multitude of judicial decisions hearing upon this question, and it has been considered in many cases in this Court; hut a citation of two cases in which this Court has dealt with the question will he sufficient.

In Norfolk and Western Railroad Company v. Hoover, 79 Md. 253, it is said: “It has been repeatedly held by this Court, and is the settled and established doctrine of Maryland, that in actions of this character, where a servant sues his master for injuries resulting from the negligence of a fellow-servant, the plaintiff, to succeed, must prove, not only that some negligence of the fellow-servant caused the injury, hut. also that the master had himself been guilty of negligence, either in the selection of the negligent fellow-servant *60 in the first instance, or in retaining him in his service after-wards. Mere negligence on the part of the fellow-servant, though resulting in an injury, will not suffice to support the action, because the master does not insure one employee against the carelessness of another. But he owes to each of his servants the duty of using reasonable care and caution in the selection of competent fellow-servants, and in the retention in his service of none but those who are. If he does not perform this duty, and an injury is occasioned by the negligence of an incompetent or careless servant, the master is responsible to the injured employee, not for the mere negligent act or omission of the incompetent or careless servant, but for his own negligence in not discharging his own duty towards the injured servant. As this negligence of a master must be proved, it may be proved like any other fact, either by direct evidence or by the proof of circumstances from which its existence may, as a conclusion of fact, be fairly and reasonably inferred. * * * So the question is, can you fix upon the master a failure to use due care in selecting careful servants by showing such notorious or general reputation respecting the servant’s unfitness or incompetency as that the master could not, without negligence on his part, have been ignorant of it when he employed the servant? About this there ought to be no difficulty. If the servant’s general reputation before employment is so notorious as to unfitness as that it must have been known to the master, but for his master’s negligence in hot informing himself — if he could have been ignorant of it only because he failed to make investigation — then, it is obvious that he has not used the care and caution which the law demands of him in selecting his employees. Hence, ‘the servant’s general reputation for unfitness may be sufficient to overcome the presumption that the master used diie care in his selection, even though actual knowledge of such reputation for unfitness on the master’s part is not shown’ ”.

*61 Ill this case there is evidence of the general reputation of Sadoski for unfitness and incompetency to discharge the duties of deckman. This evidence was, therefore, sufficient to overcome the presumption that the defendant had used due care in selecting him for that work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 A. 4, 120 Md. 53, 1913 Md. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-stevedoring-co-v-hufnagel-md-1913.