City of Chicago v. White Transp. Co.

243 F. 358, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2121
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 2, 1917
DocketNo. 2421
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 243 F. 358 (City of Chicago v. White Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Chicago v. White Transp. Co., 243 F. 358, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2121 (7th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

BAKER, Circuit Judge.

[1] I. Appellee’s steamer, the Arizona, was sunk in the Chicago river, through the alleged negligence of the city’s servants in the management of one of the city’s fireboats. By the law of Illinois a municipal corporation is not liable to the owner of property for negligence of firemen in the performance of their duty. This, of course, applies to acts within the sovereign dominion of Illinois. In the case of Workman v. New York City, 179 U. S. 552, 21 Sup. Ct. 212, 45 L. Ed. 314, it was held that for every maritime tort there is redress if the admiralty court has jurisdiction of the offending person or thing; that, though a libel in personam is not maintainable against a sovereign, it is not for lack of a cause of action in admiralty, but on account of the sovereign’s immunity from process; that a municipal corporation, like private corporations and persons within the reach of the court, is subject to process; and therefore that a municipal corporation must respond to a libel in personam if a cause of action is stated- under the maritime law, although the same acts of its serv[359]*359ants would not constitute a cause of action under the local law of the state. So the present libel in personam was a proper proceeding.

[2] II. At the close of navigation, the libel alleged, the Arizona was laid up for the winter at a dock on the east side of the Chicago river; that one night in midwinter a fire broke out in a grain elevator located on the west bank of the river, northwest of the Arizona; that a gale was blowing from tlie northwest, and the thermometer registered below zero; that the fireboat negligently took a position in the river near tlie Arizona, and negligently operated and continued to operate the fire apparatus in such a way that the water therefrom ran into the Arizona’s hold, and also formed large masses of ice on her decks, cabins, rails, and port side, so that she began to list to port, and finally sank, all without fault of the libelant. The damages asked were the expenses of raising and repairing her.

Do these allegations exhibit a cause of action? In the Workman Case and in the other citations by appellee (Thompson Navigation Co. v. City of Chicago [D. C.] 79 Fed. 984; Philadelphia v. Gavagnin, 62 Fed. 617, 10 C. C. A. 552; The Major Reybold [D. C.] 111 Fed. 414; Port of Portland v. United States, 176 Fed. 866, 100 C. C. A. 336; Island Transportation Co. v. Seattle [D. C.] 205 Fed. 993),' the injuries to the libelants’ vessels occurred through collisions; that is, the negligence of the municipal corporations was in the operation of their vessels as vessels. Here, it is to be observed, the sole negligence charged consisted in bringing the fire apparatus so near the Arizona, and operating it in such a way, as to cause her to sink. No direct precedent has been cited by counsel or found by us; and so the question must be answered in the light of analogies. If the damage to the Arizona had resulted from the operation of fire apparatus located upon the banks of the river, a different question would be presented. Here, however, not only the Arizona, but also the instrumentality which injured her, was upon the navigable waters of the United States. In the federal license of the fireboat there were no provisions which would exempt the city of Chicago from any maritime liability which under the same circumstances would fall upon a private corporation or individual. It would therefore seem that, following in the line of the principles declared in the Workman Case, a municipal corporation is liable for any negligent act, committed on navigable waters, which would render any private corporation or any individual liable. And as to these latter, liability is created not merely by the negligent handling of their vessels, but as well by the negligent setting in motion of any force from their vessels which causes an injury to another vessel upon navigable waters. In The Chickasaw (C. C.) 41 Fed. 627, a steamer, moored to her wharf and with her furnaces fireless, cut loose a coal fiat which was lashed to her side; the coal fiat was carried down by the current of the river and drifted against and injured the libelant’s vessel; and the decision turned on the question whether under the evidence the act of the Chickasaw’s mate in setting- the coal flat adrift was a negligent act. Very obviously tlie movements of the Chickasaw herself were not involved; but the injury to the libelant’s vessel was caused by the impact of the coal flat. In The Clarita, 23 Wall. 1, 23 L. Ed. 146, a privately owned fireboat negligently permitted a burn[360]*360ing vessel, which the fireboat had taken in tow, to get loose and to drift near and set fire to the libelant’s bark. The negligence charged and proven consisted not at all in the lack of proper equipment or of proper management of the fireboat as a vessel; it consisted in the failure to provide fireproof hawsers which would have enabled the fireboat to prevent the burning vessel from escaping and communicating fire to other vessels. If any analogies may be drawn from these citations to the present case, they certainly are not as close as might be desired; but we believe that they justify, if not require, the application of the Workman decision to the present libel.

[3] III. The Arizona was tied with chains to a dock on the east side of the river about 200 feet east southeast of the burning elevator which was on the west side of the river. South of the burning elevator about 75 feet was the Minnesota elevator which the fire marshal had instructed the captain of the fireboat to save. Many other men and apparatus were engaged in other assigned tasks in the general effort to subdue and prevent the spread of the fife. A gale of 40 miles an hour was blowing from the northwest. The fireboat tied a forward line to a vessel lying south of the Arizona and an aft line to the Arizona, so that the'fireboat lay on the port quarter of the Arizona. From this position the fireboat threw water on the south wall and the south portion of the east wall of the burning elevator. Spray from the nozzles was blown upon the aft part of the Arizona, water flowed through her hatches into her hold, and ice formed on the port side of her deck and cabins. She soon began to list, and finally, under the weight of ice 9 feet thick and of the water in her hold, she snapped her chains and sank.

The fireboat began her operations about 10 p. m. and continued fast to the Arizona until about 4 a. m. The Arizona sank about 7 a. m.

In the testimony of the captain of the fireboat and of one of his men, it was claimed that when they arrived the Arizona was already listing; that on examination her hold was found to contain a large quantity of water; and that, as she continued to list, water came into her through .seams in her port side above the water line. But the testimony respecting the Arizona’s condition before and after the sinking clearly establishes that the sole cause was the water from the nozzles of the fireboat, and the claim to the contrary is not now urged by appellant.

One contention of appellant is that the absorption of the men in fighting the fire, together with the darkness and smoke, prevented them from noticing and appreciating tire increasing' peril of the Arizona. Not long after the fireboat had been in operation the captain observed the listing and sent men on board the Arizona. These men, at the captain’s direction, put in siphons to draw water from the hold.

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243 F. 358, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 2121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-white-transp-co-ca7-1917.