Compton v. Hammond Lumber Co.

58 P.2d 235, 55 P.2d 21, 153 Or. 546, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 134
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 58 P.2d 235 (Compton v. Hammond Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compton v. Hammond Lumber Co., 58 P.2d 235, 55 P.2d 21, 153 Or. 546, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 134 (Or. 1936).

Opinions

BEAN, J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment entered in the circuit court of Multnomah county in favor of plaintiff, based on the verdict of a jury, in the sum of $l,200-^-$700 as damages and $500 on the maintenance cause. This'appeal questions the propriety of the court’s rulings permitting the judgment.

The case is stated about as follows: The Hammond Lumber Company is the owner of a steamship named the Covena. On June 10, 1933, the vessel was taking on a part cargo of lumber in the Portland harbor, and plaintiff joined the vessel as second mate for coast-wise. The vessel proceeded to Puget Sound, took on some more lumber and then sailed to San Pedro, California, where on June 19 plaintiff entered into articles of seamanship with the owners as second mate for a voyage to Gulf ports and return by way of Panama canal. At the time of joining the ship at Portland, plaintiff was in perfect physical health and the skin disease which he contracted did not manifest itself until shortly before he reached New Orleans. Plaintiff did not go ashore in any port except Everett, Washington, and was ashore there for only a few hours and *549 he did not intermingle with any people while he was ashore. A virulent itch developed in the pelvic region and between the legs when the boat was about two days out from New Orleans, and shortly afterwards red pimples appeared and commenced spreading. The itch first manifested itself in a small area, from an inch to an inch and a half wide and three inches long on each side, and began slowly spreading. In a period of 15 days it entirely encompassed the pelvic region. It spread to two inches below the navel, and the whole inner portion of the thigh. About 15 days after its first appearance it also broke out on his left ankle. It caused him great discomfort, accompanied by a terrible itching sensation, and he stated that the pimples had water inside them and were more or less painful, and that it was very uncomfortable for him to move about. He attempted .to cure it from the ship’s medicine chest by the use of iodine, but this did not have any effect. The vessel eventually returned to the Pacific Coast ports and he secured a ticket to the United States Public Health Service physicians at San Francisco for treatment. The itch is a very contagious sldn disease. Plaintiff’s home was in Portland, Oregon, and he was directed to report to the doctor in charge of the United States Public Health Service there. He reported to Dr. Weir, who was then in charge. The voyage of the vessel terminated on August 18, 1933, and he then became the patient of Dr. Weir and Dr. Smith, who are connected with the United States Public Health Service. These experienced physicians testified that they diagnosed the disease as the itch, partly on account of the statement of plaintiff that he had been treated for the itch in San Francisco at the United States Public Health Service. Plaintiff testified that *550 he continued- to he affected by the itch so that, he was unable to perform the duties of a seaman, until after the 1st of. January, 1934, that the pimples had disappeared from the affected parts before this date, but that the skin was so tender he was unable to work.

The ground of the complaint is that the plaintiff caught the itch due to the defendant corporation’s negligence. It is alleged in the complaint:

“That in and by said contract of employment, it was agreed that defendant would furnish reasonably sanitary quarters for plaintiff; that defendant negligently and carelessly and without any care or attention as to whether plaintiff would bé injured thereby or not, failed to provide sanitary quarters, and as a result thereof plaintiff contracted sarcoptes scabiei, a contagious skin disease which was due to the negligent failure of defendant to cause a health inspection to be made of a certain member of the crew employed as a cook.”

The cause was tried on the evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff.

The testimony of plaintiff indicated that the cook employed on the Covena had been afflicted with the contagious itch for some time prior to the joining of the ship, thereby rendering the quarters insanitary. Plaintiff testified that when the Covena was about two days out from San Pedro, as the weather became warmer, the steward stripped off everything except a pair of duck pants and that he noticed that the steward’s, entire body, up almost to his neck, was covered with the same type of itch which subsequently developed on his own person. The extensive area of the steward’s body covered by the itch, the plaintiff states, indicated that it was of long standing. The steward occupied on shipboard the position of a junior officer *551 and lived in the officer’s quarters on board the vessel and used the same lavatories, washbowls and bathing facilities as the officers. Plaintiff asserts that the steward seemed to be a close friend of the master; that the general condition of this vessel was very insanitary, and, contrary to the usual custom on shipboard of frequently changing the linen, the ship was derelict in this respect.

Plaintiff contends that it was apparent to any one that the steward was afflicted with the contagious itch and the fact that he had this itch was known to the master of the vessel before Mr. Compton contracted it; that the steward had charge of the mess rooms, and if he did not do the actual cooking, at least he superintended it and he was given no health test prior to his employment on the Covena, and that the failure to give the steward a health test and the failure of the master to isolate him when it was known he had the itch was negligence on the part of the owner. It is also claimed by plaintiff that the steward himself was negligent in not isolating himself during the voyage and also in taking employment while in this condition. Plaintiff contends that this is negligence of a fellow servant for which the employer is liable. Plaintiff alleges that $100 per month was a reasonable sum to be allowed as maintenance money, and that the cure could not be effected for a period of six months.

Defendant predicates error upon the refusal to direct a verdict for defendant on both causes of action, first, for damages, and second, for maintenance. Defendant assigns as a second assignment of error that the verdict should have been directed upon the first cause of action for the reason that the proof failed to support the allegations, and third, that the court erred *552 in not directing a verdict for defendant upon the second cause of action for the reasons stated in the first assignment of error, and for other reasons.

Dr. Edward A. Weir, of the United States Health Service of Portland, testified, refreshing his memory from his notes, that Compton came to him for treatment of itch, and further testified:

“A. The term that we give it in our nomenclature is scabiei sarcoptes. It is the ordinary itch.
# # *
A. He seems to be over the worst of it.
Q. Isn’t it a fact that you put down that name— what is it?
A. Scabiei sarcoptes.
Q.

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Compton v. Hammond Lumber Co.
58 P.2d 235 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P.2d 235, 55 P.2d 21, 153 Or. 546, 1936 Ore. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-v-hammond-lumber-co-or-1936.