Cosgrove v. Pitman

37 P. 232, 103 Cal. 268, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 765
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1894
DocketNo. 15189
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 P. 232 (Cosgrove v. Pitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosgrove v. Pitman, 37 P. 232, 103 Cal. 268, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 765 (Cal. 1894).

Opinions

Harrison, J.

The defendants are stevedores, and in August, 1885, were engaged in discharging a cargo of coal from the vessel “ Henry Hyde,” then lying at one of the wharves in San Francisco. The plaintiff’s intestate was in their employ, and while so engaged a tub of coal, which was being hoisted from the hold of the vessel, swung around so that it might be emptied into another vessel alongside, and struck him with such force as to cause injuries from which he died. The plaintiff, as the administratrix of his estate, brought this action against the defendants to recover the damages sustained by his death, alleging that it was caused by reason of their negligence. The coal was hoisted by means of a donkey engine on the wharf, which was in charge of an engineer named Murphy, who at signals from another employee started and stopped the engine; and it is claimed by the plaintiff that the injury to the deceased was caused by the negligence of this engineer; and, in order to avoid the rule of law which exonerates the employer from liability to an employee for an injury resulting from the negligence of a fellow-servant, the [272]*272plaintiff sought to show that Murphy was addicted to the habit of drinking intoxicating liquors, and that this fact was of such notoriety that it must have been known to the defendants, and that, therefore, they were guilty of negligence in having him in their employ. The cause was tried by a jury, and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants have appealed.

Murphy’s capacity as an engineer, aside from the impairment of such capacity by reason of this alleged habit, does not seem to have been questioned by the plaintiff, and there was ample evidence of such capacity shown at the trial. The plaintiff did not attempt to show that Murphy was intoxicated at the time of the accident, nor was there any evidence of that purport before the jury. Murphy himself testified, and there was no evidence tending to contradict his statement, that he was not intoxicated on the day of the accident, and had not taken any intoxicating liquors, either on that day or for a year prior thereto. The testimony of Nagle that in the morning of that day, while Murphy was fixing his engine, and seemed to be in a hurry, some one remarked: “ I guess he is drinking a little,” is not entitled to any consideration as evidence that he had in fact been drinking.

Upon the theory of the plaintiff that the injury resulted from the negligence of Murphy, if she would charge the defendants with the results of this negligence, by reason of their having him in their employ, with knowledge of his intemperate habits, it was necessary for her to show that the injury was in some respect the result of such intemperate habits. Unless the accident was in some way connected with such habit, or resulted from intemperance, the habit was not the cause of the negligence, and the defendants could not, by reason of their knowledge of this habit, be rendered liable for the negligence of Murphy resulting from any other cause. If the fact of Murphy’s habit of intemperance at or about the time of the accident had been shown, the jury might have inferred that he was in that condition [273]*273at the time of the accident, and that his negligence was the result of this condition. Proof of his being under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident would be presumptive of his negligence, and, if it had appeared by direct evidence that he had a habit of intemperance] it would throw upon the defendants the burden of showing that he was not then in that condition; but proof that he had at some previous time the reputation of having the habit is not proof of the fact that he did have the habit. To allow the proof of his reputation for drunkenness to be equivalent to establishing the fact that he had the habit of drunkenness, and from that to make the further inference that from his habit he was so at this time, would be to draw an inference from a presumption. Unless facts are shown from which negligence may be reasonably inferred, a jury should never be permitted to infer, arbitrarily and without evidence, that there was negligence. When a fact is established, some other fact may be justly inferred therefrom, but when the plaintiff, instead of presenting a fact or facts from which the negligence of the defendant may be reasonably inferred, gives to the jury only a presumption drawn from other facts, the jury are not to be allowed to infer negligence from such presumption. An inference cannot be drawn from a presumption, but must be founded upon some fact legally established. (See Douglass v. Mitchell, 35 Pa. St. 443.)

For the purpose of establishing this habit in Murphy, the plaintiff offered evidence of his reputation in the matter of drinking, and also the testimony of certain witnesses that they had at times seen him “ under the influence” of liquor. None of the witnesses testified that they had ever seen him intoxicated, or that he was in fact accustomed to habitual drinking. It was shown that he would occasionally drink, “to be sociable and pleasant,” and also that it was quite common for engineers to drink. One witness, when asked about his habits with respect to drink prior to the day of the [274]*274accident, said: “I have seen him take a drink once in a while. I have seen him when he was pretty full”; and when asked how frequently, said: “Well, not very often. It might be once a week, or something like that.” Another witness, when asked with reference to his habits of drink, said that “ for some months prior to 1885 ” he would take a drink frequently, and that quite a number of times he had known of his drinking to excess; that for four, five, or six years before the trial (March, 1891) he had not conducted himself so well with respect to drink, and a great many would not employ him. The witness did not, however, state when or how frequently he had known of his drinking to excess. Another of the plaintiff’s witnesses testified that the “standing” of Murphy “along about 1885” was bad on account of drinking, and that among the pile-drivers for four or five years prior to the trial he was not thought to be a “safe” man. Another, who had seem him drink in 1883, said that since that time “ I have considered that he drank too much whiskey to take care of an engine.” He does not, however, state that he had had any knowledge of Murphy’s habits or conduct during two years prior to the accident. This was substantially all the evidence that was given by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing that Murphy was addicted to the habit of drinking. When the evidence was offered the defendants reserved the right to move to strike it out, if the plaintiff failed to bring it home to them, or should fail to show that Murphy was under the influence of liquor at the time of the accident; and at the close of the plaintiff’s case they made this motion, and it was denied by the court.

This motion should have been granted. It cannot be said that to take an occasional sociable drink, or even to be occasionally “under the influence” of drink, constitutes a habit of drinking, or that a jury would be authorized to infer from such evidence that the man had been rendered incapable of properly managing his engine, when he had not been drinking for a year prior [275]*275thereto. Proof of specific acts is not equivalent to proof that Murphy had either this reputation, or the habit. “ Character for care, skill, and truth of witnesses, parties, or others, must all alike be proved by evidence of general reputation, and not of special acts. (1 Green-leaf on Evidence, secs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 P. 232, 103 Cal. 268, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosgrove-v-pitman-cal-1894.