Cuddy v. Horn

10 N.W. 32, 46 Mich. 596, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 651
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 10 N.W. 32 (Cuddy v. Horn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuddy v. Horn, 10 N.W. 32, 46 Mich. 596, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 651 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Marston, C. J.

The following statement of facts taken from the briefs of counsel for the defendants is sufficiently full and accurate for a definite understanding and discussion of the legal questions raised.

The action was commenced by the plaintiff as administrator of the estate of John Kelley, deceased, to recover damages on account of his death caused by a collision between the steamer “Garland,” of which the defendant Horn was owner, and the steam-yacht “Mamie,” owned by the other defendants, on the Detroit river, July22d, 1880. The deck-[600]*600ration alleged in substance that the Garland was going down the river upon a pleasure excursion, and the Mamie was coming up, returning from a pleasure excursion, and that Kelley was a passenger on the Mamie; that by failure of the master of the Garland to keep a proper lookout, and by his failure to give proper signals at the proper time upon the approach of said Mamie, as required by Rule 3 for the government of pilots, and by reason of the failure of the master of the Mamie to give the proper signals to indicate upon which side she would pass, until the vessels had approached so near that a collision was inevitable, and by reason of the failure of the owner and master of the Mamie to keep a proper lookout upon said Mamie, said vessels collided, and said Mamie sank, causing the death by drowning of said Kelley.

The defendant Horn and the other defendants filed separate pleas-of the general issue. The owners of the Mamie also filed a plea in abatement, alleging that proceedings had been commenced and were then pending in the district court of the Hnited States by them as owners of the Mamie for the purpose of taking advantage of the statute of the Hnited States limiting the liability of vessel-owners in certain cases. And special notice of such proceedings was also given with the plea of the general issue.

A trial was had upon this plea, and a verdict, by direction of the court, rendered for the plaintiff thereon, and the trial thereupon proceeded upon the pleas of the general issue, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendants. The case comes here on writ of error, and the points relied upon by the defendants will be considered in order.

The position taken by the defendant Horn was, that the plaintiff’s intestate was a passenger on the Mamie at the time of the alleged collision, and the Mamie having contributed to the collision, plaintiff’s intestate must, in law, be held to have been so identified with those in charge of the yacht that he could not have recovered if he had survived, for an injury suffered by him occasioned by such collision, and that under the terms of the chartering or hiring of the yacht he could not have recovered for an injury so received.

[601]*601It appeared that Bev. A. F. Bleyenberg had chartered the steam-yacht Mamie to carry a party of altar boys and others, twenty-one persons in all, and fourteen of them from eleven to fifteen years of age, from Detroit to Monroe and back, for which he was to pay twenty dollars, and that the yacht was in charge of the master and engineer thereof placed there by the owners. At the time of chartering the yacht it was stated that there would be about twenty persons to go on the trip, but no limit was placed upon the number, or as to the particular route to be taken, in going to and returning from Monroe.

It has not been and could not be claimed that young Kelley had any authority or control whatever over the master or engineer of the yacht, or that he could have changed or directed the movements of the yacht in even the slightest degree. And while Father Bleyenberg, undoubtedly, we may assume, could and did have charge and control of the yacht, as to the time of starting, the number of passengers and such like, yet as to the due and proper management of the vessel, the steam she should carry, the speed at which she should be run, the course she should take within certain limits, the rules she should observe in meeting and passing other vessels, the lights she should carry, in a word the laws and rules applicable to such craft while navigating the rivers and lakes, were matters over which he could not rightfully be permitted to have any control or direction whatever. These were matters which the master of the vessel could not legitimately •turn over to the guidance or direction of any person who may have chartered the boat for a trip to and from a certain point. Had directions been given the master to run the yacht ashore, or upon a rock,-or to run down upon and destroy a row-boat, or to not give or answer the necessary signals when approaching another vessel, or to not carry proper lights, clearly the master would have been under no -obligations to obey such orders, and neither he nor the owners of the vessel could have justified such a departure from duty by setting up the authority or directions of Father [602]*602Bleyenberg therefor. In this case it was the legal duty of the yacht to carry proper lights at night and to give and answer certain signals in due and proper time when approaching another vessel, and what the law had thus directed to be done could not be varied, changed or controlled by any person who may have chartered the vessel for the occasion. And where a person can rightfully have no voice or control,, he cannot be held so identified with those in charge as to be considered a party to their negligence. It seems to me that any other rule would but point out the way to owners of vessels in which they could violate all rules and regulations' adopted to insure the safety of passengers without incurring any liability to them therefor. The reason for holding a person riding in a private conveyance identified with the driver thereof, and therefore affected by the negligence of the latter, cannot fairly or justly be held applicable in cases like the present. In the case of a private conveyance the driver is under the control and directions of the passenger, and if not, the latter may well decline to entrust his safety farther in such conveyance. "When, however, a person enters a public conveyance, and certainly a railroad train or a steamboat, he has no such control over the movements of either, and whether he may have chartered such conveyance for a special purpose or not, yet for a faithful observance of the rules of law enacted for the running or navigation thereof, he cannot be held responsible, in a case like the present, where the master is not his servant and is not subject to his directions or authority.

The authorities cited by counsel for plaintiff in error and which decline to follow Thorogood v. Bryan, 8 C. B. 115, should be followed in the present case. The charterer in this case did not appoint the officers of the boat, but was himself, and those who accompanied him, under and subject to their power in the navigation of the vessel, and if they, thus controlling the movements of the Mamie while running, and representing the owners thereof, were guilty of negligence in the performance of their duties, those on [603]*603board have a remedy for injuries suffered in consequence-thereof. See also Covington T. Co. v. Kelly 11 Am. Rep. 21.

It was next insisted that there was no joint liability on the part of the defendants. This question is not free from embarrassment, and upon a trial the danger is that each-defendant is interested in endeavoring to throw all the blame upon the other, and perhaps attempt to prove acts of negligence not set forth in the declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.W. 32, 46 Mich. 596, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuddy-v-horn-mich-1881.