Daub v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.

18 F. 625, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMay 23, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 18 F. 625 (Daub v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daub v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 18 F. 625, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446 (uscirct 1883).

Opinion

Deady, J.,

(charging jury orally.) The plaintiff in this case brings an action against the defendant to recover damages for an injury he sustained while in its employ on board of the steam-boat Henry Villard, engaged in navigating Lake Pen d’Oreille, occurring, as he alleges, upon the twenty-seventh day of January, 1882. He alleges in his complaint that he was employed as a deck hand on this boat, and that one Nat. IT. Lane and one N. K. Noon wore respectively as master and mate of the vessel, and that the boat being at a point or place or landing on the lake, called Eock.y Point, I believe, and [626]*626about to leave, that he was employed to let go the head-line, and that by reason of the negligence of the master and mate he was caught in the line and had his leg crushed; and that he has suffered permanent injury — is permanently disabled in consequence thereof. The plaintiff also alleges that the mate was incompetent for his employment, and that defendant knew it, and was negligent in employing him and in retaining him in that position. The defendant, answering his complaint, denies that the plaintiff suffered the injury complained of at the time and place alleged, and denies that it was caused by the negligence of the master or the mate; denies the mate or master were incompetent for their places, or that if they were that the defendant had notice of the fact; and alleges further that the plaintiff suffered this injury in consequence of his negligence in the discharge of his duty as deck hand. This is substantially the case of the plaintiff as stated by him, and the defense as stated by the defendant.

The plaintiff in this ease is a laboring man, engaged, as he told you, in working on railways as a laborer and on steam-boats as a deck hand. The defendant is a corporation, supposed to be possessed of great wealth, power, and resources, but as to whether plaintiff is entitled to recover or not in this action you will consider them as any two ordinary individuals. The plaintiff has no right in this case on account of his calling, or position in life. He is entitled to no privileges, nor benefits, on that account. The defendant, although á corporation, representing great wealth and resources, stands before you as any other individual. It is nothing more than a collection of individuals who have associated themselves together for a lawful purpose, and they are not liable, and ought not to be made to pay any damages at your hands, unless any other collection of individuals would be required to do so under the like circumstances.

A man’s liability to pay for a wrong charged to have been committed by him does not depend upon his wealth, but upon his conduct; and this corporation is liable to this plaintiff on account of its conduct, and not on account of its wealth.

However, I suppose it is proper for you, in considering this case upon its general merits, and the probability or improbability of the facts in controversy, to consider that the plaintiff is a poor man, probably without means and without resources to make his case — obtain evidence, get witnesses, and bring them here; that the defendant is wealthy, — has resources and means of calling to its aid and assistance all the testimony that may be necessary to make its case. I suppose there is nothing improper in your looking at these two persons in their different situations in life for that purpose, and for that purpose alone.

It appears from the statement of the plaintiff, and other uncontra-dicted testimony in the ease, that this boat was engaged in the navigation of that lake as a part of the enterprise of building the de[627]*627fendant’s road. It was removing material from camp to camp, or stores from some place of deposit to the camps, to be used as they might be needed. Capt. Pease was in command. Ho employed Noon as mate some time in September. The latter ran on the boat until, I think, the twenty-ninth clay of December, stopping at this point ordinarily once a day, with Noon as mate; that then, for some reason which is immaterial in this case, he wished to come down to the Dalles, in anticipation of which he had taken Capt. Lane on board of the boat to familiarize liimsolf with the landings and the lake; that Lane handled the boat for a week or so after that time, before Pease left him in charge of the boat as master, while Noon remained.

About the middle of December the plaintiff was employed to work on this boat as a deck hand. He had been engaged at camp 2 at some work on the grade. He states a friend told him that there was a vacant place on the boat as deck hand, and he went to the mate and offered his services. The mate employed him at $50 per month. He continued in this service, with Lane as captain and Noon as mate, until the day that this accident occurred. On that morning, the boat being heavily loaded, and the weather very cold, —the thermometer being about 13 degrees below zero, — the boat started on its journey. It was made fast by the head-line to three piles driven into the water some distance out from the wharf, and by a stern-line, I suppose, to the wharf. The boat was to leave there at a certain time. The mate generally cast off the stern-line, and sometimes he told the captain that he had cast it off, or that it was cast off, but the captain often stepped out from the pilothouse and saw that it was off. If he was not told, he generally looked for himself. That the boat was generally more or less aground, and the only practicable way to get her away from the place was to work her stern around, while holding on to the headline, until they got her swung enough out in deep water, and then let go of the head-line. On this morning the stern-line was cast off as usual, and the captain commenced to work the boat — work her out in the stream — and gave a short, sharp whistle, as the signal to cast off.

The testimony, I think, is uniform that the short, sharp whistle, when leaving a landing, indicates that the bead-line, or whatever line the boat is held with is to be cast off. The order may be given to the mate, or may be given directly to the men by this short, sharp whistle. The mate may repeat the order in words, as soon as he hoars it, to the men who are charged with the duty of letting go, if he is there; but if he is not present, then I suppose the men understand it, and, at the signal to cast off, immediately do so, whether the mate is present or not.

The plaintiff says in this action that he and one Seymore undertook to cast off the head-line; that they were charged with that [628]*628duty by the mate, having been told before that they were to cast off the head-line. Counsel for plaintiff, interpreting the testimony, insist that plaintiff was assisting Seymore in casting off the headline. As I remember the testimony, each assisted the other if necessary — they two were charged with casting off this head-line. As you remember, this head-line consisted of a cable or rope about two inches in diameter, and probably 140 or 150 feet long. It was fastened to the bitts in the front of the boat — in front of the capstan. Usually, when they landed at this place, Seymore was on the larboard or port side of the boat, near the coil of rope. He threw the rope around these piles with sufficient force to make the end come around to the starboard side, where it was caught and fastened on the starboard bitt with a hook by the plaintiff. On the other side, where Seymore seems to have been on this occasion, it is fastened by making loops or hitches of the rope around the bitt on the' port side. The rest of the rope was lying off some little distance aft and to the port side, coiled up.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tide Water Oil Co. v. Commissioner
29 B.T.A. 1208 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1934)
Summerfield Co. v. Commissioner
29 B.T.A. 77 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1933)
Reading Co. v. Geary
47 F.2d 142 (Fourth Circuit, 1931)
Walpole v. State Board of Land Commissioners
62 Colo. 554 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1917)
Gutierrez v. New York & Porto Rico S. S. Co.
4 P.R. Fed. 510 (D. Puerto Rico, 1909)
Dye v. Crary
85 P. 1038 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1906)
The Miami
93 F. 218 (Second Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. 625, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daub-v-northern-pac-ry-co-uscirct-1883.