Garoni v. Compagnie Nationale de Navigation of Marseilles

14 N.Y.S. 797, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 63, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2505
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJune 1, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 N.Y.S. 797 (Garoni v. Compagnie Nationale de Navigation of Marseilles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garoni v. Compagnie Nationale de Navigation of Marseilles, 14 N.Y.S. 797, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 63, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2505 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1891).

Opinion

Daly, C. J.

The infant plaintiff, Angelo Garoni, aged over seven years, with bis father, mother, brother, and two sisters, was a steerage passenger on ■the defendant’s steam-ship Cáchemete, from Naples to New York. There were over one thousand passengers on the ship, which was a new one, making her second voyage. When the vessel was three or four days out from Naples, the captain ordered a general vaccination of the passengers, who were thereupon assembled upon the deck in the stern of the vess.el, and were required to go up, one or two at a time, to the bridge, by the starboard gangway, and down on the port side. The Garoni family were on the port side. The mother was ill. The oldest daughter, a girl 15 years of age, held the plaintiff by the hand as she sat beside her mother. The plaintiff wanted a •drink of water. His father went to get it. The plaintiff let go his sister’s ■hand, and attempted to follow his father. He was crowded by his fellow-passengers against the rudder-chain, which ran exposed along the deck just ■inside the bulwarks.' He placed his foot upon the chain, which drew it into an iron sheave or block, through which the chain ran, crushing the foot. The plaintiff screamed, and the doctor, who was vaccinating, came to his assistance, and attempted to extricate him. At this juncture, a sailor named Privat, who was stationed at the ladder near by, gave by mistake an order to •starboard the wheel, which caused the chain with the child’s leg to be drawn still further through the block up to the middle of the thigh, the doctor’s hand being also caught and injured. The captain then gave orders to have •the movement of the chain reversed, and the boy’s leg was relased. The injury required amputation óf the leg at the thigh, which was performed. The foregoing is the version of the accident given by the plaintiff’s witnesses. Tlie defendant introduced evidence to show that there was no crowd at the place where the child was hurt; that "he was entirely alone; that he placed •his foot upon the chain; and that the accident occurred at a place where passengers were not allowed to go. The court charged the jury that if they found from the evidence that the plaintiff was allowed by his parents to be upon the deck of the vessel unattended by any one to protect him, they were ■thereby guilty of negligence; and that the plaintiff was chargeable with the [799]*799negligence of his parents, if there was such negligence, in permitting him to be unattended on the deck of the vessel; and that, if the plaintiff failed to establish his own freedom from fault, he was not entitled to a verdict. The finding of the jury in plaintiff’s favor established that he was not on the deck unattended; and, under the additional charge that, to constitute negligence in the parents, there must be an omission of such reasonable care as persons of ordinary prudence would exercise and deem adequate for the purpose under the. circumstances of the case, the finding of the jury also established that the parents on this occasion exercised ordinary care. The evidence in the case is sufficient to sustain both of these findings. The court refused to charge at defendant’s request that if the jury find from the evidence that the accident was caused by the child placing his foot upon the chain, and that he was not pushed upon the chain by any crowd, his negligence was such that he could not recover. This request, based upon the act of the infant himself, assumed that he was sui juris, for it sought to hold him responsible, not for his parents’ carelessness, but for his own. To charge this request would have withdrawn from the jury the question as to w'hether the child, if sui juris, had exercised such care as was reasonably to be expected from a child of his age. Of this the jury, under the instructions of the court, ■yvere to judge; and, taking all the circumstances of the case into consideration,—the crowded emigrant ship, the exposed chain, the natural propensities of a child of the plaintiff’s age, the absence of apparent danger and of any warning,— it was a fair question for the jury whether the plaintiff v,Tas negligent in putting his foot upon the chain, even if he did so in play. The jury was the judge as to whether the act was heedless or not in a child of the plaintiff’s age. That question was fairly submitted under the general instructions upon the law if the jury found that the plaintiff was capable of exercising discretion or judgment. The court charged, at the plaintiff’s request, that if the jury found from the evidence that it was negligence on the part of the defendant to leave the steering-chain exposed, the fact that plaintiff was crowded against the chain by his fellow-passengers does not constitute a defense to such negligence. The defendant excepted to the charge, and claims that it took away from the jury the consideration of the question as to how the child came to be in a position where he could be crowded upon the chain. The instruction must be taken with all the prior instructions on this point as to the duty of the parents to use reasonable care, and not to leave the plaintiff at the mercy of the crowd, and the duty of the plaintiff himself to exercise care proportioned to the circumstances and to his tender years. The charge excepted to therefore worked no harm to the defendant. The fact that the child was in such a position that he could be crowded or pushed against the chain was not, as defendant claims, conclusive evidence that either he or his parents were negligent. The parents of a child are not bound to such care as shall make it impossible for the infant to stray into danger. In the case of Fallon v. Railroad Co., 6 Daly, 8, where a child aged five years and three months, which had never been known to go into the street alone, after playing in the yard of defendant with other children, came into the house for a drink of milk, which its mother gave it, and, while she went into an adjoining room to change her dress, the child, without her knowledge left the room, and, descending the stairs, went into the street through the open street door, and was run over by a passing railroad car, we held that whether there was negligence, in the matter which could be imputed to the child was a question properly submitted to the jury; and in attirming this decision the court of appeals held that the evidence did not establish contributory negligence as matter of law, but that it was a question of fact, and properly submitted to the jury. Id. 64 N. Y. 13.

The question of the negligence of the defendant in leaving the rudder-chain exposed in a place on the deck where a child, either running about in play or [800]*800jostled by the crowd, could get his foot upon it, so-that that member could be drawn into the sheave or block with a certainty of serious injury, was left to the jury upon proper instructions, and upon evidence which justified a finding that there was negligence. Mr. Rowland, a ship-builder since 1846, engaged in the building and equipping of passenger steam-ships, connected for the last 19 years with the firm of John Roach & Sons, testified that this construction of the steering gear or chain was very unsafe; that it should be covered; that it is not necessary that the chain should be exposed for the proper steering or handling of the ship; that in American ships, where the chain is on deck, it is covered with a grating; that in all ships now built it is boxed in, or so covered; and that he never in his life saw one exposed like this; and that it is most dangerous, and a regular man-trap. On the part of the defendant four witnesses were called, who testified that the construction was the usual one, and was proper.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.Y.S. 797, 39 N.Y. St. Rep. 63, 1891 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garoni-v-compagnie-nationale-de-navigation-of-marseilles-nyctcompl-1891.