Guiterman v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Mail Steamship Co.

9 Daly 119
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 3, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 Daly 119 (Guiterman v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Mail Steamship Co.) 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
Guiterman v. Liverpool, New York & Philadelphia Mail Steamship Co., 9 Daly 119 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The motion for a non-suit was properly denied. The affirmative evidence given by the plaintiffs was amply sufficient to entitle the jury to pass uponthe question, whether the injury sustained was caused by the defendants’ negligence.

There was no offer to prove that, by a local statute, applicable to the port of Liverpool, it was compulsory upon the defendants to place the steamer in charge of a pilot when she moved from the dock, and anchored in the river Mersey for the purpose of coaling; and that, by a general statute of Great Britain, the master or owner of a vessel is not answerable for any loss or damage to any person, occasioned by the fault or incapacity of any qualified pilot, acting in charge of a vessel, where the employment of a pilot was compulsory.

The counsel for the defendants simply proposed to read in evidence certain sections, from what purported to be a local and a general statute, which being objected to, was properly excluded by the court.

But if the existence of these statutes could have been proved, or the fact that it was compulsory, by the public regulations of the port of Liverpool, for the defendants to have a pilot on board of the steamer, whilst she was at anchor in the river, on the night preparatory to her departure, when the accident occurred, the judge held that the evidence could not be deceived, for the reason that it should have been set up specially in the answer, not being available as a defense, under a general denial.

It may be an open question whether it was necessary, if this constituted a defense, to plead it specially. In Mitchell v. Crassweller (13 Com. Bench, 237), which was an action for negligence, Chief Justice Jervis thought that the plea of not guilty put in issue whether, at the time of the accident, the driver of the cart was the defendant’s servant. Justice Maulé said that what was traversed by “not guilty” was whether the defendant, by his servant, negligently drove the [122]*122horse and cart against the plaintiff, and Justice Cbeswell was of opinion that the defendant, under not guilty,” might show that at the time of the accident, the driver was not acting as the defendant’s servant; and it is a general rule, that any defense which shows that the plaintiff never had any cause of action against the defendant, may be given in evidence, under the general issue (Wilt v. Ogden, 13 Johns. 56; Edson v. Weston, 7 Cow. 278; Clark v. Yale, 12 Wend. 470; 1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 538, 8th Am. ed.).

I am, however, inclined to think that the judge was right in holding that this defense should have been set up specially by the answer. It is also a general rule, that, where the act or omission would, at common law, grima faeie, appear to be an act of negligence, and the facts in the declaration cannot be denied, any matter in excuse, or which shows that the act or omission arose from the exercise of a higher authority, over which the defendant' had no control, must be set up specially as a defense (1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 538, 6th Am. ed.; Butterworth v. Soper, 13 Johns. 443). The averment of the declaration here, is that the defendants, their master, mariners and servants, so carelessly, negligently and improperly carried the plaintiffs’ goods, that they were injured. The three judges above mentioned, in Mitchell v. Crassweller (supra), were of opinion that an averment of this kind is put in issue by the plea of not guilty ; but the case was determined upon another ground—that the defendant’s servant, when the accident occurred, was not engaged in his master’s business; whilst other cases, which will be referred to, hold, on the contrary, that in actions for negligence, the fact that the driver was not the defendant’s servant, nor the horses or vehicle his, or that he was not the owner of the vessel that caused the collision, is not put in issue by the plea of not guilty, but only the wrongful act—that is, that the injury was caused by negligence.

The plaintiffs had intrusted their goods to the defendants. The vessel in which they were was ordinarily in charge of the defendants’ officers and servants; and if they were injured from the want of proper care of the vessel whilst she was taking in coal on a rough night, it was grima faeie the [123]*123negligence of the defendants (Rodrigues v. Melhuish, 10 Exch. 110; Bennett v. Moita, 7 Moore P. C. 160). The defense that, at the particular time when the accident happened, the steamer was, in consequence of a public regulation of the port of Liverpool, exclusively in charge of a licensed pilot, over whom the defendants had no control, -and whose orders and directions the defendants’ officers and servants were bound to obey; and that it was by his omission to direct what should have been done for the security of the vessel and cargo, that the accident happened, was a matter of defense so peculiarly within the knowledge of the defendants, that, to prevent surprise and to enable the parties to go to trial upon equal terms, the plaintiffs were entitled, I think, to be apprised of it, by the answer (Demick v. Chapman, 11 Johns. 132; Ely v. Ehle, 3 N. Y. 506 ; Co. Litt. 282).

It was held in Taverner v. Little (5 Bing. N. C. 678; 7 Scott, 796), that the defendant, under the plea of not guilty, could not show that the cart was not his, nor driven by him, or his servants, when the accident occurred ; a case which Lord Denmait said (Hart v. Crowley, 12 Ad. & E. 378) was decided upon great consideration. In Hart v. Crowley (supra), under a like plea, it was held that the defendant could not show, that, although the wagon by which the cabriolet was injured was his, the horses and servant were not. In Woolf v. Beard (8 Carr. & P. 373, on appeal, 12 Ad. & El. 34; E. C. L. 92, b), under the same plea, it was held, that the defendant could not show that the cabriolet by which the plaintiff was knocked down was not his ; and in Dunford v. Trattles (12 Mees. & W. 529), it was held that the plea of not guilty only puts in issue the wrongful act, and that it was not necessary for the plaintiff to show.that the defendant was the owner of the vessel that caused the collision. In Lucy v. Ingram (6 Mees. & W. 302) and in General Steam Navigation Co. v. British and Colonial Steam Navigation Co. (L. R. 3 Exch. 330), two leading and important cases, where this defense of compulsory pilotage was interposed and sustained, and in Rodrigues v. Melhuish (10 Exch. 110), where it was relied upon, it was set up specially, and the better opinion, I think, is that it should be.

[124]*124The defendants proposed to amend their answer upon the trial, by setting up this defense, which being objected to, the judge denied their application. This was a matter of discretion, which is not reviewable upon appeal (Hartfield v. Secor, 1 Hilt. 535; Barley v. Johnson, 1 Daly, 61) ; or, if reviewable, the judge was right in denying the application; The defendants knew this fact when the action was brought, and after the cause had been in litigation more than ten years, it was a proper exercise of discretion to refuse to allow them to set up this defense for the first time, by amending their answer upon this, the second trial.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Daly 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guiterman-v-liverpool-new-york-philadelphia-mail-steamship-co-nyctcompl-1879.