International Mercantile Marine Co. v. Fleming

151 F. 203, 80 C.C.A. 479, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1907
DocketNo. 115
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 151 F. 203 (International Mercantile Marine Co. v. Fleming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Mercantile Marine Co. v. Fleming, 151 F. 203, 80 C.C.A. 479, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152 (2d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff, who was a longshoreman employed by the defendant, was injured while at work upon the defendant’s ship Kroonland by falling into the hold because of the tipping of one of the covers at hatch No. 4. When it is necessary to cover this hatch a large iron beam, 14 feet long by 18 inches wide and known as the “strong-back,” is lowered into place by steam power. It extends athwartships, its ends resting in grooves or slots in the coamings. [204]*204Three iron bars or beams are then placed fore and aft on each side of the strong-back, the ends resting on the flanges of the strong-back and the coamings. The hatch is thus divided into four sections, each having three wooden covers, one end of each cover being supported by the flange of the center fore and aft beam and the other end being supported by the flange on the side coaming of the hatch. Hatch cover No. 2, on the forward starboard section of the hatch, is the one that ¡tipped and precipitated the plaintiff into the hold while he was stand- ’ ing thereon engaged in pushing a draft toward the starboard wings.

; There was evidence to prove that this cover was an inch too short. It also appears by undisputed testimony that the strong-back was not properly'seated in the. slots at either end by reason of. the “rust, coal dust, iron, etc., which had corroded there from time to time and never been cleaned out.” It required a hammer and cold chisel to clean "out /the slots after the accident. The defendant’s witness, Peter Quin-Nan, testified as follows: ’ :

“The strong-back and fore and afters and hatches all depend for their sup''port on these little slots at the end of the combings. The first thing that is ’put in is the strong-back, and there was enough stuff accumulated in those " pockets to throw the strong-back about two inches out of its regular position, so that the whole structure there—the fore and afters and the hatches—was about two inches out of the position in which it wqs intended they should be.”

Quinlan was the defendant’s assistant foreman at the time of the ' accident to whom was delegated the duty of seeing that the ship was "properly rigged so that cargo could be safely taken on and off. This duty of superintendence continued from the time the ship was ready to begin unloading until the return cargo was safely housed. Quinlan had charge of the strong-backs, fore and afters and the hatches ■generally. It was his duty to tell the men when to take off the hatch covers and when to put them on again, when to begin to load and unload and when to work the winches. On the day in question he had four gangs, or about 70 men under his direction and was “in the service of the employer and entrusted by him with the duty of seeing that the ways, works or machinery were in proper condition.”

■ . The plaintiff had been a longshoreman for '18 years, but it does not appear where he worked, or that he had worked on the Kroon- ' land, prior to the time in question. He assisted in putting the hatch ■covers on No. 4, but it is not shown that he knew of the short cover or the general disarrangement caused by the clogging of the strong-back slots. He testified:

“I had not noticed anything peculiar with this hatch as I was working there the day before. X did not notice anything the matter with it. I did not notice •■'any unsteadiness. It seemed to me that the hatch was all right.”

, We think the trial judge was justified in submitting the questions ■ of negligence to the jury. It is the duty of the "master not only to '¡provide suitable machinery, means and appliances to do the required work, but to use due care tq keep them in repair. If an accident ¡ happens by reason of the master’s neglect to discharge this duty he ;is .liable for the damages thus occasioned. The appliances for coyer,ing . the hatch, though originally, sufficient,-had become dangerous by [205]*205the accumulation of debris which,had so hardened in the' slots ‘that the strong-back, which was, so to speak, the keystone of the struo ture, could not be properly set, thus rendering the entire covering unt stable and dangerous. The cover in question appears to have been an inch too short, but whether the slipping was due to this cause or to the fact that the strong-back was two inches too high, or to both causes combined, was a question of fact for the jury to determine.

One of the witnesses testifies that prior to the accident Quinlan' was notified of the difficulty in getting the strong-back in position.; this he denies but admits that he may have been told that one of the hatch covers was too short. As before stated he was the defendant’s representative, and, under the employer’s liability act of New York, there can be little doubt that the defendant was liable for his neglect to perform those duties which the law required of the defendant and which the defendant delegated to him. The act referred to (chapter 600, p. 1748, of the Laws of 1902) provides that a master is responsible for the negligence of his superintendent or foreman. Even if Quinlan did not know of the clogged slots, the question remains, should he have known? He was given full charge of the hatches and everything pertaining thereto. A very slight inspection would have revealed the dangerous condition of the slots and even after the strong-back was placed across the hatch he could have seen at a glance that it was not properly located.

It may be urged that this was equally true of the plaintiff, but the difference is obvious. It is the difference between a skilled foreman charged with the duty of observation and inspection asid a day laborer, who was there to handle the cargo and obey orders. It is enough that the negligence of plaintiff and defendant were, on this proof, questions of fact which the court could not properly take from the jury.

Regarding the negligence of the p’aintiff’s fellow servants the court, charged the jury that if they found “that the real cause of the injury was some negligence on the part of the plaintiff himself or of his fellow servants, in the use of appliances which were proper and sufficient in their nature as furnished by the defendant, then he cannot recover.” This was certainly as favorable an instruction as the defendant was entitled to.

The plaintiff on cross-examination was asked as follows:1

“Q. I am asking you as a longshoreman, with 18 years’ experience, whether it is not so that constantly on board ship -the longshoreman chock hatches which are a little short with a little piece of wood at each end?
“Objected to as not cross-examination.-
“The Court: You will not be able to contradict this evidence afterwards by showing that sometimes in ships, when hatches are short, they do chock them. If you prove it by this witness you will have to be bound by it.
“Mr. Ward: On cross-examination? Can I not show by my own witnesses that that is the practice, if he says not? . ;
“The Gourt: Not generally on ships. • You can show anything you please about this hatch, of course,
“Mr. Ward: I mean in the business on different ships in this port. Then I will withdraw the question and except to your honor’s ruling.”

[206]*206This ruling is assigned as error. Conceding it to be technically incorrect we do not think that it was prejudicial error.

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Bluebook (online)
151 F. 203, 80 C.C.A. 479, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-mercantile-marine-co-v-fleming-ca2-1907.