Kahyis v. Arundel Corp.

3 F. Supp. 492, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 12, 1933
DocketNo. 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F. Supp. 492 (Kahyis v. Arundel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahyis v. Arundel Corp., 3 F. Supp. 492, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643 (D. Md. 1933).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

This is a libel in personam in admiralty under the general maritime law, by the libel-ant, an employee of the respondent, to recover damages for personal.injuries in the course of his services. The basis of the' claim is that the respondent furnished an unsafe place for the libelant to work, and that his injuries resulted in consequence thereof. The respondent admits the employment and accidental injury but denies any negligence or failure to provide a safe plaee for the libelant to work. It also pleads a release, which, however, at the trial, was not insisted on as an absolute bar.

The facts may be briefly stated as follows: The Arundel Corporation is engaged generally in dredging and contract work, and owned and, at the time of the accident, was operating a dredge Severn in the Patapsco river near Baltimore. The dredge is operated by [493]*493steam power. The accident occurred November 18, 1931, while the libelant was engaged as a fireman in the fireroom on the dredge Severn, in the performance of his usual duties. He had been employed in this capacity in the same fireroom for about four months prior to the accident. In a statement signed by him, by making his mark, on November 28, 1931, the occurrence of the accident to him is thus described:

“My name is William Kayhis, single, and am 36 years of age, reside at 316 South Bond Street. I have no dependents and am self-supporting. I am a fireman on the Dredge ‘Severn’ owned by the Arundel Corporation and have been working for them about 4 months.

“On November 18, 1931, about 12.20 A. M., I was breaking a fire with a slice bar, on the dredge ‘Severn’ which was lying in the Patapsco River, off of Canton, when the dredge, from some unknown cause, rolled and as it did I slipped and as I fell I struck my right arm against a winch, which is located about 5 feet from the fire box. I called the engineer and told him what happened, I then went to bed, and the next morning, the captain of the dredge sent me to Dr. Robt. Johnson in Brooklyn. He treated me and told me to come in the next day. When he examined my arm again he sent me to the U. S. P. & Gh Clinic where an Xray of my arm was taken.

“The accident was not due to any carelessness of any of the crew or defectiveness of any part of the dredge, but to the rocking of the dredge which threw me down.”

This statement was phrased by a clerk in the office of the respondent’s insurance, carrier. With the exception of the expression in the last sentence regarding “defectiveness of any part of the dredge,” the account then given by the libelant of his accident was confirmed in substance by his testimony at the trial. He added at the trial that in stoking the fire in the fire box under the.boiler a clinker in which his slice bar had been stuck, suddenly broke up while he was pulling on the bar, and this caused him to lose his balance and to suddenly fall backwards, in consequence of which his right arm came in forcible contact with the cylinder of the anchor winch which, as the testimony otherwise showed, was situated directly opposite the door of the fire box which he was stoking and distant therefrom 70% inches. He also added that there was some water on the floor in the fireroom which tended to make it slippery in places and that this may have contributed to his losing his balance; but the water was not definitely located at the place where he lost his balance and I am not able to find as a fact that the water caused the floor to be slippery or contributed materially to the accident. The presence of the water was said to be due to the fact that there was a leaky valve in the room and some water had been intentionally thrown upon some dying ashes on the floor. The floor was a standard floor not shown to have been defective in any particular.

The libelant continued to receive medical and surgical treatment from the clinic of the respondent’s insurance carrier for the period of seven weeks. This was furnished free of charge and during that period the respondent caused to be paid to the libelant the weekly sum of $10.77, which was two-thirds of his prior weekly wages. At the end of six weeks Dr. Hopkins, in charge of the clinic, advised the libelant that his arm had healed and that he could return to work. He did promptly report for work and asked for some light work, but was told by an executive officer in charge of dredging operations of the respondent that they had no light work at that time, and he was advised to return to the clinic, which he did, and was paid for another week, and then discharged as cured and ready for work. But the respondent by that time had laid up the dredge, which had completed its operations, and had no work of any kind to offer to the libelant.

Libelant’s injury consisted of a simple break of the lower part of the ulna, the smaller bone in the forearm, not far from the wrist. The doctors, both for the libelant and the respondent, agree that there was a complete and satisfactory' union of the bone so that the break was entirely repaired; but the libelant’s doctor expressed the opinion that there was an impairment possibly to the extent of 50 per cent, of muscular power owing to the lack of proper massage or- exercise of the arm after the break had healed, .although he further thought that much of ■this loss of muscular power could still be repaired by proper exercise. On the other hand, respondent’s doctor expressed the opinion that there was no appreciable loss of muscular power and that the libelant had been told when discharged to come back if he had any trouble with his arm, but had not reported for further treatment.

As a fact, I find that the medical treatment given to the libelant was skillful and .careful and apparently adequate and there is no substantial permanent injury; although I also find that at the time the libelant was [494]*494discharged as cured his arm was still not in condition for heavy work and would not have been for some time thereafter, although light work would have been beneficial for him. I find also the respondent was acting in good faith in not providing further work for the libelant at the time; and some part of the condition of libelant’s arm is due to lack of sufficient and proper exercise which it would have been better if he had undertaken promptly, but which may now stiE be resorted to with benefit. I also find that libelant’s continued faUure to find employment was not due primarily to the condition of his arm but due to prevailing economic conditions. I also find that the medical advice given to the Kbelant was reasonable and should have been adequate although probably, as he is an illiterate man, he may not have understood what he should have done in the way of aftertreatment by his own activities; and it would have been better if even greater care had been taken to impress upon him the importance of personal attention to his arm.

On November 28, when the insurance carrier made the first weekly payment to the Ebelant, he was asked to and did sign what in form is a complete release to the Arundel Corporation against all elaims on account of injuries for the accident of November 18,' 1931. This he signed by making his mark. And again on January 9, 1932, when the last payment was made to him, he signed a similar release. With commendable candor respondent’s counsel abandons the contention set up in the answer to the Ebel that these releases constitute a bar to the libelant’s claim. This accords with my own view, considering the EEteraey of the libelant and the conditions under which the release was signed.

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Related

Jones v. Lykes Bros. S. S. Co.
108 F. Supp. 323 (S.D. New York, 1952)
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80 F.2d 792 (Fifth Circuit, 1936)
The Tawmie
80 F.2d 792 (Fifth Circuit, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. Supp. 492, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahyis-v-arundel-corp-mdd-1933.