Luckenbach S. S. Co. v. Buzynski

19 F.2d 871, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368, 1927 A.M.C. 1185
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 1927
Docket4786
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 871 (Luckenbach S. S. Co. v. Buzynski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luckenbach S. S. Co. v. Buzynski, 19 F.2d 871, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368, 1927 A.M.C. 1185 (5th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

FOSTER, Circuit Judge.

Appellee, Karl Buzynski, filed a libel against the Luekenbaeh Steamship Company; hereafter called the Steamship Company, owner of the steamship Edgar F. Luekenbaeh, against William Parr & Co., agents of the Steamship Company, and against the Texas Contracting Company, contracting stevedores, hereafter called the Contracting Company, to recover damages for personal injuries suffered while working as a longshoreman on the said ship in the port of Galveston.

Buzynski was employed by the Contracting Company, an independent contractor engaged in loading the ship. The ship’s winches were used, the Contracting Company supplying the winehman. On the morning of October 25,1924, just after he had started to work, and while he was engaged with a number of other men in removing the hatch covers from No. 3 hatch on the said ship,' without warning, a chain sling, or bridle, weighing about 40 pounds, fell from aloft and struck and injured him.

* The libel alleged in general terms that respondents were negligent in not providing li-belant with a safe place to work and safe equipment to work with, and in failing to keep the same in reasonably safe condition, without specifying wherein the premises were unsafe or the appliances defective. On the trial of the case it developed that the chain which injured libelant fell from the end of the boom of a derrick at No. 3 hatch. The derrick was equipped with a fall rigged with an upper and a lower block. In some way, not shown by direct evidence, the winch to which this fall was connected was put in motion, the blocks jammed at the end of the boom, the lower block upset, the chain came against the mousing of a hook from which it was suspended, the mousing gave way, and th.e chain dropped.

Libelant contended that the winch was defective, because not fitted with a pin to hold the control lever of the winch in neutral, that the mousing was insufficient and defective, and that the lower block should have been fitted with a shackle, instead of a hook.

The District Court found that the mousing was insufficient, but that this was not the *873 proximate cause of the accident; found that the winch was put in motion because of steam leaking into the cylinders, causing it to start up when no one was in attendance; and held that it was defective in not being fitted with a pin to hold the lever in position. The libel was dismissed as to Wm. Parr & Co., and judgment was entered in solido against the other two respondents in the sum of $12,500, less some $720, paid by the Construction Company to libelant under the provisions of the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. 1925, arts. 8306-8309).

We agree with the District Court that the mousing was not the proximate cause of the accident. It is shown without dispute that it was the usual mousing and was put on by the foreman of the Contracting Company under the supervision of the mate of the vessel. A mousing is not intended to support any weight. Its purpose is to keep the sling from slipping out of the hook when the tackle is slacked off to release the load after it has landed, and, while it is true that if the block had been fitted with a shackle, instead of a hook, the accident would not have occurred, unless some part of the tackle gave way, for the purpose of doing the work at hand the hook was sufficiently strong and safe. The accident was not such as should have been reasonably anticipated, so as to require the use of a shackle in the exercise of reasonable care.

As libelant was an employee of an independent contractor, the relationship of master and servant did not exist between him and the steamship company. However, it owed him the duty of using reasonable care to furnish him with reasonably safe appliances to work with, suitable to the work being done, and of inspecting these appliances before turning them over to the Contracting Company. If thereafter the appliances became defective through use while in charge of the Contracting Company, it was necessary for notice of that fact to be brought home to the Steamship Company to impress it with liability. Navigazione Alta Italia v. Vale (C. C. A.) 221 F. 413.

On the other hand, the relationship of master and servant did exist as between libel-ant and the Contracting Company, and they owed him the absolute and nondelegable duty of using reasonable care to provide him with a reasonably safe place to work and reasonably safe appliances to do the work with; but in the exercise of this degree of care the Contracting Company was entitled to rely to some extent upon the duty of the Steamship Company to initially furnish safe appliances. Labatt’s Master and Servant, pars. 1055 to 1065.

The winch which caused the accident is described as a typical twin cylinder single drum controlled gear winch. It is operated by a vertical throttle valve, controlled by a lever about 6 feet long, hinged to a fulcrum about 2 feet from the operating valve. The lever is horizontal in neutral, and moves up and down between guides fitted on one inner side with cogs about three-sixteenths of an inch deep, which engage corresponding cogs on the lever. Slight pressure from the winehman will cause these cogs to mesh, so that the lever is held in position, unless moved by hand or jarred in some way. The steam for operating the winch comes from a pipe line on deck leading to the boilers, which is closed by a check valve so placed that the man operating the lever can at the same time open or close the valve. When this check valve is closed, no steam can be admitted to either the operating valve or the cylinders of the winch, and it cannot operate no matter what position the lever may be in.

There is evidence tending to show that the lever may be thrown out of position by a jarring of the ship, causing the drum of the winch to revolve, if steam is on. Some of the evidence tends to show that, if the lever is jarred out of position, it will fall, in which event the tackle would have been slacked off and the accident would not have happened; but there is also evidence that it might go either up or down. It is shown that the winch in question is of standard construction and of the kind used on many steamships; but it is also shown that some winches of the same type have a pin which may be put through corresponding holes in the lever and guides to hold the lever in position.

It is elementary that an employer is not obliged to supply the newest and best appliances, but is justified in using such appliances as are in common use and are reasonably safe and proper for doing the work. Measured by this standard, it would appear that the winch in question was reasonably safe. It did not develop any defect when in operation, and no accident occurred while it was being used for the work. It became a dangerous factor in a most extraordinary accident, when left at rest and unattended. If the cheek valve was cut off, as it should have been when the winch was not in use, it would be just as safe as if the lever were secured by a pin, provided the winch was otherwise in good condition, and it could hardly be said that the addition of a pin would add any factor of safety, considering the ever-present human equation, as the operator might' as well have forgotten to put the pin in place as to cut off the valve.

*874

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 871, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2368, 1927 A.M.C. 1185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luckenbach-s-s-co-v-buzynski-ca5-1927.