McCauley v. Pacific Atlantic Steamship Co.

115 P.2d 307, 167 Or. 80, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 7
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 115 P.2d 307 (McCauley v. Pacific Atlantic Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCauley v. Pacific Atlantic Steamship Co., 115 P.2d 307, 167 Or. 80, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 7 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This action was brought by John H. McCauley against Pacific Atlantic Steamship Company, a corporation, to recover damages for an injury to his right eye. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff the defendant appeals.

The accident in which the plaintiff was injured occurred at New London, Connecticut, on or about February 15, 1938, while the plaintiff, employed by the defendant, was engaged in scraping paint and rust from the under side of the forecastle head deck of the steamship San Bernardino. The plaintiff was furnished no goggles or other protection for his eyes. Particles of materials scraped from the ship got into his right eye and caused multiple corneal ulcers to develop in that eye, greatly impairing the plaintiff’s sight.

The complaint charges the defendant with negligence in the following particulars:

“1. In compelling plaintiff to work at scraping said paint and rust, under the circumstances as herein-before described, considering the great danger and hazard thereof, under the circumstances as aforesaid.
“2. In failing and neglecting to furnish plaintiff with goggles or other safety devices to protect plaintiff’s eyes from said falling dirt, rust and paint, considering the manner in which said work had to be performed, as aforesaid.”

One of the appellant’s principal assignments of error is based on the refusal of the trial court to direct *83 a verdict for it as defendant. It is therefore necessary to review the evidence in some detail.

At the time of his injury the plaintiff was an able-bodied seaman in good health, about forty-five years of age. He was then receiving $72.50 a month in wages, with maintenance, and over-time pay of about $25 a month additional. He had been a sailor from 1912 until the time of the accident, excepting an interval during the world war, when he served in the United States army. On January 9,1938, he signed regular merchant shipping articles on the west coast, for a voyage on the San Bernardino to the east coast and return.

Approximately 70 per cent of the work done by sailors is that of scraping off paint and rust and repainting the ship. It is customary for the ship to furnish goggles and for the sailors to wear them while engaged in scraping.

The boatswain is the foreman of the sailors. He takes his orders from the first mate, who is also mentioned in the testimony as “chief mate” and “first officer”; and the sailors take their orders from the boatswain. On the San Bernardino there is only one storeroom for such equipment as tools, goggles, cargo hooks, paints and lines which the sailors have occasion to use. The storeroom is located under the forecastle head. In the testimony it is variously mentioned as the “mate’s storeroom”, “boatswain’s locker” and “gear locker”. On the San Bernardino it was the duty of the first mate to see that the storeroom was properly supplied, and the boatswain was in direct charge of the room.

When sailors are turned to, meaning put to work, it is customary for the boatswain, if on board, to come forward to the storeroom and issue the gear, which *84 for scraping consists of wire brushes, scrapers' and goggles. On the day that the plaintiff was injured the boatswain was ashore, and the first mate ordered the plaintiff and five or six other sailors to scrape paint and rust from the under side of the forecastle head deck. He gave them the key to the storeroom, to get their equipment. The plaintiff and some of the others looked the storeroom over and were unable to find any goggles. They then proceeded to work without goggles.

As a witness, the plaintiff stated that there were no goggles on the ship. In this connection he explained:

“Previous to that [his injury at New London], about three weeks before, we were coming up the coast, . . . and we were there working on the starboard life boats, scraping the bottoms, and it is a sort of light chips on them there, where you scrape off; we were overhauling the boat. So these chips fell, — they really was active chips; it is hard paint, you know, — you see what I mean; it isn’t dead paint like rust would be, . . . So I asked the boatswain, I says, ‘How about a pair of goggles?’ So he says, ‘I don’t believe there is any goggles on the ship.’ Well, we got through with the job the best we could and painted the boat.”

The under side of the forecastle head deck, which the plaintiff and others were told to scrape, is about nine or ten feet high, and in order to reach it they had to stand on hatch boards laid on boxes. A pointed hammer was used to chip the paint, which was then scraped. In describing the work, the plaintiff thus testified:

“First the bad stuff we work off. They have a long-handle scraper like the, — like a hoe with a straight edge to it and it is pointed on one side. Well, you scrape that rust to get the worst off. A cloud comes down as soon as you touch it, and then to get a thorough job *85 you have to get in there with a short scraper, a twelve or fourteen inch scraper, twelve inch scraper, and then you have to get close to it.”

With reference to the manner in which he was injured, the plaintiff gave the following testimony:

‘ ‘ Q. Then what, if anything, happened to you in — did you sustain any injury? Describe just what did happen. A. I had been working down there, it was close to ten o’clock, and the rust coming down in my face; we were working Mnd of close together, all of us, and it had been falling in our faces and we would wipe it off the best we could, and we had no goggles. I looked for goggles that morning, looked forward,—
“Q. (Interrupting) Just a minute; describe what happened to you. A. Well, the dust and rust and everything else kept falling down on our heads and faces, so we, — it got in my eyes, got pretty bad, and started to burning and — I think it was coffee time; we have coffee at sometime around ten o’clock, — and around coffee time, — I think it might have been a little after, I went to the second officer; he was a medical doctor on the ship, took care of the medical chest. ’ ’

The second officer washed the plaintiff’s eye. The first mate also was present, and the plaintiff then remarked CiM “it was a pretty tough job without goggles. ’ ’ In this connection his testimony was as follows:

“Q. To whom did you mention that? A. I mentioned that to the second officer and the first officer. Q. Is that when the second officer was fixing your eye? A. Yes, and the mate was standing right there.
“Q. What was the reply to that? A. He didn’t say nothing. Q. Either one of them? A. Neither one of them; the second mate was busy with me.
“Q. Did you make that to the chief mate? A. I made that to the chief mate, it was a tough job and there was no goggles. Q. Who did you make that statement to ? A. Chief mate.
*86 “Q. That was while the second mate was working on you? A. That was while the second mate was working on me, yes.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 P.2d 307, 167 Or. 80, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccauley-v-pacific-atlantic-steamship-co-or-1941.