Mercurio v. Lunn

93 F. 592, 35 C.C.A. 467, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2263
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1899
DocketNo. 539
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 93 F. 592 (Mercurio v. Lunn) 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
Mercurio v. Lunn, 93 F. 592, 35 C.C.A. 467, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2263 (2d Cir. 1899).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

A brief memorandum of the district judge states that, in view of the introduction of some additional testimony, an opinion, which had theretofore been handed down, was withdrawn, and is no longer a part of the proceedings in the action. The record therefore does not contain any findings of fact by the district court as to any one .of the controverted questions of fact:. In consequence, it will be necessary to review the evidence in some detail. Stevens v. The City of New York, 4 C. C. A. 268, 54 Fed. 181. The libelant was in the employ .of a firm of stevedores who were engaged in discharging the vessel, and was injured by the fall, of a derrick boom, which was being lowered to the deck, in order that a block, which was the property of the stevedores, might be removed. So much of the cargo as was to be left in the port of Yew York had been discharged, and there were on hoard at the time, in the vicinity of hatch Yo. 1, — where the derrick was located,- — the libelant, two of his fellow servants (Totrona and Palese, gangwaymen), the first mate, and one of the sailors, who had been running the winch, and is spoken of in the testimony as the winchman. The method adopted for removing the block from the end of the derrick boom is concededly a proper one. The libelant, contends that it is the better method. The course of procedure is as follows: A fall leads from the boom (near its end) to the mast (near its head), and through a block down to the winch. A sufficient number of turns are made around the [594]*594drum, and, the winch being set in motion, the drum turns so as to haul on the fall, thus elevating the end of the boom and slackening the chain span, which runs from the mast to the boom end. The boom being up, and the chain slack, one of the men climbs the rigging, and removes the pin from the chain. The boom is then supported only by the fall, and, as that is payed out, the boom descends. A fall that is turned around the drum of a winch, and which-has been used to elevate the boom, may be payed out to lower the.same in one or other of two.ways; either the link motion may be altered by the reversing lever, and, steam being admitted, the drum will begin to revolve in a reverse direction to that in which it revolved when the hoisting was going on, or else, the steam having been shut off when the operation of elevating ceased, the drum ceased to move, and the fall, its bight kept well in hand, is gradually “surged off” as if the turns had been taken around a fixed cylinder. Libelant had climbed the rigging, and had drawn the pin from the chain span. He then returned to • the deck, taking his position on the port side of the foremast on the bridge deck, to clear the rope for the man who was lowering the fall. The boom had descended but a little way, when its speed suddenly increased, and it came down with a run into the crutch. It was fastened to the mast with a gooseneck; and the effect of the fore-end striking so heavily into the crutch was to cause the heel to rebound, and lift the gooseneck out of the sockets. The bóom struck the libelant, inflicting severe injuries. There is no controversy as to any of the facts above stated.

The negligence charged in the libel is: •

“First, in that the said wincimian negligently and carelessly left all of a sudden the said winch which he was operating, contrary to his duty, by reason of which the said winch, being left uncontrolled and umnanaged, made the boom * * * fall precipitately; * * * and, second, in that respondents * * * failed in their duty to securely and safely place and fasten the said boom,” etc.

There is a conflict of evidence as to precisely what passed between the mate and the stevedore’s men when the latter asked to be allowed to lower the boom in order to get the block. It may, however, be assumed that he allowed them to undertake the operation, and that he detailed the winchman, who, having finished his work, had left the winch, to render such service at the winch as the operation called for.

The first witness called for the libelant (first, not in point of time, but in logical order) is Totrona, the gangwayman. From his evidence it appears that he and the winchman took their positions at the winch; the former on the port side by the drum, the latter on the starboard side. Totrona took five turns of the fall around the drum, and when he was all ready told the winchman to heave up the boom. The winch was started, and the boom raised up along the mast, slackening the chain span, whereupon Totrona told the winchman to stop, and he stopped the winch by turning off the steam. He could stop it in no other -way. This situation must have continued some little time, long enough for libelant to remove the pin, and return to the [595]*595deck. Indeed, libelant himself testified expressly that the boom did not begin to descend until he came on deck. The first half of the operation was now concluded, — a part of the operation which invariably required the running of the winch, since without the application of the steam power the heavy boom could not be raised. The other half — lowering the boom — might he performed, as was said before, either by reversing the winch, and running it in the new direction, or without its aid as a moving mechanism. Totrona settled the question by beginning to slacken the line (so that it could he surged off). The winchman waited till this operation began, and then went away. The witness Totrona says, “After we began to lower the derrick, the winchman left, believing that the rope would have held the boom.” We are unable to see any negligence on his part in so doing. He liad been detailed to act as winchman, had so acted, discharging his duties properly, until the time came when it was determined that the operation of lowering should he concluded without further movement of the winch,' which was at that time stopped, with the steam cut off. Hiere was no further need for his services as engineer of the winch. He had not been assigned to assist in surging off the fall. No one supposed that with five turns on the winch it would require more than Totrona to keep it properly in hand during the descent. He had handled it unaided daring the elevation. There was no apparent necessity for the winchman’s remaining at the winch, and no lack of reasonable and ordinary prudence in his leaving. Totroiia testifies (hat he told the winchman to remain; “to stay at the winch, and not to leave it.” Witness further says that he so told him when there ivas as yet not much weight on the winch, and no indications of trouble; that it was usual for the winchman to remain at the winch; that he did not know the winchman intended (o go. If Tolrona did not anticipate any trouble, and had no expectation that the winchman was about to go, it is difficult to credit: his statement that he to\d him to stay. Elsewhere Totrona says that, when the winch was moving the other way, the winchman being then somewhere forward, where he could not see him, he called to him to come back, and he also says that he gave the order only once. It is, of course, immaterial whether Totrona asked him to stay or not. If reasonable prudence required him to stand by the winch, he would be negligent in leaving it; if, on the other hand, his duties ceased when, after elevating the boom, he had stopped the winch, and it had been decided to lower by surging off, and not by any further motion of the winch, then there was no negligence in his leaving, although Totrona, for no explainable reason, asked him to stay. It may be remarked that the testimony of the throe Italian witnesses is most unsatisfactory and unpersuasive, a circumstance due in part to their imperfect knowledge of English.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Louisville Trust Co. v. Marx
98 F. 456 (D. Kentucky, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 F. 592, 35 C.C.A. 467, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercurio-v-lunn-ca2-1899.