Mitchell v. Hosmer

30 Mich. 227, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 170
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Mich. 227 (Mitchell v. Hosmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Hosmer, 30 Mich. 227, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 170 (Mich. 1874).

Opinion

Graves, Ch. J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by the plaintiffs in the court below to recover a balance they claimed for towing certain rafts for defendant. The defendant insisted that what he had already paid was fully sufficient to satisfy for the true quantity of logs which had been towed and delivered. He also set up a claim by way of recoupment, and which he found'ed upon the alleged default and misconduct of the plaintiffs in performing their duty-in regard to the towage and delivery. The plaintiffs recovered sixty-eight dollars and seventy-three cents; and, being-dissatisfied with this finding, they have brought the case here for review upon writ of error and bill of exceptions. Before noticing any of the legal questions, it is best, perhaps, to advert to several of the facts. In the season of 1869 the plaintiffs were engaged in towing with steam tugs on Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron; and the parties hereto entered into an agreement that during the fall of that year the plaintiffs should tow for the defendant a quantity of logs from Rifle River, in Saginaw Bay, to Tawas, at fifty cents per thousand, and return the boom sticks free. Purr suant to this arrangement, some six rafts were towed, on which the defendant paid six hundred and thirty dollars. The plaintiffs claimed that they were entitled to the further sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars and fifty-seven cents, with interest from October 10, 1869.

The main question is connected with what took place concerning the fifth raft. According to the proof on both sides, this raft was to be delivered at Adams’ mill at Tawas, and the evidence conduces to show that the plaintiffs’ tug, under the command of one of the plaintiffs, Mr. Mitchell, arrived with the raft between midnight and daylight on the morning of Saturday, the 15 th of October, [229]*229near the entry of the boom connected with Adams’ mill; that within a pretty short time the persons, in charge of the tug tied the raft to Adams’ dock and to an adjacent one belonging to Mr. Grant; that the weather was then good, and Captain Mitch ell, (as soon as the raft was thus tied outside the boom, left it and returned with the tug to Au Sable for another raft; that early in the morning Mr. B. M. Hosmer, the defendant’s agent, discovered the raft tied outside of the mill boom, and, feeling uneasy as to its safety, immediately tried to get help to place it inside; that before this could be .accomplished the wind and sea arose, and became so violent that before he could swing the rear end around Grant’s boom, in order to effect an entrance into that of Adams’, some of the cribs went ashore and part of them astray, and some forty-two logs escaped into the open bay and were lost; that most of the logs which were cast upon the shore were separated from their cribs, and had to be re-rafted by defendant; that the plaintiffs did not return with the tug until the 16th or 17th, the evidence differing as to the day. The testimony was somewhat conflicting as to the state of fitness of Adams’ boom for admitting the raft when the tug arrived there, and also as to the facilities afforded for booming, and as to what occurred between the person in charge of the boom and Mr. Mitchell, as master of the tug, and his servants. Captain Mitchell testified that when he came abreast' of the boom entrance, he saw the man who usually attended to it; that this person did not tell him to put the raft into the boom, or say that he would open it, or give any directions about putting the logs within it; that he, Mitchell, was employed about an hour and a half in tying the raft, and during that interval saw no other person there. At a subsequent stage of the trial, and after the defendant had introduced his defense and rested, the plaintiffs gave evidence tending to show further that when the tug arrived opposite the boom door or entrance, there was a large quantity of logs inside; that the boom was nearly two-thirds full, and that the logs [230]*230were pressed by the wind against the gateway; that the man in charge informed the managers of the tug that he could do nothing; that he could not move the logs which were against the opening, and could not prepare the gap or way so as to let the tug and raft enter.

On the part of the defense the' testimony went to show that the person then having charge of the boom for Mr-Adams was one Jackson; that he was on duty near the gateway of the boom when the raft appeared, and attending to receive it; that it was not hauled up as far as the gap; that he cried out to those on the tug to “come ahead,” and that, as near as he could understand what was said, they claimed either that they could not get in or were in a hurry; that the boom was in good condition, with the exception that the gap was incumbered by a few thirty-foot sticks, which the wind held there; that an entrance was practicable with little trouble, and that not more than ten or fifteen minutes would have been required to effect it; that there was plenty of room inside, and when he observed that the persons with the tug were fastening the raft outside, he at once proceeded to inform Mr. Adams, and was gone not to exceed twenty minutes; but when he returned the tug had sailed away.

This reference to the circumstances, and to the drift of the evidence, is all that is necessary for the disposition of of the point we are now considering.

The defendant maintains, and the court charged in substance and effect, that if, when the plaintiffs arrived with the tug and raft the boom was not in a condition to be entered, and it was apparent that in five or six hours, or some other reasonable time, an entrance would be practicable, it was their duty to remain there for such time, unless on consultation with those in charge of the boom, their earlier departure was assented to. The whole language of this part of the charge is not repeated, but its sense and import, as it must have been understood by the jury, are given. It is true, that, in the same connection, [231]*231it was suggested by the court that the tug, by waiting, would have been entitled to advance a claim in the nature of demurrage. But this remark is not considered, under the circumstances, as meriting any special comment. If the supposed duty to wait, in the actual state of things, rested with imperative force on the plaintiffs, then their violation of that duty, by going away immediately without consent, afforded ground of legal complaint against them by the defendant, irrespective of the question whether they would or would not, by remaining, have founded a claim in the nature of demurrage.

"We have no occasion, therefore, to admit or deny the soundness of this intimation.

In view of the evidence relating to the condition of the boom when the raft arrived there, the proceedings which then occurred, and the immediate departure of the tug, it is very apparent that this instruction as to the duty of the plaintiffs to stay was eminently important. The facts were open to a construction by the jury which would subject them to the application of the rule stated by the court, and in such an event it could not operate otherwise than in a manner very decisive against the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mich. 227, 1874 Mich. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-hosmer-mich-1874.