Monongahela River Consolidated Coal & Coke Co. v. Walts
This text of 105 N.E. 160 (Monongahela River Consolidated Coal & Coke Co. v. Walts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The only question of importance presented in this appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. The action was against appellant to recover damages for personal- injuries received by appellee while in appellant’s employ as a deckhand or fleetman, on appellant’s steamboat Harry Brown, which was towing a fleet [236]*236of empty barges up the Ohio River from Cairo, Illinois, to Louisville, Kentucky. The fleet was driven to the Kentucky shore opposite Evansville, Indiana by a storm, and appellee, when going down a ladder let down from a barge and carrying a coil of rope to the shore to assist in landing the boat, fell from the ladder and was injured. The negligence charged was that the ladder was defective and out of repair, in the respect that three rounds were broken out and missing, that the defective and dangerous condition of the ladder was known to appellant long enough before the accident to have repaired the same or to have notified appellee of its condition, and that appellee, who had no knowledge of such condition, in the use of due care, was injured while obeying the captain’s order in the course of his duty. Appellant claims that the evidence is insufficient to show that it had knowledge before the accident of the defective condition of the ladder.
The evidence showed that a hasty landing had to be made on account of the storm, that the ladder in question was taken from its place at the head of the fleet, and put down over the side of the barge, which stood about eight feet above the water, that there were at the time of the injury three rungs missing from the ladder, that appellee was ordered by the mate who was standing within ten feet of the ladder, where he could see its condition, to take a line ashore, and appellee started down with a heavy coil of line, his back to the ladder, and was injured by attempting to step where a rung was missing, thereby falling; that appellee had not used the ladder before, and could not see that the rounds were missing because of the upright position of “the ladder, the coil of line which he was carrying on his shoulder, and the haste with which he was required to execute the order. The mate, who was second in charge of the boat, the men and the appliances, had ordered the ladder placed at the head of the fleet at. Evansville, and while standing where he could see it, ordered another deckhand to put it out [237]*237over the barge shortly before appellee started to use it. There was no evidence that the ladder had been used after leaving Cairo until the occasion when appellee was injured, and no evidence that the defects were of recent origin, or of any change in its condition after the boat left Cairo. Sometime after the landing at Evansville and before land-at Louisville, another ladder was placed at the head of the fleet, and the one on which appellee was injured was placed back on the steamboat. There was evidence that rungs were missing from the ladder at the time of the injury, and were missing at a time later on the cruise, although as to this there was conflict, some witnesses testifying that no rungs were missing at the time of the injury, or at any other time.
[238]*238
Note. — Reported in 105 N. E. 160. See, also, under (1) 3 Cyc. 348; (2) 26 Cyc. 1441; (3) 38 Cyc. 1809, 1815, 1778.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
105 N.E. 160, 56 Ind. App. 235, 1914 Ind. App. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monongahela-river-consolidated-coal-coke-co-v-walts-indctapp-1914.