Myrtle Point Transp. Co. v. Port of Coquille River

168 P. 625, 86 Or. 311, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 149
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 168 P. 625 (Myrtle Point Transp. Co. v. Port of Coquille River) 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
Myrtle Point Transp. Co. v. Port of Coquille River, 168 P. 625, 86 Or. 311, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 149 (Or. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McCamant

delivered the opinion of the court.

1-4. The most strenuous insistence of defendant is that the court erred in denying its motion for a nonsuit.

“Upon a motion for a nonsuit, every intendment and every reasonable inference must be made in favor of plaintiff, and the court must assume those facts as true which the jury can fairly find from the evidence”: Thienes v. Francis, 69 Or. 165, 170 (138 Pac. 490).

Examining the testimony in the light of this rule, we find ample evidence that during the summer of 1913 the defendant slashed the brush and trees on the banks of the east fork of the Coquille; that a large amount of the brush and debris fell into the stream, the obstruction thereto being so great that a skiff could not be propelled up or down the stream and at some places one could cross the stream on the brush; it was the expectation of the defendant that so much of the brush as was in the bed of the river would float out on the first rise in the autumn; this rise came on October 7th and there is evidence that a quantity of brush came out as alleged in the complaint, carrying a great wall of water with it. The jury was entitled [316]*316to find from the evidence that this brush and the water that was behind it carried out the boom and plaintiff’s boats. The east fork of the Coquille is a navigable stream during a portion of the year and it is a tributary of the Coquille which is one of the arteries of commerce in southwestern Oregon. The deposit of the brush in the stream was in violation of Section 13 of the Act of Congress approved March 3, 1899; 30 Stats, at Large, 1152, hereafter quoted. Plaintiff proved furthermore that at a meeting of the defendant held December 17, 1913, the minutes of the defendant admitted that the brush and trees had torn out the boom of the Myrtle Point Mill and Lumber Company. There was a dispute as to the accuracy of these minutes, and after the bringing of this action the defendant undertook to amend them, but at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case the evidence justified the jury in finding that defendant had admitted that the carrying away of the boom was chargeable to the brush and trees which defendant had deposited in the stream. It may be said parenthetically that the correction undertaken to be made in the minutes did not greatly improve defendant’s position; it appeared that the minutes of December 17, 1913, had been approved and that at a later meeting of the defendant, the commissioners approved the report of a committee which held that “the foreman in charge was negligent in not having all the trees and brush cut into as short lengths as per his instructions.” The evidence was sufficient to be submitted to the jury on the question of defendant’s negligence.

The motion for a nonsuit is based in part on defendant’s contention that plaintiff was gnilty of contributory negligence in the respects charged in the answer. The evidence as to the condition of the boom [317]*317is conflicting and we cannot say that it was negligence as a matter of law for plaintiff to tie its boats thereto. Nor can we say that plaintiff was negligent in failing to leave a lookout and a navigator on each of these boats on the evening in question. Plaintiff’s evidence is to the effect that at the time when the boats were berthed there was but a slight rise in the river and there was nothing to indicate impending trouble. To hold as a matter of law that the owner of a small river steamboat, berthing her near the head of navigation on a river under normal conditions, is obliged to keep her steam up and to maintain a lookout “and an efficient person in charge” is to lay a heavier burden on navigation than seems reasonable. The question of plaintiff’s contributory negligence was for the jury.

• Defendant cites on this point: The Mary E. Cuff, 84 Fed. 719, The Niobe, 31 Fed. 164, The On-the-Level, 128 Fed. 511, and The William E. Reis, 143 Fed. 1013, 1016. These were all admiralty cases in which the court was judge both of the facts and of the law. It was held in each of those cases that the vessel should have been left in charge of a lookout or watchman, but the circumstances were widely different from those in the case at bar. In three of the cases there was notice of approaching storm or flood. In The Niobe the fault consisted in violating a harbor regulation. In The William E. Reis a vessel weighing 8,000 tons had been left near the mouth of the Cuyahoga River in charge of a boy; the water in the river was rising and the conditions demanded a slackening of the lines of the vessel which the boy was unable to do.

5-9. There is evidence that the negligence of Myrtle Point Mill and Lumber Company contributed to the catastrophe, but this on familiar principles does not excuse defendant.

[318]*318It is suggested that defendant was organized for the improvement of Coquille River and that the work complained of was a lawful work looking to the betterment of navigation on the upper river. Defendant’s evidence shows that navigation has been improved by the work done. But a lawful work done by or at the instance of a municipal corporation must be done with due regard to the rights of others, and if it be done negligently a party injured by such negligence is entitled to recover: Giaconi v. Astoria, 60 Or. 12 (113 Pac. 855, 118 Pac. 180, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1150); Warren v. Astoria, 67 Or. 603 (135 Pac. 527); Portland Gas etc. Co. v. Giebisch, 84 Or. 632 (165 Pac. 1004).

Plaintiff was permitted to prove over the objection of defendant that it is the general custom on Coquille River not to leave a watchman on a steamboat at night when it is tied to its moorings and this is assigned as error. It is true, as contended by the defendant, that a party is not to be excused from negligence on the ■ground that others are in the habit of acting negligently. Where a statute or a valid harbor regulation requires a certain degree of care, the violation of such statute or regulation is not to be excused on the ground that it is generally violated. On the other hand, when there is no absolute standard of care fixed by law, evidence of what is usual is often of value in assisting, a court or jury in determining the issues on a charge of negligence: 1 Thompson on Negligence, § 32; Richardson v. Klamath Steamship Co., 62 Or. 490, 498-500 (126 Pac. 24). Great value is attached to this character of proof in the admiralty courts: Lamb v. Parkman, 14 Fed. Cas. 1019, 1022 (Fed. Cas. 8019, 8020); The Titania, 19 Fed. 101, 107; The City of Alexandria, 23 Fed. 826, 828, 829; The [319]*319Dan, 40 Fed. 691-693; The Isaac Reed, 82 Fed. 566, 567; The Tjomo, 115 Fed. 919, 922, 923; The Hyades, 124 Fed. 58, 59 (59 C. C. A. 424). This controversy is cognizable in the admiralty courts and while the federal judiciary act saves to suitors in this character of litigation “the right of a common-law remedy, when the common law is competent to give it, ’ ’ we think the common-law courts should respect and ordinarily follow the rules which obtain at admiralty: Schuede v. Zenith Steamship Co., 216 Fed. 566; Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U. S. 205 (61 L. Ed. 1086, 37 Sup. Ct. Rep. 524).

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168 P. 625, 86 Or. 311, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myrtle-point-transp-co-v-port-of-coquille-river-or-1917.