Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. v. Corcoran

9 F.2d 724, 57 A.L.R. 163, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2449
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1925
Docket204
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 724 (Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. v. Corcoran) 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
Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. v. Corcoran, 9 F.2d 724, 57 A.L.R. 163, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2449 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinions

ROGERS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

This suit is brought to recover for personal injuries which the plaintiff suffered in a voyage she made in one of defendant’s ships. The plaintiff, who lives in Indianapolis, Ind., was one of a party of four, all _ being school-teachers and friends. A ticket was issued to them at Boston, and they were booked through to Paris, and given a tieket on the Canopic, which was to carry them from Montreal to Liverpool. The vessel started on its voyage on June 25, 1922. The plaintiff and her three companions occupied the same stateroom, a small room with four berths in it. The plaintiff occupied the upper berth on the sea side of the ship, on the C deck, and the porthole was 8 or 10 inches above her berth. On the night the plaintiff retired, the steward came into her stateroom and opened the porthole, using a wrench to do it. This was around 7 o’clock on the night of June 29th. The porthole was left open, and on the morning of June 30th, about 6:30 o’clock, the sea having become rough, the water poured through the open porthole. The water [726]*726streamed in, as one of the party testified, “as though it came out of a hose. It streamed as if the whole ocean was coming in.” The witness said she was awakened by water splashing down her neck, and there was a foot of water on the floor of the cabin. Another one of the party testified to being awakened “by this dreadful rush of water. The only thing I can think of is a -high-pressure fire plug it sounded like. It came in and struck the other side of „the room with a thud. The next thing I remember I was scrambling out of the berth; * * * and when I was getting out of the berth another rush of water came and hit me in- the back, knocked me to the. other side of the room, * * * and, feeling something was wrong, I naturally thought we were sinking, or some other thing was happening. * * * ”

The plaintiff testified that she was awakened by the water that poured into her berth from a porthole which the steward had left open. As she lay on the edge of her berth, which was an upper one, she was thrown out of it by the force of the water pouring through the porthole, and landed on the floor in about 8 inches of water. As she tried to rise she felt extreme pain in her right ankle. She testified she looked, and her “foot seemed to be hanging by a thread, the bone was sticking out, dripping with blood.” She fainted, and was carried to the ship’s hospital, and was in such extreme pain that she was kept under the influence of morphine.

The accident happened on June 30, 1922. On the arrival of the ship at Liverpool she-was taken to a hospital in that city, where she rerhained until September 25th, when she started for her home in Indianapolis. During the timé she was in the hospital, and when she reached home, pus was being discharged from her wound, and during this period the pain was so intense at times the attending physician had to use hypodermics. That the plaintiff’s injuries were serious, most painful, permanent, and may finally make necessary an amputation, is amply'diselosed by the record. The deposition of the ship’s surgeon, speaking of her condition immediately after the accident, said:

“Q. What examination did you make, and what did you find at that time, Doctor? A. Well, there was a compound dislocation; I put down in the log,, compound fracture dislocation, chiefly dislocation; her ankle was ripped up; it looked as if the foot was going to fall off; I thought I would have to take it off, at first sight; it looked an awful sight.”

And again:

“Q. It was a bad dislocation? A. Yes; compound dislocation.
“Q. In what respect was it bad? A. Any compound thing is bad — open wound.
“Q. Was ” the foot completely turned around? A. Yes; it looked, when I first saw it, as if it was going to drop off — hanging. I thought sure I would have do take it off at first.
“Q: Miss Corcoran states the astragalus — A. The astragalus was turned upside down and the scaphoid- — that was displaced a little bit; it’s a very rare form of displacement.
“Q. It is a very rare form of dislocation? A. Oh, yes; to get that astragalus turned upside down."

And a physician of New York City, connected with the Medical School of Columbia University, who made an examination of plaintiff a few days before testifying, and two years after the accident, stated that her condition was permanent and that he advised an amputation of the -foot. He testified:

“Q. Examining with the aid of those X-ra.ys, in addition to the -examination you made yourself, will you state what you found those X-ray pictures show -as to the foot ? ’ A. The X-ray revealed the nature of the deformity. They show a destruction, or the results, rather, of a destruction, of the astragalus bone, and they show, when taken in series, taken in three different times, they show a progressive shrinking! and .'eating away of that bone;" the last X-ray showing merely a fragment of the" bone that I should say represented possibly, certainly not more than, one-fifth of the original size of the astragalus, whereas the X-ray taken the previous year shows a destruction of the bone not quite so far advanced as it is at the present time.”

The ticket issued by the White Star Line-to the plaintiff provided for second-class passage by the British steamship Canopic from Montreal to Liverpool “upon the following conditions which are agreed- upon between th.e carrier and each passenger.” Then followed 12 conditions, the ninth of which reads: “No claim under this ticket shall be enforceable against the shipowner or his property, or the agent or passage broker, > unless notice thereof in writing with full particulars of the claim be delivered to the shipowner or agent within three days after the passenger shall be landed from the transAtlantic ocean steamer at the termination of her voyage, or, in ease of the voyage being [727]*727abandoned or broken up, within seven days thereafter.”

This ticket was unlike the pasteboard tickets commonly sold in this country to passengers on railroads or steamboats. It covered a large quarto page, with printed matter on both sides, and in the left-hand corner it contained the names of the four women passengers for whose benefit it was issued, one of whom was the plaintiff. It booked each through to Paris. The ticket was issued at the Boston office. It contained in large type at the bottom the following: “Your attention is specially directed to the conditions of transportation in the above contract.”

- The passengers named in the ticket did not see this ticket until the trial. The arrangements were all made for the persons named on the ticket by a third person, who was the conductor of the party, who purchased the ticket, looked after the baggage, and made all the arrangements. This person was the representative of the Temple Touring Company of Boston. Her services were not paid for by the persons named in the ticket issued. They gave her the money with which the ticket was bought. That ticket she kept in her possession throughout, and, as before remarked, she at ho time showed it to them, and the testimony does not show that she ever acquainted them with its provisions. But we do not attach importance to the fact that this plaintiff never saw the ticket or read the conditions printed thereon.

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Oceanic Steam Nav. Co. v. Corcoran
9 F.2d 724 (Second Circuit, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 724, 57 A.L.R. 163, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oceanic-steam-nav-co-v-corcoran-ca2-1925.