Pleasure Beach Park Co. v. Bridgeport Dredge & Dock Co.

165 A. 691, 116 Conn. 496, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 11, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 165 A. 691 (Pleasure Beach Park Co. v. Bridgeport Dredge & Dock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pleasure Beach Park Co. v. Bridgeport Dredge & Dock Co., 165 A. 691, 116 Conn. 496, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 66 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Haines, J.

The plaintiff owned and operated a pleasure park near Bridgeport, with a bridge over an arm of the sea connecting the park with the mainland, while the defendant owned a shipyard and docks a short distance to the north. Moored to the docks were several boats, including a dredge, a pile driver and a barge, and about eleven a. m. March 8th, 1931, these *498 broke away in a storm. The barge was blown through the draw of the bridge and did no damage, but the dredge and pile driver were blown against the bridge causing injury to the latter, and the plaintiff brings this suit to recover compensation therefor. The defendant pleaded that the breaking away and damage were the result of an act of God, which consisted of “an unusually severe and extraordinary storm, and unusual and unprecedented conditions of weather, wind and tide;” and that there was no negligence on the defendant’s part which in any way contributed to the injuries inflicted upon the plaintiff’s bridge. The trial court sustained these defenses and gave judgment for the defendant accordingly.

From the subordinate facts the trial court reached two conclusions: (1) that “the immediate cause of the boats going adrift, was a storm of such violence and so unprecedented that it was an act of God in the sense that the full force of the storm as it was at about eleven o’clock when the boats broke adrift could not reasonably have been expected,” and (2) that “the defendant and its agents did not do anything which a reasonably prudent person would not have done nor did they fail to do anything which a reasonably prudent person would have done under the circumstances having in mind that the boats would be subject to the force of such storms as might reasonably be expected at the time and place.” The claim that these two conclusions are erroneous is the chief ground of the present appeal.

Error is predicated upon the failure of the trial court to find certain facts and also upon certain paragraphs of the finding as made. One of the latter relates to the physical condition of the dock and the other to the method of mooring the boats thereto. It was found that the dock was old, but in fair condition; that *499 neither the stringer at any point where the pile driver or dredge was moored to it, nor the mooring piles to which it was moored, were materially rotted; that the stringer was in good condition and the piles were sound except that some decay had occurred at the very top of the piles, a considerable distance above the part to which the lines were tied. It was also found that in every particular the method in which the pile driver and the dredge were then moored to the dock, complied with the standard method ordinarily used by mariners and dock men to moor vessels of that character for long periods of time.

Attack is also made upon the three other paragraphs of the finding. One is to the effect that there was nothing in the condition of the dock or its equipment which was faulty in any particular which materially contributed to the breaking away of the boats. A second is that none of the employees of the defendant omitted to do anything which reasonable foresight and prudence would have dictated and which would have prevented the boats from breaking away; while the third is that the breaking away of the boats was caused entirely by the force of the storm which in its full measure, could not within reason, have been foreseen, and if it had, could not have been successfully guarded against.

Much of the testimony was conflicting, but a careful study of the entire record reveals sufficient credible evidence to justify the findings here objected to, while no warrant can be found for the addition of any important relevant facts from the draft-finding except that we have felt justified by the evidence in adding certain facts to the effect that Duffy, an ordinary laborer, with only such experience as he had had in assisting in handling the lines of vessels, was the only man left in charge at the dock when the dock master *500 left to get his breakfast; that the regular dock force consisted of six men, but this being Sunday, none of them except Duffy were present when the boats broke away. The remaining claims in the draft-finding are: either unimportant to this, inquiry, or are not undisputed facts.

The essential factual situation reflected by the record may be sufficiently summarized as follows: The defendant’s dock master knew of certain storm warnings issued by the United States Weather Bureau three days before March 8th, 1931, and went to the docks about nine this Sunday morning with the realization that a storm was developing. These boats were then moored to the dock as they had been for some time, the pile driver by two lines extending from one end of the boat to the dock, one fastened to a mooring pile and one to the stringer of the dock, and by two lines extending from the other end . of the boat to the dock, one fastened to the stringer and the other either to the stringer or to a mooring pile, and by two spring or check lines. The dredge was moored by two lines from the bow, one of these lines doubled, leading to a mooring pile on the dock, and the other line to the stringer, and by two' lines from the stern of the boat to the stringer, and by one check line. Sufficient slack had been left in the lines to allow for somewhat more than the normal rise and fall of the tide. All the lines were of large manila rope, apparently in good condition, although it is impossible to tell by visual inspection, whether such rope is in good condition. The stringer to which some of the lines were fastened was a large square timber laid horizontally around the outer edge of the dock and bolted at frequent intervals into the piles which support the dock, but none of the lines were padded where they came in contact with the stringer as is sometimes but not customarily done. *501 The mooring piles were large piles such as are customarily used for mooring purposes at a dock. The stringer was in good condition and the piles were sound except that some decay had occurred at the extreme top of them a considerable distance above the point where the lines were fastened. This was the standard method of mooring boats of this character so situated. The wind was from such a direction that the pile driver was receiving the full force of the storm, and as soon as he arrived at the dock, the dock master tied a steel cable from the rear end of the pile driver to the stringer in addition to the rope lines. The dock master had had a long experience in work of that kind and after carefully inspecting the situation, reasonably believed that everything was in good condition and that the boats would be held to the dock through the storm then raging and through any storm of a severity which would ordinarily be expected to strike that spot. He then left one of the dock crew, Duffy, in charge, and about ten-thirty went to his home to get some breakfast and dry clothing. Duffy’s experience had been confined to assisting others in mooring boats. The storm developed rapidly into one of unprecedent violence at least for many years, and the tide was the highest in the memory of man, while such a swell or surge of water as occurred was extremely rare.

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Bluebook (online)
165 A. 691, 116 Conn. 496, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pleasure-beach-park-co-v-bridgeport-dredge-dock-co-conn-1933.