Prickett v. New Orleans Anchor Line

13 Mo. App. 436, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 136
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Mo. App. 436 (Prickett v. New Orleans Anchor Line) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prickett v. New Orleans Anchor Line, 13 Mo. App. 436, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 136 (Mo. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action against a corporation engaged in the business of carrying passengers and freight for hire on the Mississippi, for the loss of the baggage of a passenger.

There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs.

There is little, if any, conflict in the evidence. It appears that plaintiff Elizabeth Prickett, who resides at Edwardsville, Illinois, left St. Louis on February 23, 1881, on the James Howard, one of defendant’s line of New Orleans packets, on a round trip from St. Louis to New Orleans and return. Before arriving at Cairo on the return, it was anticipated that the boat would reach St. Louis during the morning of Sunday, March 13th. But owing to the bad quality of coal furnished at that point, she did not make the distance from Cairo as quickly as her officers had hoped ; and she reached the wharfboat at St. Louis at about a quarter past nine at night. It was then dark ; there were no hacks or conveyances on the levee. The deck passengers and the St. Louis cabin passengers all left the boat on her arrival. But those cabin passengers who did not live in St. Louis, including Mrs. Prickett, remained on board. Most of the passengers [439]*439were ladies and childi-en. Mrs. Prickett was accompanied by a grown-up son. The boat took fire, as is supposed, by the spontaneous combustion of some bales of jute. The fire took place at a quarter past ten. The passengers were saved in the yawl. But Mrs. Prickett lost her trunk and its contents, consisting of wearing apparel, which were burned with the boat.

The captain of the boat gave permission, as soon as it was seen that the boat would arrive after night, for the lady cabin passengers and their escorts to remain on the boat all night. He especially gave permission for Mrs. Prickett to do so. The captain says that it was some inconvenience to allow passengers to remain on board over night, but that permission to do so was always accorded on his boat to ladies when the boat arrived at night, though it was sometimes refused to men who had no women in charge ; and on this trip he refused permission to stay over night to a company of civil engineers who were travelling together. There was evidence that there was a hack-stand within a quarter of a mile of the levee, at which Mrs. Prickett’s escort could easily have got a hack and taken his mother to a hotel before the fire. Mrs. Prickett intended to leave on the morning train for home, and desired to remain on board to save the trouble of moving into a hotel and out again before taking the morning train.

The court gave the following instruction at the instance of plaintiffs: —

“ 1. The court instructs the jury, that if they believe from the evidence that the steamer James Howard reached lier landing at St. Louis on the night of March 13, 1881, at a later hour of the night than had been anticipated by the officers and passengers, and in view thereof the captain of the steamer James Howard, prior to the landing of the same, invited plaintiff Elizabeth Prickett, or gave her permission to remain on board over night; and that in consequence of such invitation or permission, plaintiff took no [440]*440immediate steps to receive and remove her baggage when the steamer landed, and the same remained on board and w.as burned before removing, then defendant is liable for its loss, and the jurors will so find.”

At the instance of defendants, the court gave the following instructions: —

“2. The jury are instructed, that in determining what was a reasonable time within which plaintiff could have gone ashore with her baggage after the landing of said boat at St. Louis, they must not take into consideration the facilities or accommodations at the wharf at St. Louis, on the landing of said boat, for the transporting of plaintiff and her baggage to a hotel or other place of abode.
“3. If you find that the plaintiff kept her baggage on said boat after its safe arrival, and after a reasonable time had elapsed within which she could have removed it from said boat, and that afterwards it was burned on board said boat, then unless you find that said fire was due to the negligence of the defendant or its servants, you will find for the defendant, and the court instructs that the burden of proving such negligence is on the plaintiff.
“ 4. The court instructs the jury that the instructions are to be taken and considered together as a whole.”

The court refused an instruction that, on the pleadings and evidence, plaintiff is not entitled to recover, this instruction is inserted amongst those given in the transcript; but this is manifestly one of those clerical errors, which unfortunately, in many cases disfigure the transcripts which it is my duty to examine. I am sometimes tempted to doubt whether these transcripts are compared before they receive the certificate of the clerk. The work is so carelessly done, in many instances coming under my observation, that I think it my duty, in the interests of the administration of justice,, to animadvert upon it again, as I have taken occasion to do before, though, I think, with little or no good effect.

Defendant asks the court to instruct, that the master of [441]*441the boat had no authority to invite passengers to remain on the boat after her arrival in port, unless this was expressly given to him by her owners; that if plaintiff, with her baggage, had a reasonable time within which, by diligence, she might have gone ashore, and by a permissive license from the master, for her own benefit, and without benefit to defendant, she remained on board till her baggage was lost by fire, without any negligence of defendant, she cannot recover. The court refused so to instruct.

We think these instructions were properly refused, and that the cause was put to the jury, by the instructions given, in a way of which defendant has no reason to complain.

That the captain of the Howard had full authority to permit passengers to remain on board over night when she arrived in port after night had set in, we have no doubt at all. So far as the license went, it was as good as if it had been given in express terms to plaintiff by the owners and captain together. It was within the incidental powers necessarily resulting from his official capacity as master of the vessel. These are restricted to the usual business of the trip; but within the scope of that business, they are very wide indeed, and exceed those Of an ordinary agent. The captain could not turn his vessel', if employed for carrying passengers alone, into a mere freight vessel; nor could he turn it into a mere boarding-house, by tying up at the bank and taking boarders; but a ship may arrive in port at an hour when it is fairly doubtful whether it would not be a hardship to require all the passengers at once to disembark; and the captain, in the interest of the owners of a passenger ship, must necessarily have the power to permit the women on board, when he arrives in port at night, to remain on board until a reasonable hour'next day. ■ And if he accords this permission, the passengers remain as passengers, and the voyage is not ended as to them until they have had a reasonable time to leave the vessel next morning. To lay down a rule that the captain of a passenger boat navigating [442]

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246 S.W. 991 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Mo. App. 436, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prickett-v-new-orleans-anchor-line-moctapp-1883.