Smith v. Pejepscot Paper Co.

46 F.2d 469, 1931 A.M.C. 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1105
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 27, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 F.2d 469 (Smith v. Pejepscot Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Pejepscot Paper Co., 46 F.2d 469, 1931 A.M.C. 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1105 (D. Me. 1931).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

George B. Smith, Elliot Smith, and Prank Paulkins brought actions in the state court in Knox county, against the Pejepseot Paper Company, alleging damages to person and property, occasioned by the alleged negligence of the defendant company at Rock-land, Me., in November, 1929. They assert that on the night of November 12, 1929, George B. Smith and his son brought their 39-foot fishing boat to the dock of the Snow Shipbuilding Company at Rockland and tied her up in front of the wharf; later the same night the captain and crew of the tug Pejepseot, owned by the defendant company, moved the plaintiff’s boat from its position, where it had been left by the plaintiffs, up into the dock some 50 feet. At the place where the boat was originally tied up by the plaintiffs there was sufficient water to float her at any time. Later, at 3 o’clock on the following morning, plaintiffs went down to the boat and found her lying halfway up the wharf on her bilge; the water had gone out entirely and left the boat keeled over on her side. The agent of the defendant had moved the boat to this location without knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs; and the plaintiffs did not have such knowledge until the boat was found on her bilge. She was equipped with a gasoline engine and two gasoline tanks. The vents in the gasoline tanks were in the caps that screwed onto the tops of the tanks through which the tanks were filled; and it was necessary to have such vents in order to let air into the tanks. "When the plaintiffs came back about 4 o’clock in the morning, the tide had come in sufficiently so that the boat was floating; and plaintiff George B. Smith went forward through the engine room to light the lights. He stood in the door between the engine-room and forecastle and struck a match in the forecastle some six feet from the vent in the tank, for the purpose of lighting up. Immediately there was an explosion in the forecastle, and almost immediately another explosion in the after deck, causing damage to the boat by fire, and resulting in personal injury to the plaintiffs. Eor this injury to property and to the persons of the plaintiffs these actions are brought.

Later in January, 1930, the defendant, the Pejepseot Paper Company, filed a petition in this court to limit its liability to the value of its tug Pejepseot; and, in accordance with the practice in such proceedings, plaintiffs were enjoined from taking further action in the state court and ordered to file [470]*470their claims in this court. Thereupon the plaintiffs filed their claims here in these proceedings. This court therefore now has jurisdiction of the issues in the ease.

The defendant, by its petition, contests its liability and the liability of the tug and her appurtenances foy any and all losses or damage or injury occurring by reason of the matters set forth in these suits.

The petition raises, first, the question of liability. The claim of the defendant is substantially this: That the tug Pejepscot is a large ocean-going towboat. In the autumn of 1929 it needed a new rudder. Her master, Captain Hallowell, went to the I. L. Snow Shipyard in Rockland to have’ a new rudder made. The Snow-Company was given a pattern of the rudder, and, when such rudder was completed, the tug was to come to the shipyard to have the- rudder installed. When Captain Hallowell first went to the Snow Shipyard, he asked the superintendent where his tug could be berthed when she came for the purpose of installing the rudder. The superintendent went to the dock and pointed out the berth the tug was to use; it being the same berth the tug actually used at the time of the injury in question. At the time of meeting the officials of the Snow Shipyard, Captain Hallowell asked the superintendent what was to be done with the boats lying at this berth if there should be any there when he brought the tug in; and the superintendent instructed him to move them out of the way. The tug Pejepscot arrived at the Snow Shipyard late in the afternoon of November 11, 1929, and found several small boats there, including the boat belonging to the plaintiffs. Captain Hallowell then says that he went ashore and telephoned to Captain Snow, vice president of the yard, for instructions; and then Captain John Snow told him to move the boats out of the way. In accordance with this instruction, the crew of the tug took the lines that held the Smith boat into the dock and moved the boat up the dock some fifty or moré feet, and made her fast. The same was done to all the boats that were there at that time. No harm came to any of those boats except the plaintiffs’ boat, although they were all handled alike. On the following day the Pejepscot was towed out into deep water, where her old rudder was unhung and her new rudder hung, and on the night of November 12th, about 6 o’clock, after ’Snow’s men had completed the hanging of the new rudder, the boat was taken back to the same berth she had been on the previous night; when the tug got back to the berth assigned to her by Snow, it was found that the Smith boat had been again moved into this berth; and the crew of the Pejepscot did precisely what they had done the previous night — they moved her up the dock and made her fast. The defendant alleges that the berth into which the Smith boat was moved was a soft level bottom used by the Snow Company for the purpose of grounding out boats; that no harm was liable to come to the boats and no harm did come to the Smith boat on the previous night, although she was handled in the same way. Defendant alleges that, about 3 o’clock on the morning of November 13th, when the Smiths went down to the wharf and found their boat high and dry, George B. Smith, one of the plaintiffs, lighted a match, without examination of the conditions existing, and caused the explosion.

The petitioner, defendant, makes the following contentions:

First, that the Smith boat had no right to lay in the berth in question. She was a trespasser, and this is especially true on the second night (November 12).

Second, that the damage complained of in this ease would never have occurred if the boat had been properly equipped, and the gasoline tanks properly installed.

' Third, that what did happen in this ease was not the reasonable and probable result of the act of moving the boat.

Fourth, that the cause of the explosion was the lighting of a match in a cabin where gasoline fumes had been collecting for a long time, and the mixture of air and gasoline was just right to ignite.

Fifth, that the moving of the boat was not the proximate cause of the damage complained of.

Sixth, that, if there is any liability, it is the liability of the I. L. Snow Company, who directed the crew of the Pejepscot to move this boat so that they could -perform their work on the boat.

The plaintiffs contend that, as a direct result of the negligent moving of their boat by the defendant, they suffered injury in person and in property, occasioned by the explosion of gas in the boat, after a match had been lighted by one of the plaintiffs. Clearly the boat was moved by the defendant from the position in which she had previously laid,, and was moved to- another berth. The boat grounded out and heeled over on her bilge. On the lighting of the match by one of the plaintiffs the explosion and injury occurred.''

[471]*471Tho first question before the court is: Was the alleged negligent act of the defendant the proximate cause of the injury. Here the burden of proof rests upon the plaintiffs.

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Related

Dowling v. Isthmian S.S. Corporation
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52 F.2d 913 (Third Circuit, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F.2d 469, 1931 A.M.C. 927, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-pejepscot-paper-co-med-1931.