Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc. v. Hicks

285 U.S. 502, 52 S. Ct. 450, 76 L. Ed. 903, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 787
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 11, 1932
DocketNos. 430, 444
StatusPublished
Cited by169 cases

This text of 285 U.S. 502 (Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc. v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc. v. Hicks, 285 U.S. 502, 52 S. Ct. 450, 76 L. Ed. 903, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 787 (1932).

Opinion

*506 Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion, of the Court.

These cross-writs were granted in a proceeding for limitation of liability under Sec. 3, Act of March 3, 1851, c. 43, 1 initiated by Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc., owner of the motor launch “ Linseed King,” which sank on December 20, 1926, causing personal injuries and loss of life,

Kellogg & Sons is a New York corporation engaged in the manufacture of linseed oil at á number of factories, among them one at Edgewater, New Jersey, on the west shore of the . Hudson River, opposite 96th Street, New York. The home office of the corporation is in Buffalo, where the chief executive officers reside. The Edgewater plant employs many workmen who live in New York. In order to ferry these men to and from the factory the company owned and, operated the- “ Linseed King,” a gasoline launch of a length of forty-five feet and a beam-of ten feet, having a small wheel house forward, and behind that an enclosed cabin which occupied practically the entire deck space. The company’s practice was to send the boat from Edgewater, early in the morning, to the foot of 96th Street, where the men went on board and were transported to the factory in time for their work. Although the safe load was estimated at not over sixty passengers, she had eighty-six life preservers aboard and had frequently carried more than eighty persons. This number seriously crowded her cabin, the total superficial area of which was two hundred thirty-three square feet, two lengthwise seats occupying about one-third of the space.

*507 On the morning in question the boat left the New Jersey pier before daybreak, in charge of one man. As the New York shore was approached drift ice was encountered which had come down the river during the night and been driven to the easterly side by a west wind. The launch passed safely through the ice and reached the foot of 96th Street. There another of the company’s employees, who' was detailed to give general assistance and may be considered a deckhand, came on board. The launch was immediately filled from a crowd of waiting men. It is difficult to ascertain exactly how many boarded her; but the courts below have found that there were at least seventy-eight. On the return trip the thicker part of the ice towards the New York shore was successfully traversed, and when the master considered himself clear of ice he proceeded at full speed, — about seven miles an hour. Shortly thereafter a cake or floe of ice stove a-hole in the boat’s port bow and caused her to fill and sink in about two minutes. The result was a panic in the cabin, a rush for the exits, which were small, and one of which opened inward, thus being difficult of operation on account of the crowdéd condition. Some of the passengers were thrown into the river, reached floating cakes of ice, and were rescued. Thirty-five bodies were found in the cabin, but the number lost was never definitely determined.

Actions were brought in the New York courts against Kellogg & Sons by certain of the survivors and by the administrators of some of those, who had been drowned. One libel was filed in the District Court for Southern New York. Claims were made by others and suits threatened. The company filed a petition for limitation and sought an injunction against all proceedings upon any claim, including those for workmen’s compensation under the New Jersey. act, except that no injunction was asked against the mere filing of claims with the New Jersey State Work *508 men’s- Compensation Bureau. The launch was surrendered, its value .ascertained as $1,500, proper stipulation entered, and an order of reference made to a commissioner to receive claims. An injunction pendente lite was issued-as prayed embracing not only the claimants, but the State Compensation Bureau, service being made upon the secretary of that body. Claims were filed, and the claimants in their answers to the petition denied the company’s right to limitation.

Upon the issues so made the cause came on for hearing before the District Court, and at the conclusion of the evidence that court denied the owner’s right to limit and referred all of the claims to a commissioner for report as to their validity and the amounts t.o be awarded. The latter recommended awards to sundry claimants. On exceptions the District Court confirmed some and altered others.

Those who were killed and injured in the disaster were of three classes: (1) Regular employees of Kellogg & . Sons in the Edgewater plant; (2) Men who had applied on December 18 for work in discharging the cargo of a ship expected on that day. She did not then arrive, and they were given employment check stubs and told to return on the following day, which they did; but as she-had - not then docked they were advised to report again on the morning of the accident. The vessel had berthed the evening before, and if these men had succeeded in reaching the pier at Edgewater they would have been preferred in the allotment of work in discharging her cargo. (3) Men seeking employment in answer to an advertisement for laborers inserted in the New York newspapers, who had, however, not been interviewed by the company officials, and who. would therefore have had to apply and be accepted upon arrival at,The Edgewater pier.

*509 ■ The owner insisted that as the men in groups (1) and (2) were employees within the intent of the workmen’s compensation law of New Jersey their remedy was exclusively under that act, and no damages could be granted to any of them or to the personal representatives of deceased members of these classes in this proceeding. No such objection was urged against awards to men in the third class. The . commissioner overruled the owner’s contention, held the workmen’s compensation act was inapplicable, and all of the claimants should receive awards in the admiralty court. Upon exceptions the District Court reverséd the commissioner’s conclusions and held that those falling within the first class must be dismissed from the case, as any redress to which they were entitled was under the New Jersey act, but that the men in the second had never been actually employed, and were consequently outside the compensation law, and the commissioner’s recommendations as to awards to them should be confirmed. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the action of the District Court.

The petition for certiorari (No. 430) by the owner alleged error in refusing to limit liability and in not remitting the claimants in the second group to their remedy under the workmen’s compensation act. Claimants of the fiist group also filed a petition (No. 444) asserting the coürt below improperly disposed of their claims, and that they-were entitled to awards in the pending cause. The cases were heard together.

The first question for decision is whether Kellogg & Sons, as owner, was entitled to -a decree limiting its liability. The master’s negligence is not denied; indeed the owner proved that definite and peremptory instructions had been given him never to run when there was ice in the river. His disregard of these was the proximate cause of the disaster.

*510

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Bluebook (online)
285 U.S. 502, 52 S. Ct. 450, 76 L. Ed. 903, 1932 U.S. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-kellogg-sons-inc-v-hicks-scotus-1932.