State ex rel. Boddie v. Baltimore & O. R.

254 F. 720, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 781
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 24, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 254 F. 720 (State ex rel. Boddie v. Baltimore & O. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Boddie v. Baltimore & O. R., 254 F. 720, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 781 (D. Md. 1918).

Opinion

ROSE, District Judge.

The equitable libelant seeks compensation for her husband’s death. There is no dispute as to how he was killed, and upon the facts there can be none that it was the result of the negligence of some one other than himself. The controversy is as to whose carelessness it was. He was in the employ of the respondent the Patapsco Ship Ceiling & Stevedore Company, hereinafter called the “Stevedore Company.” It had frequent occasion to move its workmen about the harbor, and for that purpose, it sometimes used launches of its own, and sometimes hired those of others. At the time of the fatal accident, the deceased was in one of the latter, upon which the gang, of which he was a member, had been ordered by the Stevedore Company. The launch attempted to pass under the lines which held fast to the pier a dredge which was owned and operated by the respondent the Maryland Dredging & Contracting Company, hereinafter called the “Dredging Company.” One of these lines sagged down upon the launch, and swept the deceased off to his death by drowning.

The dredge had been working in the same slip for something over three weeks before the accident. The launch had passed in and out of the slip almost daily, and usually a number of times each day. During working hours, the dredge was made fast to the piers, on either side, by lines; there being two of them on each side. One of these the breast line, ran from amidship the dredge to the pier. It was about 80 feet long. The other extended from the dredge’s quarter diagonally forward about 200 feet to the pier. When these lines were taut, there was ample room for a launch safely to pass under them. When the dredge was at work, as the result of the movements of its bucket, the lines were continually passing from taut to slack, and back again. About three-quarters of a minute elapsed from one slackening of the line until the next. The accident happened on an August morning. The launch started from the head of the slip; that is, from a point 200 or 300 feet from the dredge. The starboard side of the dredge was that upon which the launch should have gone, if upon any, and upon that side it attempted to pass. At the time it started, the dredge’s starboard lines were both taut, and remained so until after the launch had passed under the first, presumably the breast line. Then the other line sagged down on the launch and swept the deceased off.

There are only two controverted questions of fact: (1) Did the launch sound its whistle as it left the wharf? and (2) was the dredge at work when the launch started towards it ?

It is abundantly established that the whistle was at hand. There was no reason why it should not have been sounded, and every reason why it should. The master of the launch and two other persons swear positively that it was. Seven other persons who testified were, at the time, in a position in which it was physically possible for them to- have heard the blast, if given. Of these, two do not remember whether the whistle was sounded or not. A third, a very intelligent man, states that, had it been blown before the launch started, his attention would hardly have been attracted to it. Of the remaining four, two were the master and engineer of the dredge. Their evidence that it was not sounded is of little worth.

[722]*722The captain is quite deaf, and says he has been increasingly so for the last 10 years. He claims that he can hear better when the dredge is vibrating than he can at other times. However that may be, his evidence that he did not hear tire whistle proves nothing, in spite of the fact that he appeared to be, outside of the defect in his hearing, a competent and truthful man. He was in the pilot house looking forward at the time of the accident, and he did not rely on his own ears for knowledge as to signals which might be given by boats coming up from the rear of the dredge. In the absence of his mate, he had stationed his engineer on the stern, at a point from which all that went on aft his boat could have easily been seen, and from which there were ample facilities for communicating promptly with him. All these precautions were bound to prove useless, unless the engineer in fact did keep his eyes and his ears open. It never seems to have occurred to him that there was any reason why he should do either. Apparently he supposed that he had nothing whatever to do, except once in every 20 minutes or so, at which interval it was customary to move the dredge. He says he did not hear the whistle, but then he was equally d,eaf to the noise made by somewhere from 20 to 40 stevedores crowding upon the launch. He never saw the launch at all, until it was under the line which caused the disaster. From his whole manner on the stand, I concluded that he was either physically or mentally asleep for some while before the accident. When testifying, he was voluble in his criticisms of the actions of the launch on previous occasions, and as to the warnings given it by the dredge captain, and as to its speed at the time of the accident. .A comparison between what he says on these matters and the testimony of the dredge master shows that many of his statements are gross and obvious exaggerations, to call them by no harsher term.

The remaining witnesses, who say that the whistle was not sounded, are a colored stevedore and a very intelligent launch captain, then in the employ of the Stevedore Company, but now in the government service. He was standing on a wharf near by at the time the launch put out. Both these witnesses made a favorable impression, and yet such negative testimony, even when given by honest and capable men, is not persuasive against the positive testimony of witnesses who appear also to be trying to tell the truth. Neither of these men was charged with any duty which depended upon his hearing the whistle. It might well have been sounded without its making the slightest impression on either of them. Under such circumstances, all of us have ears, but we hear not. It is, of course, not possible to be absolutely certain that the whistle was sounded; but I have little doubt that it was, and must so find. That being so, the dredge was clearly in fault. It could have suspended its operations long enough to allow1 the safe passage of the launch, as had been its habitual practice with reference to this and other launches. If, for any reason, it was at the moment impracticable to stop, the engineer could, as was also usual, have signaled the launch with his hands to wait. Neither was done, because for some reason the engineer was for the moment oblivious to all that was going on about him, and the captain of the dredge, handicapped [723]*723by his defective hearing, relied on his engineer for information as to what was happening to the stern of his boat.

In view of this conclusion, it is unnecessary to determine the other point in controversy, namely: Was the dredge at work when the launch started towards it? There are many witnesses, and not all from one side, who are positive that it was, and had been for some hours before. Those who claim that it was not point out that every one agrees that the dredge’s starboard lines were taut when the launch left the wharf, and remained so until after the launch had successfully passed under the first of them. The launch was not, even at the time of the accident, moving more than three knots an hour. It is argued that, had there not been some stoppage of the dredge, the lines would not have been taut so long. The calculation is a close one, but it is not necessary to make it.

It must be remembered that the owner of the launch is not a party to this cause.

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Bluebook (online)
254 F. 720, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-boddie-v-baltimore-o-r-mdd-1918.