Sumner v. Philadelphia

23 F. Cas. 392, 5 Legal Gaz. 332, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 145, 9 Phila. 408, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 392 (Sumner v. Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sumner v. Philadelphia, 23 F. Cas. 392, 5 Legal Gaz. 332, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 145, 9 Phila. 408, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719 (circtedpa 1873).

Opinion

Report of referee, confirmed October 6th, i.873, by

McICENXAN, Circuit Judge:

This is an action on the case brought by the owners of the brig Home against the city of Philadelphia, wherein damages are claimed for the alleged illegal detention of said brig by the board of health at quarantine during the summer and fall of 1870, and other alleged injuries growing out of the same matter. Under an agreement made by counsel. May 21st, 1S72, the case was referred to me, with the provision that my opinion and judgment in the case should have the same force and effect as a judgment on a special verdict.

No questions arise for my determination in the pleadings, as it wTas agreed that any possible objection to the form of action on the one side, or to the giving in evidence of matters of justification under the general issue. on the other, should be waived, and the case heard on the merits, irrespectively of the pleadings. Much evidence was produced before me on both sides orally, and depositions taken on behalf of plaintiffs under a commission, were also submitted. The case was ably and carefully argued by Messrs. Henry Flanders, and D. W. Sellers, for plaintiffs, and Messrs. George D. Budd, and C. H. T. Collis, city solicitor, for the city. There was, however, no serious conflict of testimony, though from the necessary circumstances of the case there is some contradiction in the evidence on certain points. Except in one particular, however, these contradictions are unimportant, and I have little difficulty in determining what are the actual facts of the case so far as the history of the transaction is concerned. The determination of some questions, however, which are quasi matters of fact, has been more difficult, involving, as it does, an examination from the scientific testimony. &c., adduced, an investigation into the cause and nature of the infection of yellow fever, especially in the particular epidemic of that disease at the quarantine station in 1S70. In determining these matters I have felt some doubt, from the nature of the case, and from the widely varying opinions of medical men on the subject, but I think that it will be found that my conclusions on this question sufficiently approximate the truth for the special matters involved in this ease, even if I be in error in some of the general views reached. The questions of law arising upon the facts present still more [393]*393difficulty, but my decision of them will be tlie subject of review, and will be doubtless corrected should I err.

First. As to the facts. The brig Home arrived in the Delaware river about the 26th of June, A. D. 1S70, and at the Lazaretto, the quarantine station of the port of Philadelphia, on the 20th of June, 1870. She was a vessel of two hundred and sixteen tons register, hailing from New York,, but arriving from Black river, Jamaica. Her car-eo consisted of logwood, but she had besides on board, but not on her register, thirteen bales of sail clippings. These appear to have been the private property of the master. The vessel was then about thirteen years old, built in Nova Scotia, her •class No. 2. She had been refitted some three or four months previously, but was in a very filthy condition at the time of her arrival. She had no bill of health. The master, Thomas H. Phillips, had died on board on the 24th June, 1S70. Notwithstanding the denials made by the crew, I am entirely satisfied he died of yellow fever, and so decide. The steward had also been sick of the same disease, but had recovered. The crew, at sailing, consisted of nine men, one colored boy, and a passenger from Kingston, Jamaica. Of this number, three— Griffiths, second mate, and Elliott and Pierre, of the crew — were taken down with tlie yellow fever within a few days of the arrival of the Home at quarantine: Grif-fiths absconded from quarantine June 30th, the day after his arrival, and died at his home, in Philadelphia, on July Cth. Elliott was taken sick at quarantine on July 2d, and recovered. Pierre was taken sick July 8th, after release from quarantine, and died in the municipal hospital in Philadelphia. Besides, the pilot, Stephen Bennett, who had been five days on the Home (from June 25th to 30th), was taken sick at Wilmington, on his way to the breakwater, July 2d, and died in Philadelphia, whither he came, on July 0th. These eases were, undoubtedly, yellow fever, and were seen and examined by competent physicians, and I cannot see that there can be a possible doubt that in each case the disease was contracted from the Home. This makes it a matter of absolute certainty that she -was an infected ship.

By orders of Dr. Thompson, the Lazaretto physician, the vessel was put in quarantine, and, by resolution of the board of health, ordered to be cleaned, fumigated, and disinfected. She took up, at first, a position about four hundred yards from the quarantine landing. The diagrams accompanying the report of the board of health (which was by both sides agreed to be given in evidence) show very satisfactorily the. several positions of the vessel. In the disinfection of the vessel, the removal of the cargo was necessary. As the cargo consisted of log-wood, which appears to be a substance not capable of retaining or propagating infection, and is so classed in the quarantine laws, hereinafter to be referred to, it was ordered to be unloaded in barges or lighters. About the 11th of July three barges or lighters came down to the Lazaretto, and discharge of cargo commenced. The first lighter (name unknown) received the deck load of logwood, and on July 13th left, witli-out permission, for the city (for the quarantine authorities claimed the right of detaining the lighters also), and came up to the logwood wharf on Windmill Island, opposite the city. No sickness seems to have affected her crew, or to be traceable to this lighter or her crew or cargo. On the 13th or 14th of July the hatches of the vessel were opened for the removal of the cargo, and on the 15th Dr. Thompson permitted her to be brought up to the government wharf, lying somewhat lower down the river than {lie quarantine wharf, to facilitate unloading. This second position is also well shown by the diagrams attached to the report of the board of health. This government wharf adjoins a government store house, and about one hundred and forty yards to the northwest of it is a public house known as Pepper’s. At about four hundred yards, and further to the west, is the house known as Miller’s. The quarantine buildings lie some two hundred yards to the northeast of this second position of the Home, and Dr. Thompson’s house some hundred and fifty yards from it, in the direct line from the Home to the hospital building. The prevailing wind was from southwest, blowing directly from the Home towards the quarantine buildings.

The Lazaretto had been unhealthy during the spring and early summer; it lies low, and is surrounded in great measure by marsh. There had been unusual overflows also, and, resulting therefrom, considerable malaria, and consequently intermittent fever, mostly of a mild type, had prevailed that season in the vicinity of Lazaretto. Up to this time, however, the yellow fever had been confined, as before mentioned, to the crew and pilot of the brig Home. At this time, however. the disease suddenly appeared among the crews of the barges moored alongside of the brig, the inhabitants of Pepper’s House, and of the Lazaretto. This outbreak seems clearly not to have been due to any contagion with the crew’ of the Home. They had mostly scattered before this, and no case can be traced to contact with either those who themselves had or had not yellow fever.

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23 F. Cas. 392, 5 Legal Gaz. 332, 18 Int. Rev. Rec. 145, 9 Phila. 408, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sumner-v-philadelphia-circtedpa-1873.