Swigert v. Graham

46 Ky. 661, 7 B. Mon. 661, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 7, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 Ky. 661 (Swigert v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swigert v. Graham, 46 Ky. 661, 7 B. Mon. 661, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 94 (Ky. Ct. App. 1847).

Opinion

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action on the ease was brought by Graham against the owners of the steam boat Oliver Anderson, to recover for the loss of Edmund¡ the plaintiff’s slave, who while-employed as a hand, hired for the service of the boat, was drowned in the Kentucky river, in August, 1844. The-declaration avers that Edmund was employed on the boat for hite to be paid to the plaintiff; that the captain, officers and agents of the defendants having the management of the boat, and the direction of Edmund, &c., not regarding their duty in that behalf, took so little and such bad care of the boat that it was run aground, and that they took so littie and such bad care of Edmund, &c,, that owing to their carelessness, negligence, unskilfulness, misdirection and mismanagement of said boy Edmund, &c., he was drowned.

1. It seems that one of the owners of the boat was not joined in the action, and that one of the defendants was not an owner. And the first of these facts having been pleaded in abatement, and a demurrer to the plea sustamed, the first question is, whether the action was subject to be affected by the nonjoinder alledged. It is doubtless true that the mere circumstance of the action .... being in form "ex delicto” should not conclusively relieve it from those rules with regard to the consequences of nonjoinder or misjoinder of parties, which apply peculiarlv to actions in form "ex contractu,” and do not . 1 „ , , , m. in general apply to those of the other class, lhe grounds [662]*662of discrimination between those cases in which these rules are, and those in which they are not applicable, are not however, so far as we have seen, precisely defined. But this action is clearly not brought for the mere nonfeasance of a contract; but for tortlmus negligence or mismanagement in the exercise of rights and duties belonging to the relation which is itself created by contract. The action is not brought for the non-delivery of the boy according to the terms, express or implied, on which he was hired, but for the breach of a duty imposed by law upon a party who has the possession and use of the slave of another, whether on hire or not. And although the declaration would not in this case be sustained, unless there were evidence that the boy Edmund was in the service of the boat on hire, it is not necessary to prove any stipulation of that contract, and therefore it is not, in view of the question now on hand, necessary to prove the contract. The action on the case for a breach of warranty on a sale, put by Chitty, 1 vol. 74, as an example of a case in which as a contract is to be proved, the mies applicable to actions ex contradu should apply, is not anaiagous to the present case. In the action for a breach of warranty, whether in case or assumpsit, the action is essentially for the nonfeasance of the contract, and for nothing else. We are not satisfied that the present case should form an exception to the general rule which prevails in actions in form ex delicto, and are therefore of opinion that the plaintiff’s right of recovery in this suit, should not be affected by the alledged nonjoinder or misjoinder of parties defendants.

The bailee of a slave' for hire is hound to ordinary diligence in regard to the heolth, safety, &e. of the slave, and responsible for ordinary neglect, as in all cases of bailment for hire.

2. The material question in the case is, whether under the actual circumstances, the owners of the boat are liable for the loss of the slave, by being drowned while in their employ. 'And this question depends not merely upon the general principles applicable to the case of bailment on hire, as they are stated or adjudged in relation to inanimate or to mere animal property, but upon the proper application or modification of those principles in reference to the paiticular case of a slave hired for service as a common hand on board of a steam boat engaged in the navigation of the Kentucky and Ohio rivers. The [663]*663irule that the bailee on hire, is bound to ordinary diligence, and responsible for ordinary neglect, is doubtless true in all cases of their bailment, unless there be fraud -or a special contract by which it may be varied in the 'particular case.

But what is ordinary care, or care in regard to one species of properly, may not be so in regard to other property; ii may vary on account of the subject itself, or on account of the circumstances in which it is placed. Ordinary diligence means that degree of care or attention, or exertion which under the actual circumstances aman of ordinary prudence and discretion would exercise in reference to the particular thing were it his own pioperty. —So there is a corresponding obligation on the bailor who knows the use for which propertyjis bailed that it is capable of the use lor which it is hired; and implies a right to use it in thatserviee in the ordinary way, unless there should be some. special ’reason at some particular time known to bailee why it should not be so used.'

[663]*663But what is or is not ordinary diligence may vary, not only with the circumstances under which the subject of it may be placed, but with the nature of the subject itself. That which in respect to one spéeies of property might be gross neglect, might in respect to another species be extraordinary care. And under peculiar circumstances of danger, extraordinary exertions may be required of one who is bound only to ordinary diligence, or -in otber'words, the circumstances may be such, that extraordinary exertions are nothing more than ordinary diligence.

- Ordinary diligence, then, means that degree pf care, -or attention, or exertion, which under the actual circum-stances, a man of ordinary prudence and discretion would use in reference to the particular thing were it his own property, or in doing the particular thing were it his ■own concern. And where skill is required for the undertaking, ordinary diligence implies the possession and use of competent skill. » On the other hand, the same principles which impose on the bailee these obligations, impose on the bailor, (in the absence of special contract •or representation,) the corresponding obligation that the thing or property hired for use shall be reasonably fit for the purpose, or capable of the use known to be intended: that is, that it possesses the qualities usually belonging •to things of that kind when used for the same purpose.

And of course the bailment of property on hire for a particular use or service, implies the right on the part of -the bailee to use it in that service in the ordinary way, -unless at some particular period or part of the service, there should be special circumstances rendering such use improper, and which are, or ought to be known to him. •Having a right to rely upon its possession of the qualities ordinarily belonging to similar things used in similar service, he is bound to bestow only 1hat degree of care, attention or exertion for the preservation of the thing [664]*664which is ordinarily bestowed for the preservation of things of that kind in that service..

A slave being capableofvoluntaxy motion, of ••observation, experience, knowledge andfddll, is presumed in ordinary cases, to he capable of taking care of himself if disposed to do so, without constant supervision or physical control.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ky. 661, 7 B. Mon. 661, 1847 Ky. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swigert-v-graham-kyctapp-1847.