The Buffalo

154 F. 815, 83 C.C.A. 531, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4591
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1907
DocketNo. 278
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 154 F. 815 (The Buffalo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Buffalo, 154 F. 815, 83 C.C.A. 531, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4591 (2d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The Buffalo was a large, rectangular, flat-bottomed scow, intended for the lightering of coal. Her hold was divided into four compartments. Running fore and aft upon either side of her deck was a railroad track. A McMiler hoist or derrick mounted upon car wheels was placed on these tracks, so that it could run forward and backward the entire length of the tracks. This Mc-Miler hoist consisted of a house built upon a turntable and containing an engine, boiler, and machinery. From one part of the house extended the boom of the derrick, from the end of which the bucket was raised and lowered. The engineer who controlled the circular movements of the arm, the raising and lowering of the bucket, and the fore and aft movement of the entire structure on the rails was stationed in this house, which was inclosed on all sides with the exception of an opening on the side from which the boom extended. The engineer fáced the opening, and the boom was in the direct line of his vision, so. that.he could observe the movement of the bucket as it was raised and lowered and could see that it was properly placed. When the boom revolved the whole structure upon the turntable revolved with it. By reason of the fore and aft movement of the McMiler hoist upon the rails it could be readily shifted, so that the bucket might operate in any desired compartment. This movement also subserved another purpose. It would sometimes happen that, when the bucket was in line above a particular compartment, the place outside the scow which it was necessary that the bucket should reach did not lie upon [817]*817the circle described by the radius of the revolving boom. It would then be necessary to supplement the movement of revolution by a fore and aft movement of a few feet upon each occasion when the bucket was raised or lowered. About 1 a. m. of September 30, 1904, the libelant, with a gang of men, was at work in the compartment furthest aft loading ore into the bucket. The bucket being loaded, libelant rested on his shovel, his back being towards the hoist, while the bucket rose and the boom swung over towards the steamship Venezuela, into which the ore was being delivered. In order to effect delivery of the bucket into the proper hatch of the steamer, the engineer moved the hoist a few feet further aft, it struck the libelant, and in trying to save himself from falling his arm was thrown over one of the rails and crushed by the moving wheel.

The appellants contend that there can be no recovery in rem against the scow under the decision of the Supreme Court in The Osceola, 189 U. S. 158, 23 Sup. Ct. 483, 47 L. Ed. 700. In answer to that contention it is sufficient to say that libelant was not a member of the crew of the scow. He had been employed for three weeks as an ore shoveler on the docks of the claimants in Buffalo. Informat'on having been received that the Venezuela was aground somewhere on the north shore of the lake, they hurried a number of their ore shovelers from the dock where they were at work aboard the scow, which was then empty, to assist the coal shovelers of the scow in lightening the steamer till she was got afloat and then in returning the ore on board of her. Eibelant was merely a stevedore or longshoreman in the employ of appellants, and the case is to be determined by ordinary rules governing the relation of master and servant.

It is further contended that the proximate cause of the accident was the negligence of a fellow servant- — the engineer. We are unable to find that the latter was guilty of any negligence. It is not shown that he moved the structure at any unaccustomed speed or in any unusual way. His entire attention was necessarily concentrated upon his own work, quite sufficient fully to occupy it, regulat ng the movements of the hoist, revolving turntable, and bucket, so as to move the ore from the one place to the other. If he carefully watched the buck el as it swung out hoard, he could not at the same time keep looking over his shoulder to see that the shovelers were keeping out of the way. He was entitled to assume that their avoidance of bucket, boom, or hoist would be. secured, either by warning given to them or by their own attention to what was going on. Manifestly the compaitment in which libelant was injured was an unsafe place to work, compared with the dock upon which he was accustomed to load buckets. His previous occupation had taught him that he must look out for a moving bucket and a swinging boom, and this he did, as the testimony shows. But for workers in the aft compartment on this occasion there was an additional peril, arising from the circumstance that the whole turntable and superstructure moved fore and aft over a part of the place where they were at work. He was put to work in this dangerous place after midnight, without a word of warning, without any caution to look out for any other movement than that of the bucket and the boom. This was negligence on the part of the master, and its consequences can be avoided [818]*818only by showing that the circumstances are such that it is to be presumed that libelant must have assumed the risks of an employment whose dangers were obvious to any person of reasonable care and prudence.

But the testimony in. this case will not sustain any defense either of assumption of risk or of contributory negligence. He knew of the danger from moving bucket and boom, testified that he watched them carefully, and no one disputes that testimony. He had never before worked on any such scow, with fore and aft movement to the revolving structure. He went on board the tug which took the scow over to the grounded steamer about noon of September 29th. During that trip the machinery was not in action. They reached the Venezuela and began discharging her ore about 2 p. m.; libelant working in the hold of the Venezuela. She floated at 10 p. m., whereupon the ore shovelers were transferred to the scow and put to work in No. 2 compartment, where they worked till it was emptied about 1 a. m. They then walked around the hoist to No. 4 compartment (aft) to begin work there. There is no testimony to show that during the three hours they were at work in No. 2 the hoist was moved fore and aft over any part of that compartment. Apparently that compartment and the hatch of the steamer were in such position relative to each other that it was not necessary to move anything but the boom and bucket. Certainly up to the time that libelant went to work in No-. 4 there had been nothing to. warn him that a danger additional to those which attended his work on the docks lurked in its dim-lit obscurity. Nor had he been long enough in No. 4 to receive such warning through the teachings of experience. He was struck while the second or third bucketful was swinging aloft. While we do not think the master was under any obligation to have a man specially stationed to call out when the hoist moved aft after each swing outwards of the boom, as the swing of the boom would itself indicate the time when such movement might be looked for, we are satisfied it was his duty to give warning generally to those whom he put to work there at midnight of dangers which their past experience might not have led them to expect and which at that hour were certainly not obvious. The findings of the district judge as to the merits of the case are therefore affirmed.

The libel was filed against the “lighter or fuel scow Buffalo, her rig, engines, boilers, boats, tackle, buckets, etc.” The owners claimed the benefit of the limitation of liability acts, and the district judge held that they were entitled thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F. 815, 83 C.C.A. 531, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-buffalo-ca2-1907.