The Gw Glenn

4 F. Supp. 727
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedSeptember 19, 1933
Docket1380
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 727 (The Gw Glenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Gw Glenn, 4 F. Supp. 727 (D. Del. 1933).

Opinion

4 F.Supp. 727 (1933)

THE G. W. GLENN.
BROWN
v.
DONOHO et al.

No. 1380.

District Court, D. Delaware.

September 19, 1933.

*728 Ward & Gray, of Wilmington, Del., and George P. Whip, of Baltimore, Md., for libelant.

John Biggs, Jr., of Wilmington, Del., and Melvin Hopkins, of Dover, Del., for respondents.

NIELDS, District Judge.

This is a libel by Isaac R. Brown, Jr., ancillary administrator of the personal estate of Kirvan S. Phillips, deceased, against Benjamin Donoho and Hiram B. Donoho, as owners of the schooner or motorboat G. W. Glenn, to recover damages for the death of Phillips. It is filed under the provisions of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, § 33, commonly known as the Jones Act [USCA title 46 § 688], and is based upon the alleged negligence of defendants.

April 14, 1930, Phillips, a sixteen year old lad of Cambridge, Md., was employed as a deck hand on the oyster schooner G. W. Glenn by her master, John R. Hardy. The Glenn was over 50 feet long and was equipped with sails, an auxiliary gasoline engine, and another gasoline engine called a "winder" with which to draw the oyster dredges aboard. The crew consisted of four seamen and a cook, including Phillips. The Glenn had been dredging a week and at sunrise on April 23, 1930, sailed from Mahon's Ditch back to Silver Bed on Oyster Rock in the Delaware river 1¼ miles from the Delaware shore. At 9 o'clock that morning the dredges were drawn aboard, and the crew had "early dinner" while the cook at the wheel held the schooner above the oyster bed. The weather was fair, the wind blowing north northwest, the tide ebbing, and the sea rather rough. About 9:20 the captain resumed the wheel and was bringing the schooner back for dredging. She was proceeding under full sail in a west southwesterly direction and making six knots an hour. Three of the seamen were on deck trimming oysters. Phillips was shoveling oysters aft on the port side of the schooner, and as he passed the port side of the wooden casing about the winder there was a loud explosion from the exhaust of the winder, and Phillips went over the low rail with his shovel into the river. Captain Hardy at the wheel faced Phillips. With apparent candor he explained the accident on the witness stand in these words: "Well, it could have been an urge of the sea, or made a misstep, or low railing, and it could have tripped him that way."

The only life-saving equipment provided by the owner was a lifeboat. As is customary, the lifeboat of the Glenn was suspended from davits overhanging her stern. At the time of the accident it was lashed to a davit so that the stern of the boat could not be lowered into the water. The lifeboat was raised or lowered by operating a rope or davit fall carried through the pulleys of 4 blocks — 2 blocks at the bow and 2 at the stern. At the stern the upper block is hooked to the davit and the lower block is hooked to an eyebolt in the bottom of the lifeboat. This eyebolt in the bottom was missing and a loop of rope had been substituted. The rope loop was insufficient and unsafe. To secure the stern of the lifeboat after it was raised to the davit, the rope or davit fall was carried through a hole bored in the lifeboat and then carried around the davit and tied in a hard or "granny" knot.

With this equipment and a man overboard, Captain Hardy gave the usual alarm. He shouted to lower the jib. He threw a rope to the boy. He joined the three seamen and cook in a futile effort to lower the lifeboat. A seaman at the stern davit obtained a knife from the cook and cut the davit fall. The stern of the lifeboat then dropped within a foot of the water, but a knot in the rope jammed the pulley. With the bow of the lifeboat in the water and the stern suspended above the water, the boat capsized and a seaman in the boat with difficulty clambered aboard. However, the lifeboat had only half of one oar, so that if she had floated there was no equipment provided for navigating her. The schooner covered 100 yards before the captain headed her about. There was additional delay in lowering the sail and starting the auxiliary engine. Ten minutes elapsed before the schooner was back where the lad went overboard. When asked why it took ten minutes to get back, a seaman testified: "This fooling with the lifeboat and the sails too, and then we had to go down and start the engine." Meanwhile the "hollering" of Phillips was heard on board the schooner. He was a poor swimmer and was handicapped with very heavy clothing. After keeping afloat for three minutes or longer he sank, and his body was recovered some weeks later. When asked *729 whether there was not some one aboard that had the heart to get out after the boy, another seaman testified, "They had nothing to get after him with."

The libel charges that the death of Phillips resulted from an injury due to "negligence on the part of the respondents, their agents, servants and/or employees" in providing a lifeboat that was defective, improperly carried, and not supplied with adequate oars; in not providing life preservers; and in furnishing a gasoline engine for winding the oyster dredge so defective that "the head blew off and went through the wooden covering" so that one or more pieces of said covering striking the deceased caused him to go overboard. The libel also charges that the Glenn was in an unseaworthy condition. By their amended answer respondents (1) deny the charge of negligence, and (2) for further answer aver that at the time of the injury to Phillips respondents were not and never had been the beneficial owners of the Glenn, but were only mortgagees out of possession; that John R. Hardy was both master and beneficial owner hiring the crew and having sole use and control of the schooner. Both defenses will receive consideration.

Section 33 of the Jones Act (46 USCA § 688), under which the libel was brought, provides that in case of the death of a seaman, as the result of an injury in the course of his employment, his personal representatives may maintain an action for damages, and in such action, all statutes of the United States conferring or regulating the right of action for death in case of railway employees shall be applicable. The Federal Employers' Liability Act [45 USCA § 51] is such a statute and provides that every common carrier by railroad shall be liable in damages in case of death of the employee resulting in whole or in part from negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employees of the carrier. The Federal Employers' Liability Act makes negligence the basis of a railroad's liability. Section 33 of the Jones Act extends to the personal representatives of a seaman, incurring personal injuries in the course of his employment which result in his death, the rights accorded by federal law to railway employees. Section 33 of the Jones Act is the death statute affording relief to the beneficiaries of a seaman whose death results from an injury occasioned by negligence and suffered within a league of the shore.

Quite recently the Supreme Court has ruled that the Jones Act should be liberally construed. "The rule that statutes in derogation of the common law are to be strictly construed does not require such an adherence to the letter as would defeat an obvious legislative purpose or lessen the scope plainly intended to be given to the measure. * * * The act is not to be narrowed by refined reasoning or for the sake of giving `negligence' a technically restricted meaning. It is to be construed liberally to fulfill the purposes for which it was enacted, and to that end the word may be read to include all the meanings given to it by courts, and within the word as ordinarily used." Jamison v.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-gw-glenn-ded-1933.