The I. F. Chapman

241 F. 836, 154 C.C.A. 538, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1917
DocketNo. 1201
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 241 F. 836 (The I. F. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The I. F. Chapman, 241 F. 836, 154 C.C.A. 538, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825 (1st Cir. 1917).

Opinion

DODGE, Circuit Judge.

Kazarian, the appellee, filed his libel February 1, 1913, against this barge, to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been received on December 26, 1912, while at work on board her as one of a number of stevedores engaged in discharging a cargo of coal at Wilkesbarre Pier, in East Providence, R. I. He alleged that through the breaking or giving way of a spike or handhold, forming part of a stanchion ladder whereon he was descending into the barge’s hold, he fell about 15 feet, struck the keelson, and was “severely and permanently injured in his back, spine, and nervous system.” He alleged that the spike or handhold was defective and insufficient, and that its condition was due to the owner’s negligence.

The libel alleged $10,000 as the amount of his damages. The usual warrant and monition issued on the same day, but by a stipulation, also that day filed, actual arrest of the barge was waived on the libelant’s behalf, provided her owner filed “a claim and stipulation in the sum o f $6,000.”

On the owner’s behalf the claim was filed February 5, 1913, and on February 18, 1913, two stipulations, with surety, one for costs in the sum of $250, the other in the sum of $6,000, entitled “stipulation for value,” and reciting that the issue of the process had been waived in consideration of the filing, besides the above claim, of—

"stipulations for costs and value, the latter in the sum of $6,000, the agreed value thereof” (i. e., said barge).

The condition expressed in the latter stipulation was that the claim ant and surety should abide by all orders and decrees of the court and pay the amount awarded by final decree. Upon the stipulation appeared the following, signed by the libelant’s proctor, and dated February 18, 1913:

“Tho value of said barge is hereby fixed for the purpose of bonding in this suit at the sum of $6,000, and the foregoing stipulation is approved as to form, amount, and sufficiency of surety.”

An answer to the libel having been filed May 31, 1913, the District Court, after a hearing upon the pleadings and evidence from both sides, on June 25, 1914, determined the question of liability in the libel-ant’s favor, and ordered the case to stand for further hearing upon the amount of damages. Such further hearing was had before the [838]*838court April 26 and 27,1915. Before the hearing began the court heard, but took no action upon, a motion, filed by the libelant April 20, 1915, to amend by substituting $20,000 for $10,000 as the amount claimed in the libel.

On May 17, 1915, the libelant filed a petition asking that the claimant be ordered to furnish additional security to the amount of $14,000, and for the arrest of the barge unless such security was furnished. On November 22, 1915, the court ordered the barge arrested and held until the claimant should file a stipulation with sureties in $10,000, or until her value should be determined and her release ordered. A warrant and monition issued accordingly, and the barge was arrested by the marshal.- On December 3, 1915, the claimant filed another stipulation, also entitled “Stipulation for Value,” in the sum of $10,000, conditioned upon the payment by the claimant or surety of such amount as should be awarded by final decree, not exceeding $10,000.

The claimant had previously moved, November 20, 1915, to reopen the hearing on damages for further evidence. This motion was denied February 26, 1916, on which day the court also entered its final decree fixing the libelant’s damages at $8,000, ordering that he recover that sum, with costs, and further ordering the issue of execution against the stipulators for value on behalf of said barge, unless an appeal should be taken within 10 days, or said stipulators for value should cause the engagement of their stipulation to be performed. From said decree the claimant took this appeal.

[1] 1. The opinion of the District Court on the question of liability is dated June 25, 1914. The following, in substance, were the conclusions reached upon the evidence before the court, which was voluminous and conflicting: The libelant’s fall from the stanchion ladder was due to the giving way under his grasp 6f an iron spike or handhold therein. The ladder was part of the barge’s permanent equipment. There was an old and rusty break or flaw in the spike or handhold, which caused it so to give way. No repairs appeared to have been made upon the ladder when the barge was last overhauled six months before, nor any sufficient inspection or repairs since said overhaul. The above defect could not be regarded as having come into existence so recently that there had been no opportunity to discover it. While there was evidence that portable ladders, suitable for going down into the hold, had been provided by the barge for the stevedores’ use, and while no refusal was proved, as claimed by the libelant, to let said ladders be used in discharging this cargo; in view of a previous general practice by the stevedores to use the stanchion ladders while discharging this and other coal cargoes from this and other barges at the same wharf, found by the court to have been followed with the master’s knowledge, the barge’s owner was bound to use reasonable care that said ladders should be in proper condition for such use as the stevedores might make of them. The barge was therefore liable for the libelant’s injuries so far as caused by his fall.

The appellant contends that the evidence did not justify the above conclusions or any finding that the libelant’s fall and injury were due to negligence on his part as owner of the barge. We are unable, how[839]*839ever, upon examination of the evidence, to find sufficient reason for disapproving any of the above conclusions as clearly wrong, reached as they had been by the District Court, after hearing all the most important witnesses on both sides testify in person, and weighing their conflicting statements.

[2J 2. From the opinion on assessment of the libelant’s damages, dated February 17, 1916, it appears that the following, in substance, were the conclusions reached by the District Court: The claimant Imving had from June 25, 1914, until April 26, 1915, to prepare his evidence on the question of damages, and having closed his case May 25, 1915, without requesting further time or further hearing, could not be granted a reopening of the case for further evidence upon the grounds set forth in his motion of November 20, 1915, on the accompanying affidavits. These disclosed no excuse for the failure to make full investigation before trial, and set forth no additional evidence, except such as was merely cumulative, and not such in its nature as could substantially modify the assessment based upon the evidence heard. Upon that evidence, the libelant had suffered an injury to the spine which would permanently incapacitate him from such active physical labor as had been involved in his former employment, and would destroy his earning capacity in that employment, tie still possessed, however, enough physical capacity and intelligence to be capable of earning money by light work, as he had in fact done since his accident, as timekeeper or keeping a small shop.

The claimant contends that the award of $8,000 was excessive. Regarding the libelant’s actual condition and the extent to which recovery of his capacity to work might be expected, there was conflicting expert evidence before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F. 836, 154 C.C.A. 538, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-i-f-chapman-ca1-1917.