The Iroquois

194 U.S. 240, 24 S. Ct. 640, 48 L. Ed. 955, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 850
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 2, 1904
Docket200
StatusPublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 194 U.S. 240 (The Iroquois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Iroquois, 194 U.S. 240, 24 S. Ct. 640, 48 L. Ed. 955, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 850 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The duty to provide proper medical treatment and attendance for seamen falling ill or suffering injury in the service of' the ship has: been imposed upon the shipowners by all maritime *242 nations. It appears in the earliest codes of Continental Europe and was expressly recognized by this court in the recent case of The Osceola, 189 U. S. 158. Upon large passenger steamers a physician or surgeon is always- employed, whose duty it is to minister to the passengers and crew in cases .of sickness or accident. Of course, this would be impracticable "upon an ordinary freighting vessel, where the máster is presumed to have some knowledge' of the treatment of diseases, and in ordinary cases stands in the place of a physician or surgeon, The Wensleydale, 41 Fed. Rep. 602; but for the further protection of seamen, vessels of the class of the Iróipiois are compelled by law to be provided with a chest of medicines and with such anti-scorbutics, clothing and slop-chests as the climate, particular trade and the length of -the voyage may require. Compiled Stat. secs. 4569, 4572, 4573.

What is the measure of the master’s obligation in cases where the seaman is'severely injured while the ship is .at sea has been made the subject of discussion in several cases; but each depends so largely upon its own particular facts that the rule laid down in one may afford little or no aid in determining another, depending upon a different state of facts. The early cases of Harden v. Gordon, 2 Mason, 541, and Reed v. Canfield, 1 Sumner, 195, contain an exhaustive discussion of the general subject by Mr, Justice Story. But, as in both cases the disability occurred at or near a port, they are of no special value in this case.

We have carefully examined the cases of Brown v. Overton, 1 Sprague, 462; Peterson v. The Chandos, 4 Fed. Rep. 645; The Scotland, 42 Fed. Rep. 925; Whitney v. Olsen, 108 Fed. Rep. 292; The Troop, 118 Fed. Rep. 769, and Danvir v. Morse, 139 Massachusetts, 323, and are of opinion that none of them fits the exigencies of the present case. We cannot say that in every instance where a serious accident occurs the master is bound to disregard every other consideration and put into the nearest port, though if the accident happen within a reasonable distance of such port, his duty to do so would be manifest. *243 Each case must depend upon its own circumstances, having reference to the seriousness of the injury, the care that can be given the sailor'on shipboard, the proximity of an intermediate port, the consequences of delay to the interests of the shipowner, the direction of the wind and the probability of its continuing in the same direction, and the fact whether a surgeon is likely to be found with competent skill to take charge of the case. With reference to putting into port, all that can be demanded of the master is the exercise of reasonable judgment and the ordinary acquaintance of a seaman with the geography and resources of the country. ‘He is not absolutely bound to put into such port if the cargó be such as would be seriously injured by the delay. Even the claims of humanity must be weighed in a balance with the loss that would probably occur to the owners of the ship and cargó. A seafaring life is a dangerous one, accidents of this kind are peculiarly liable to~ occur, and the general principle of law that a person entering a dangerous employment is regarded as assuming the ordinary 'risks of such employment is peculiarly applicable to the case of seamen.

To judge of the propriety of the master’s conduct in a particular case we are bound so far as possible to put ourselves in his place, and inquire whether, in view" of all the circumstances, he was bound to put into'an intermediate port. The charge in .the libel is that he should either have put back to Port Stanley in the East Falkland Islands,' or deviated from his course and made the port of Valparaiso, “or anyoné of several other ports in the soúthern part of South America.” The.very indefiniteness of this'charge shows that neither libellant nor counsel'had in mind any particular port, and it was not until the testimony of a former officer of the Chilian navy was taken at San Francisco, that they were able to fix upon the port of San Carlos or the Evangelist Islands as proper places at which to make call._ In view of this inability to select a proper port until the officer whose business it had been to cruise, up and down the Chilian coast had informed them, it may certainly be contended *244 with great show of. reason that the master was not bound to know of the existence of these ports, except as he was informed by the chart, or of the possibility of obtaining surgical treatment at them. While masters plying upon vessels between New York and Pacific ports would be presumed to know of such familiar harbors as those of Port Stanley and Valparaiso, it by no means follows that they are chargeable with knowledge of every port, upon the southwest coast of South America, or of their surgical facilities. The accident occurred upon one .of the loneliest and most tempestuous seas in the world. For over one thousand miles from Cape Horn to Valparaiso there seem, to have been but one or two places at which it would be feasible to make a call. The evidence shows that the ship at the time was about 480 miles from Port Stanley, and with' the winds then prevailing it-would have been possible to reach that port in three or four days, but that to return to' the place of the accident in view of the head winds might have taken as many ■ weeks. During this time the owners of the' ship, would sustain a heavy loss in the wages and provisions of the crew, and the. demurrage of the ship, and while the cargo is not shown to have been perishable, there would be a risk of the loss of a market by the consequent delay in reaching San Francisco. The master is not chargeable with fault in failing to put back to Port Stanley. '■ . , •

It was also suggested that the ship could have made the Evangelist Islands, at the western end of the Straits of Magellan, by sailing one or two days out of her course; but it was shown that the only building there was a light-house, from which a small steamer was accustomed to put out to passing vessels in case a signal for relief was hoisted, and that nothing could be done there, except possibly to place the seaman upon a steamer bound north to Valparaiso or'east to Sandy Point, near the middle of the straits. ' The .probability of obtaining aid by this course, and the certainty of the limb being injured by the delay, would have made it highly inadvisable to adopt .it. As there is no harbor in the islands, the various transfers *245 from the ship to a boat and from the boat Jo shore, and the return to another ship in the rough water that might be expected at that point, would have been extremely dangerous to a person in libellant’s crippled, condition.

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Bluebook (online)
194 U.S. 240, 24 S. Ct. 640, 48 L. Ed. 955, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-iroquois-scotus-1904.