The New Zealand

49 F.2d 781, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341, 1931 A.M.C. 925
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 17, 1931
DocketNo. A-11381
StatusPublished

This text of 49 F.2d 781 (The New Zealand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The New Zealand, 49 F.2d 781, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341, 1931 A.M.C. 925 (E.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

In this limitation proceeding, it becomes necessary to determine whether the sole claimant, Charles A. Berg, being in the employ of the petitioner, was injured by reason of his own lack of care, or because the lighter upon which he was working was unseaworthy for 'the task in which it was engaged, to the knowledge of the petitioner; and, if the foregoing be resolved in favor of the claimant, the nature and extent of his injuries, and the consequent award to be made to him.

The facts are found to be as follows:

On January 8, 1929, Berg was in charge of the petitioner’s lighter New Zealand, lying alongside, bow inshore, at Pier 38, Brooklyn; the starboard side of the lighter being alongside the pier.

[782]*782Fifteen hundred bales of jute, weighing four .hundred pounds each, were being laden from the pier, and all but about one hundred and fifty were in place, when the accident happened.

The loading platform of the lighter is about seventy-three feet in length, and the beam of the vessel'is about thirty-three feet. The mast is stepped aft of the loading platform, being separated therefrom by about forty inches. Aft of the mast is the deck housing, containing the hoisting gears and power, and a cabin. There is a window on the starboard side in front of the housing, through which the man at the engine saw the bales of jute from the time they were hand-trucked from the interior of the pier to the string-piece, from which they were hoisted and brought aboard the lighter.

Three men were on the pier, doing the trucking, and each in turn placed the hooks attached to the fall into the bale that he had delivered to the string-piece of the pier. Berg was doing the stowing unassisted, and Housman was running the engine.

The loading platform was roughly divided into five blocks, fore and aft, and each was finished before the next was begun, and the bales were laid .from port to starboard. Each block, when finished, contained seven tiers of bales, laid six abreast in seven rows, making about 300 bales to a block.

The first four bloeks had been completed, as had three tiers of the fifth; two or three bales in the fourth tier had been placed, but the port • comer aft had not been filled. Salin, one of the longshoremen, fixed the hooks, and watched the bale swing toward Berg, who was standing on the port side, near the mast. The pick-up was “hasty,” and, as the tide was low, the deck of the lighter was about ten feet below the pier.' The bale started about, five feet ahead of the mast, and, as it neared Berg, the swing was in an arc, toward the aft port corner of the stow; Berg tried to ward off the bale, to prevent its striking him, but was unable to withstand the momentum whieh the bale had gained, and was pushed back and forced to step down to the deck, a matter of about four or five feet. The impact of his left heel was so severe as to cause a compressed fracture of the eleventh dorsal vertebra, causing a partial permanent disability.

The swing of the bale was not normally athwartship, because of the following condition of the gear: The mast is held in place, and enabled to take the ultimate strain of the loading, by six stays, two on each side, and two astern. The stays are engaged in chain-plates, bolted into the hull.

Customarily the port and starboard stays are made fast in the forward chain-plates, which are twenty feet forward of the stern, and five feet forward of the mast. The aft chain-plates are eleven and one-half feet forward of the stern, and hence three and one-half feet aft of the mast.

The boom whieh rests» in the gooseneck on the mast, and from the tip of which the fall runs, is controlled in its fore and aft play, as well as laterally, by guys, also called vangs, whieh likewise engage the chain-plates.

In August, 1928, the forward starboard chain-plate was completely broken, and rendered incapable of receiving the starboard stays, or the vangs; therefore, they had to be attached to the aft chain-plate, three and one-half feet astern of the mast.

This condition was formally made known to the operating head, and directing vice president of the petitioner, as he testified. He stated that he did not consider the matter sufficiently important to cause repairs to be made. The lighter spent one and a half days in the repair yard in October of that year, over two months before the accident, but no repair to the forward starboard ehain-plate was authorized. Such was made, however, in February, 1929, about one month after the injury to Berg.

The placing of bales in such a stowage as was here conducted involves, as to the first block, the extension of the boom, so that the fall will plumb conveniently to enable the bales to be placed as described. The completion of each block required the raising of the boom for accommodation to space nearer the mast; in the fifth block the boom was close to the mast. It was “topped” by Berg just prior to taking the draft whieh caused the injury, as he was working then in an area which so required. The vang controlling the fore and aft movement of the boom (whieh was necessarily swinging in a restricted zone), being made fast to the aft chain-plate, was unequal to the task of controlling the tendency of the boom to swing back, as well as across the lighter, and it was this tendency which Berg was unable to repel by his hands. Thus he was exposed to a hazard whieh would not have been present if the vang could have been made fast in the forward chain-plate.

When the vice president of the petitioner assumed the responsibility of deciding that the faulty condition whieh was called to his [783]*783attention by Berg, both in writing and verbally, was not sufficiently important to require attention, he did that which iii fairness should be visited upon the company for which he was acting, unless some rule of law operates to the contrary.

The contentions offered.by the petitioner will now be examined, as a basis for the conclusions of law upon which the decision herein will rest.

First, it is urged that the doctrine of assumption of risk deprives the claimant of all right to recover, and the following cases are cited:

Stewart v. Brune (C. C. A.) 179 F. 350. Plaintiff operated a derrick, and applied excessive power to accomplish a purpose entrusted to him. The power was in his control alone. The court decided that plaintiff must have appreciated the danger of applying power beyond the capacity of the derrick and therefore assumed the risk.

Southern Ry. v. Hermans (C. C. A.) 44 F.(2d) 366. Reversal and new trial ordered, in a death case, the jury having found a verdict for plaintiff. The decedent, a deck hand on a tug, was caught between it and a barge, in changing a line. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals says that the jury should have been instructed that, even though the captain of the tug were negligent, the plaintiff could not recover if the decedent clearly understood the risks attendant upon such negligence and voluntarily assumed them.

The Scandinavia (D. C.) 156 F. 403. Decedent, fireman on a tug, knew that a landing ladder with a broken end was unsafe with that end down, but not if it was up. He placed the broken end down, when boarding the tug from a wharf. Held that decedent assumed the risk of what he did.

New York, etc., R. Co. v. McDougall (C. C. A.) 15 F.(2d) 283. Plaintiff was a brakeman on a freight train, operating in Cleveland, where there are numerous overhead bridges.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. Koske
279 U.S. 7 (Supreme Court, 1929)
New York, C. & St. L. R. Co. v. McDougall
15 F.2d 283 (Sixth Circuit, 1926)
Norfolk & W. Ry. Co. v. Collingsworth
32 F.2d 561 (Sixth Circuit, 1929)
Southern Ry. Co. v. Hermans
44 F.2d 366 (Fourth Circuit, 1930)
The Scandinavia
156 F. 403 (D. Maine, 1907)
Stewart v. Brune
179 F. 350 (Eighth Circuit, 1910)
McAdoo v. Anzellotti
271 F. 268 (Second Circuit, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 781, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341, 1931 A.M.C. 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-new-zealand-nyed-1931.