The No. 34.

25 F.2d 602, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025, 1928 A.M.C. 780
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1928
Docket238
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 602 (The No. 34.) 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 No. 34., 25 F.2d 602, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025, 1928 A.M.C. 780 (2d Cir. 1928).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). This case raises three questions: (1) Was the judgment of the state court holding Boyer free from liability to Miller binding on Hogan so that he cannot-recover indemnity? (2) If not, is Hogan entitled to indemnity because he has shown that Boyer was under a primary duty to furnish Miller with a safe means of access to work? (3) If Boyer was primarily liable to Miller, is Boyer entitled to limit his liability?

The question as to the effect of the judgment of the state court would seem really to be one of New York practice. Section 264 of the New York Civil Practice Act provides that: “Where the judgment may determine the ultimate rights of two or more defendants as between themselves, a defendant who requires such a determination must demand it in his answer, and at least twenty days before the trial must serve a copy of his answer upon the attorney for eaeh of the deféndants to be affected by the determination. * * * ”

No such demand was made, and ,no cross-answer was served by Hogan on Boyer. That the state court judgment in favor of Hogan did not bind Boyer is in accord with the decisions of the New York courts. Erie R. Co. v. Buffalo & Lackawanna Traction Co., 220 App. Div. 520, 221 N. Y. S. 680, affirmed by the New York Court of Appeals at 246 N. Y. 625, 159 N. E. 677; Scott v. Curtis, 195 N.Y. 424, 88 N. E. 794, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1147, 133 Am. St. Rep. 811. It is impossible to-see how Hogan could have been allowed to-show in the state court that Boyer was .guilty of neglect or that Miller’s injuries were duo-to the failure to perform a duty which was primarily that of Boyer. If Boyer stood in the relation of one primarily liable (and this-relation we hold Hogan is entitled to show here) Hogan is entitled to indemnity notwithstanding the judgment in favor of Boyer in Miller’s action in the state court.

This was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit in the case of City of Owensboro, Ky., v. Westinghouse Church Kerr & Co., 165 F. 385, where a situation .existed Very similar to that here. There is a recent decision to the contrary by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit in Town of Flagstaff v. Walsh, 9 F.(2d) 590, and there are parallel oases in some of the state courts. But we feel precluded from holding that Hogan is bound by the judgment exonerating Boyer, both by the decision of Erie R. Co. v. Buffalo & Lackawanna Traction Co., supra, interpreting the New York law as to the effect of such a judgment, and iby what seems to us the logic of the situation.

If Boyer, as between himself and Hogan, was obliged to'provide safe access to -the lighter for Hogan’s men, it cannot be doubted that Boyer was primarily liable and that Hogan was entitled to full indemnity for the amount he had to pay by reason of Boyer’s neglect. George A. Fuller Co. v. Otis Elevator Co., 245 U. S. 489, 38 S. Ct. 180, 62 L. Ed. 422; Washington Gas Co. v. District of Columbia, 161 U. S. 316, 16 S. Ct. 564, 40 L. Ed. 712; Oceanic Steam Navigation Co. v. Compania Transatlantica Espanola, 134 N. Y. 461, 31 N. E. 987, 30 Am. St. Rep. 685; Grand Trunk Ry. Co. v. Latham, 63 Me. 177 ; Smith v. Foran, 43 Conn. 244, 21 Am. Rep. 647. The question then is, What was the contract between Boyer and Hogan?

It is the duty of the owner of a vessel who has engaged a stevedore to load her to furnish the men with a safe place to work and a safe passage thereto. The Rheola (C. C.) 19 F. 926; The Saranac (D. C.) 132 F. 936; Pioneer S. S. Co. v. McCann (C. C. A.) 170 F. 873. Consequently, if it was the duty of the owner of the lighter to take the sugar *605 from the ship’s taekles, it was his duty to provide a proper mode of access to his lighter for the stevedores who were to receive the cargo from the slings and stow it on the lighter. And where a ship, as here, was to discharge into a lighter, the shipowner, in the absence of some special contract to the contrary, would fulfill his ordinary duty when he put the goods over the rail of the ship in such a position that the consignee could take delivery of them. As the Master of The Rolls said in Petersen v. Freebody & Co., [1895] 2 Q. B. 294:

“The moment the goods are put within the reach of the consignee he must take his part in the operation. At one moment of time the' shipowner and the consignee are both acting —the one in giving and the other in taking delivery; at another moment the joint act is finished. Where goods are slung, and lowered gradually over the side of the ship into a lighter, they cannot all be deposited on the same spot in the same lighter. It is obvious, therefore, that those on board must help in the operation of taking delivery by guiding the thing as it is coming down into the lighter.”

A. L. Smith, L. J., also thus stated the general rule in the same case:

“It is contended here, that because the cargo was a cargo of spars the consignees had not to receive the spars until the ship’s crew had put them into the bottom of the lighter. If that be so, the case forms an exception to the general rule. But what is there to show that there is any duty on the shipowner to do that which he is not bound to do with respect to any other cargo, namely, to put his crew off the ship and on to the lighter.”

See, also, Brenda S. S. Co. v. Green, [1900] 1 Q. B. 518; Palgrave Brown & Son, Limited, v. S. S. Turid, [1922] 1 A. C. 397; Turnbull V. Citizens’ Bank of Louisiana (C. C.) 16 F. at page 147; The Sursum Corda (D. C.) 20 F.(2d) 213.

It is apparent from the foregoing that there is a general rule that the duty of the ship ends when she has put the goods over the rail in such a position that the consignee can take delivery of them. In the present ease Hogan was employed as a stevedore both by the owner of the ship and by the owner of the lighter, and was to be paid by each for his respective services. In these circumstances, Was there any adequate proof of a change in the ordinary rule as to the relative duties of the owner of the ship and the owner of the lighter for each of which Hogan was performing services? The testimony in the limitation proceeding as to the contract was by Russell L. Boyer, a highly interested witness. He said (folios 117 et seq.):

“It has been the practice, or was the universal custom, that a stevedore who was discharging the ship represents the ship in discharging to the lighter, in this mueh, that it is the duty of the ship when discharging over-side onto the lighter to deliver the draft onto the deck of the lighter, when the stevedore had to take it out of the hold of the ship in slings and drop it over onto the lighter, and then unhook his sling; and that is his duty to the ship. Then the next draft comes up, and it has been the custom for years back to hiro the stevedore at such an agreed rate to pile it up on the lighter after it 1 .s been delivered on the boat, and for that we pay a certain sum. * * * ”

But at the trial of the action in the state court there was also testimony of Boyer which was thereafter introduced in the Limitation Proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F.2d 602, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3025, 1928 A.M.C. 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-no-34-ca2-1928.