The Roanoke

215 F. 780, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1761
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 29, 1914
DocketNo. 5929
StatusPublished

This text of 215 F. 780 (The Roanoke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Roanoke, 215 F. 780, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1761 (D. Or. 1914).

Opinion

WOLVERTON, District Judge.

This is a libel to recover damages against the steamship Roanoke, on account of personal injury received by the libelant while aboard ship, and especially for alleged negligence of her master and officers in failing to secure surgical and medical attention sooner than was done.

The Roanoke is an iron ship of about 2,500 tons register, 275 feet in length, and drawing about 18 feet of water. On the morning of the 28th of December, 1911, at 7:45 o’clock, while she was passing over the bar outward at the mouth of the Columbia river, she encountered a heavy sea, and a wave-broke over her, and libelant, being on deck about the cabin, where he had been engaged in closing the doors and shutters, was struck and carried to the rear of the ship, and was in-, jured by coming in contact with the legs of an iron seat. Both bones in his right leg were broken above the ankle, and he received a severe injury below the knee; the flesh being cut and torn and the bone and arteries exposed. The ship was bound for San Francisco and ports south of there. The captain did not return to Astoria because the sea was rough and squally, and he believed it would be unsafe to pass back over the bar at the time, and that in all probability he would not be able to get in before the next morning. In this emergency he con-[781]*781eluded it would be best to pursue his course to San Francisco, but with a view of stopping at Eureka to procure medical assistance for libelant if the sea and bar would permit. He is corroborated in his judgment touching the unsafe condition of the Columbia bar for passage inbound by Capt. Maland, of'the steamship Tamalpais, who sighted the Roanoke as she was passing out. Maland, although in charge of a much lighter ship, was unable to get in over the bar until 1:55 o’clock in the afternoon. The captain was further of the view that his vessel could have gone in at almost any stage of the tide if the condition of the sea was favorable, but that it was problematical whether he would have been able to get back before the following morning, if even then.

As it relates to the nature of the injury received by Dahl he testifies that both bones of the leg were broken right above the ankle; that there was a big wound underneath the knee, about two inches (two or three inches, around there); that it came on both sides and in front, only the heavy flesh was not cut. Using the language of the witness, he says:

“And it was from the knee about even around, three parts o£ it was ent and one part left. Two-thirds cut.”

Further on he testifies that the bone was exposed a little in front. Being asked how deep the cut was, he answered:

“It was quite a deep cut. * * * It must have been right in the bone, on the front. * * * The cut was mostly on the front and sides.”

Dahl was taken into the social hall of the ship, and the stewardess, who was a practical nurse, assisted by the second mate, dressed the wound, and as best she could put the limb in splints and bound it so as to keep the foot in place until he could be taken to the hospital. As a precaution, in order to he ready in case of extreme hemorrhage, she put a bandage about the limb above the knee, but did not draw it tight, being able to put her hand, or a part of her hand, under the bandage, which indicated that it was not tight enough to stop circulation, although it might have impeded it slightly. There was considerable hemorrhage from the wound, but the endeavor to stop this was by the use of antiseptic gauze and cotton. As to the bandage, Dahl testifies that it was a tight one, very tight above the knee; that it hurt him for a few hours afterwards, but knocked off hurting in the afternoon; that he does not know whether the bandage was tight enough to stop the blood flowing, hut supposes that was what they put it on for, because they were afraid he would bleed to death. In the afternoon his ribs were hurting him, and a bandage was put around his person, which, together with the bandages on the limb, remained on until Friday about midnight. Feeling much pain from the bandages, Dahl loosened both of them; that is, the bandage about his person and the one upon his leg. After doing this he feared he was bleeding, and called the stewardess and second mate to his assistance, but it turned out that there was no unusual hemorrhage.

When the vessel arrived in San Francisco, which was on the morning of December 30th, about 6:30 or 7 o’clock, he was taken first to the Harbor Emergency Hospital, and after that to the Marine Hospital. [782]*782An X-ray was taken of the fracture. His limb was placed in a box, and a weight put on it to resist the contraction of the muscles, and the wound was treated by the surgeons at the hospital. During the treatment pieces of flesh were cut- from the wound. Sometimes Dahl would feel the knife and at other times not, and on Thursday, the 4th of January, it became necessary to amputate the limb, which was done.

Based upon the testimony alone of Dahl as to the nature of his injury and the manner of its treatment by the stewardess and the surgeons at San Francisco while in the hospital, hypothetical questions were propounded to two physicians, emphasis being placed upon the manner in which the limb was bandaged, the statement in one case being that “He was taken into a room and a bandage was placed around his leg above the knee and tightened sufficiently tight to restrict the-bleeding and to stop the flow of blood,” and in the other “tight enough to prevent bleeding,” and it was the opinion of the physicians that, if the bandage was put on tight enough to constrict any severe hemorrhage that might have occurred, the treatment might have caused gangrene, and hence would result in amputation. One of the surgeons testified that:

“So far as your (counsel’s) description goes, there is nothing about the injury that you mention which would make it unlikely that the limb would survive or recover.”

But on cross-examination, being asked:

“Can you; or can any practitioner, say from the bare statement given you by counsel here, can you undertake to give a definite opinion as to whether or -not that leg could have been saved by earlier treatment?”

He answered:

“Oh, no. One could not tell what the condition was by the description I have. It is not sufficiently definite.”

The other surgeon was asked a similar question, and answered:

“I could not say without knowing more of the extent of the injury and the case itself.”

The testimony of the stewardess and the second mate would seem to indicate that the wound was more severe than as represented by Dahl, and that the bandage above the knee was not put on as tight as he seemed to think. The stewardess testifies:

“To me it seemed a terrible wound. It was badly lacerated. The bones seemed to be exposed quite a bit, and he was bleeding profusely. I then took this sterilized gauze, after washing it out with the cotton, and kind of pressed it into the wound to keep it as clean as possible until we could remove him to Some place where he was a little more comfortable. * * * It seemed to me at the time that there must have been a piece of flesh removed about the size of my hand.”

She further says the arteries were exposed, and the tissues seemed to be bruised terribly, and there was a fracture of both bones of the leg above'the ankle.

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Bluebook (online)
215 F. 780, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-roanoke-ord-1914.