Transportation Line v. Hope

95 U.S. 297, 24 L. Ed. 477, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2171
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1877
Docket118
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 95 U.S. 297 (Transportation Line v. Hope) 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
Transportation Line v. Hope, 95 U.S. 297, 24 L. Ed. 477, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2171 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hunt

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hope, the plaintiff in the Circuit Court, sought to recover damages for the loss of his bargé, which the defendants undertook to tow from Jersey City to New Haven, through Long Island Sound.

The barge was lost before reaching her destination; and *298 the jury to which the case was submitted found a verdict, for the plaintiff for $2,125.30 damages.' This was based upon the theory of the negligence of the defendants in the .performance of their duty.

With the general question of negligence we have nothing to do. The finding of the jury is conclusive upon that subject. It is only the specific allegations of error in the rulings or charges of the judge at the trial that Ave are called upon to consider.

These allegations are as folloAvs: It is said that the court erred, first, in overruling the objection of defendant’s counsel to the folloAving question, asked of Patrick McCarty, a witness, by the counsel for the plaintiff: “ With your experience, would it be safe or prudent for a tug-boat on Chesapeake Bay, or any' other wide water, to tug three boats abreast, with a high Avind?”

The Avitne.ss had testified that for many years he had been the captain of a tug-boat, and was familiar Avith the making up of towsthat he Avas a pilot, and had towed vessels on Long Island Sound, although he was not familiar with the Sound, but that he was familiar with the Avaters of the Chesapeake Bay.

The witness was an expert, and was called and testified as' such. His knowledge and experience fairly entitled him to that position. It is permitted-to ask questions of* a witness of this class which cannot be put to ordinary witnesses. It is not an objection, as is assumed, that he was asked a question involving the point to be decided by the jury. As an expert, he could properly aid the jury by such evidence, although it would not be competent to be given by an ordinary witness. It is upon subjects on which the jury are not as well able to judge for themselves as is the witness that an expert as such is expected to testify. Evidence of this character is often given upon subjects requiring medical knowledge and science, but it is by no means limited to that class of cases. It is competent upon the question of. the value of land, Clark v. Baird, 9 N. Y. 183; Bearss v. Copely, 10 id. 93; or as to the value of a particular breed of horses, Harris v. Panama Railroad Co., 36 N. Y. Superior Ct. 373; or upon the value of the professional services of a lawyer, Jackson v. New York Central *299 Railroad Co., 2 Thomp. & C. (N. Y.) 653; or on the question of negligence in moving a vessel, Moore v. Westervelt, 9 Bosw. (N. Y.) 558; or on the necessity of a jettison, Price v. Hartshorn, 44 N. Y. 94. In Walsh v. Washington Marine Insurance Co., 32 id. 427, it was decided that the testimony of experienced navigators on questions involving nautical skill was admissible. The witness in that case was asked to what cause the loss of the vessel was attributable, which was the point to be decided by the jury. The court sustained the admission of the evidence,' using this language: “'We entertain no doubt that those who are accustomed to the responsibility of command, and whose lives are spent on the ocean, are qualified as experts to prove • the practical • effect of cross-seas and heavy swells, shifting winds and' sudden squalls..”' The books give a great variety of cases in which evidence of this character is admissible, and we have no doubt of' the competency of the evidence to which this objection is made.

Second, The defendants requested the court to charge the jury “ that the plaintiff’s barge, the ‘ Mary E. Loughney,’ was within the possession and the exclusive care- and control of her owner ; and the defendants, the Eastern Transportation Line, were not bailees of the boat, nor was the barge placed within their exclusive custody and control, and they were only liable for failure to use ordinary care and diligence.”

To which the court answered: “ By the contract between the- parties, the defendants undertook to-'tow the plaintiff’s barge from Jersey City to New Haven. As a necessary incident of this engagement, the -defendants were entitled and were bound tó assume supreme control and direction of the .plaintiff’s boat, and of the persons in charge of her, so far as wás necessary to enable them to fulfil their engagement, and they were bound to exercise such degree of diligence and care as a prudent and skilful performance, of the service for which they stipulated would require,”

The answer of the court properly defined the position of the parties. While it was very well to ask a charge that the' transporter of the-boat was' not a bailee,, and perhaps that the boat was not- within his exclusive control, and that, only ordinary care and diligence were required on his part, it was *300 quite incorrect to ask a charge that the boat was within the possession and the exclusive care and control of her owner.

The transportation company did not occupy the position of a common carrier, and did not have that exclusive control of the barge which that relation would imply. It did not employ or pay the master and the men in charge of her, nor did it exercise that internal control of her cargo, its storage, its protection, and the like, which belonged to a bailee, and it was not bound to the extraordinary duties, and liabilities of a common carrier, Alexander v. Greene, 3 Hill (N. Y.), 9.

It is, however, impossible to admit the proposition that the barge remained in the exclusive possession, care, and control of her owner; that- is, that the transporter had not and could not take any, the slightest, care of her, and was not permitted to exercise the slightest control over her, and had no possession of her of any sort or character.

She could not be towed except by being taken in charge by the tug ; that is, under-its'care and control and management. When the master of a tug undertakes to transport a barge, he must apply the means for that purpose. He must furnish motive power not only, but'-he must direct her location, whether on the port or the starboard side, whether she shall be the inside boat or the outside one, when and -how sue shall be lashed to other boats, with what fastenings she shall be secured as she is dragged through- the water, whether she shall go fast or slow, when, if at all, she shall .drop astern, when- she shall go to harbor, how long remain there, and what shall be her course of navigation. These tows consist at times of thirty or forty boats; and they must all be under one head, and subject to .one judgment, which is that of the transporter. Whether this judgment was carefully and skilfully exercised in this case formed the question which was' passed upon by the jury. ' It is- extremely inaccurate to say that .one who does, and who must do, all these things is not while doing them in the exercise of the slightest possession or care or control over such vessel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 U.S. 297, 24 L. Ed. 477, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transportation-line-v-hope-scotus-1877.