Village of Harbor Springs v. United States

72 Ct. Cl. 32, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 394, 1930 WL 2576
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 20, 1930
DocketCongressional No. 17633
StatusPublished

This text of 72 Ct. Cl. 32 (Village of Harbor Springs v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Harbor Springs v. United States, 72 Ct. Cl. 32, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 394, 1930 WL 2576 (cc 1930).

Opinion

Williams, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This matter comes before the Court of Claims under a special act of Congress, approved July 3, 1926, entitled, “An act for the relief of the village of Harbor Springs, Michigan,” which reads as follows:

“Be it enacted by the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the claim of the village of Harbor Springs, Michigan, for reimbursement for the payment of judgment rendered by the United States District Court, Western District of Michigan, against said village of Harbor Springs, Michigan, on account of the death of Ernest H. Haynes, an employee of the Department of Agriculture, is hereby referred to the Court of Claims for determination of the facts as to the. liability of the United States as a tort-feasor on account of the death of the said Ernest H. Haynes.”

The United States not being suable in actions sounding in tort, the plaintiff can not maintain a suit against it, as a joint tort-feasor, for reimbursement for the payment of the judgment rendered by the United States District Court of Western District of Michigan against it on account of the death of Ernest H. Haynes, an employee of the United States Department of Agriculture,

The plaintiff, therefore, presented its claim for reimbursement to Congress, and the matter has by the act of reference been submitted to this court for “ determination [44]*44of the facts as to the liability of the United States as a tort-feasor on account of the death of the said Ernest H. Haynes.”

The construction the court places on the act of reference is that Congress in submitting the matter desired the court to make a judicial investigation into the facts and circumstances surrounding the death of Haynes, and to determine from such facts and circumstances whether or not the United States was at fault and guilty of such negligence in relation to the conditions and causes resulting in his death as would make it legally liable as a tort-feasor, if it were a suable person.

The plaintiff does not deny that it was at fault, and a tort-feasor, and as such legally liable on account of Haynes’ death. It claims, however, that the defendant was also at fault, and that its negligence contributed to the death of Haynes. It contends that the death of Haynes resulted from the concurrent maintenance of the plaintiff’s unprotected high-tension wire, and the ladder of the defendant’s signal tower in such relation one to the other that a person ascending the ladder would, of necessity, come in contact with such wire; that this wrongful act was within the concurrent common knowledge of both the plaintiff and the defendant, each knowing the wire was unprotected, highly charged, and dangerous, and that it was the common duty of both to abate such danger.

It is particularly urged, also, that the defendant was at fault because its display man, having charge of the tower and knowing the danger involved in ascending the ladder, because of its close proximity to the plaintiff’s unprotected highly charged wire, permitted Haynes to go alone to the tower and ascend the ladder for the purpose of making an inspection of it without informing him of such danger.

In Bishop on Noncontract Law, it is stated (section 518):

“ The rule of law is that a person contributing to a tort, whether his fellow contributors are men, natural or other forces, or things, is responsible for the whole, the same as though he had done all without help.”

Wharton’s Law of Negligence (section 395) says:

“ The comparative degrees in the culpability of the two will not affect the liability of either. If both were negligent [45]*45in a manner contributing to the result, they are liable, jointly and severally.”

The rule is that the creation of joint liability in tort does not depend wholly upon proof that the same act of wrongdoing was participated in by both tort-feasors, or that they were in concert, had a common intent, or were engaged in a joint undertaking.

In Brown v. Coxe Bros. & Co. et al., 75 Fed. 689, it was held:

The rule under which parties become jointly liable as tort-feasors extends beyond acts or omissions which are designedly cooperative, and beyond any relation between the wrongdoers. If their acts of negligence, however separate and distinct in themselves, are concurrent in producing the injury, their liability is joint as well as several. 1 Suth. Dam. 212. Each becomes liable because of his neglect of duty, and they are jointly liable for the single injury inflicted because the acts or omissions of both have contributed to it.”

Applying this rule to the facts presented in the case before us, it seems clear the negligence of the defendant was a direct contributing cause to the death of Haynes. Notwithstanding the glaring and inexcusable negligence of the plaintiff in permitting its unprotected charged wire to be and. remain in dangerous proximity to the ladder of the defendant’s display tower, the death of Haynes would not have occurred had the Government and its agents not also have been guilty of negligence. Two inescapable duties devolved on the defendant in relation to the operation of its signal tower. (1) To provide a safe place for its employees to work in the performance of their duties, and (2) to warn them of any dangerous condition that might imperil their safety in the performance of such duties. These obligations the defendant could neither evade nor assign to another, and were incumbent upon it without respect to the negligence of anyone else.

Under the facts shown it failed in the performance of each of these duties. Assuming that the plaintiff was primarily at fault in creating the situation in which its unprotected wires were in dangerous proximity to the ladder on [46]*46the defendant’s tower, that fact does not release the defendant from its duty to provide for its employees a safe place on which to do their work.

For six years the defendant’s agent, Pool, had known of the existence of this dangerous condition. He had frequently discussed it with the plaintiff’s superintendent, and because of such danger had for years refused to ascend the ladder himself, obtaining the services of another when going up the ladder was necessary.

The fact that the defendant did not create the dangerous condition does not excuse it of negligence in the matter. It knew the condition existed, and by failure to see that it was abated concurred in its continuance and is jointly liable with the plaintiff for the damages resulting therefrom.

In the case of Brown v. Coxe Bros. & Co. et al., supra, suit was brought against two corporations for damages sustained by an employee of one of them through the primary negligence of the other. The complaint alleged in substance that the plaintiff, an employee of the Ketchum Steamship Company, while employed as a watchman on one of its vessels which was engaged in unloading a cargo of coal at the docks of and with the appliances and operatives of the other corporation owning and operating the docks at which the coal was being unloaded, sustained serious injuries from the falling of a coal bucket belonging to and being operated by the dock company, by reason of defective machinery and of negligence of said company.

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Related

Brown v. Coxe Bros.
75 F. 689 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
72 Ct. Cl. 32, 1930 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 394, 1930 WL 2576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-harbor-springs-v-united-states-cc-1930.