126 N.Y.S. 538 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
At the close of the evidence on both sides the learned trial justice directed a dismissal of the amended complaint and entertained a motion on the part of the plaintiff for a new trial upon the minutes. The appeal is from the order denying the motion, and incidentally denying a motion made at the same time for a reversal of the direction in defendants’ favor. Judgment Was subsequently entered in favor of the defendants, but no appeal has been taken therefrom. The case, however, may be heard upon the appeal as taken. (Voisin v. C. M. Ins. Co., 123 N. Y. 120.)
The action is for negligence occasioning an accident which occurred on board a steamship, the Denaby, at a dock on the East river in the borough of Brooklyn, on the afternoon of April 19, 1907 The plaintiff at the time was one of a gang of stevedores in the employ of the defendant, the American Sugar Refining Company of New York, and was engaged with his fellow-workmen in the discharge of the vessel’s cargo of sugar. The cargo had been brought to the dock of the sugar refining company by the defendant, the Munson Steamship Line, which latter company had hired or chartered the steamship from the owners thereof for a period of. three months, to be used in its business of ■ carrying freight, the charter covering and including the vessel with machinery, steam winches, etc., and a full complement of officers, seamen, engineers arid firemen. The work of unloading consisted in the incipient stage in hoisting the bags of sugar out of a hatch in the vessel .by means of a wire cable which operated from a drum on a steam winch on deck, through a single boom-end block' directly over the hatch. The outer end of the wire cable had an eye in which was hung, by sister hooks or clippers, a heavy iron chain with a.singlé hook at the lower end. At the close of the day the men were engaged in covering the hatch. Before it could be covered, it was necessary to place in. position across the opening a heavy iron thwartship piece, about fifteen feet long and three feet high, weighing about a ton and a half, and which contained an iron hook for the purpose of attaching it to the hoisting apparatus. The lower hook of the hoisting apparatus had been attached to the hook bn the thwartship piece and the lattei had been hoisted by the winch-man, an employee on the vessel in charge of the winch, until it had
, • So far as concerns the claim made by the plaintiff against the American. Sugar Eefining Company of Mew York, the only ground of negligence asserted or urged, is .that the chain and hook which were used, and which were furnished by that company, were defective both. in construction and in the manner of their application to the- apparatus. It is sufficient to say in answer to this claim that the evidence .does not establish a defect, or that the‘accident was caused by a defect in either of the particulars suggested; Itispractically undisputed that the accident was occasioned solely by the negligence or insubordination of the Winchman, and the case was, therefore, correctly disposed of'with respect to the sugar refining company.
On behalf of .the respondent the Munson Steamship Line, it is urged that the winchman,. being in the general employment of the unknown owners, of the vessel,, is'to'be regarded as engaged in that employment- wdiile unloading, and that he is not to be regarded in any sense as a servant of the charterers. In other words, the claim is made that the liability for the winchman’s negligence attaches to the, owners and not tó the charterers. I cannot accede to this1 contention. The - fair inference from the evidence is that the winch-man was one.of the crew of the vessel and was furnished in accordanee with the provisions of the charter party, and it seems clear to me that by the terms of that instrument the duty of unloading the vessel devolved upon, the charterers and was not assumed by the owners: ■ _ '
-It is alleged in the amended complaint and admitted in'the answer that -the Munson.Steamship Line is engaged in the business of ' carrying, freight by steamships, ■ and • the charter party
That the mere fact of the power of the selection of the men and th’e payment of their wages is not the conclusive or controlling test of the relationship of master and servant creating liability for the happening of an accident, but that such relationship may depend upon • the parties’ connection with a special or limited service in
In his brief herein tlie learned' counsel for the respondent, the Munson Steamship Line;- cites the, case -of Auten v. Bennett (88 App. Div. 15) as an instance wherein a charter party such as that in evidence in this case has been the subject of judicial examination • resulting in a determination that the master and crew remained the servants of the owners at the time of the injury complained of. The construction of the contract in that case was aided by oral evidence and the ultimate determination of the controversy was adverse to the respondent’s contention. On a subsequent trial of the case a judgment in favor of the defendant, the charterer, was reversed by the Court of Appeals (Auten v. Bennett, 183 N. Y. 496), and it was held that the charter party then under consideration was in effect a demise of the vessel and not a mere contract of affreightment, that holding being based upon provisions for the' delivery and return of the vessel similar to those.in-the document now. under consideration. The court said (p. 502): “ The Appellate Division on the first appeal held that under the terms of the charter party there was no demise off the yacht Í Mindora’to tlie defendant and that the latter was not an insurer. We are of opinion that the very plain reading of the charter-, party leads to a contrary result. A charter party, is nothing more than an agreement between parties ■ and is to be construed in the same manner as ahy Other contract. In the charter party we are considering tlie owner agrees to deliver - the ‘Mindora-’ at 27ew York;, the-defendant agrees to return her in as good, condition as when she was received; he • also' agrees to make the return in the city of 27ew York. It would seem as clear as language can make it that the yacht was to be delivered to the defendant and returned by him to the owner at the expiration of the time provided for in the charter party,” . 1
In Rosenstein v. Vogemann (102 App. Div. 39) this court held that under a charter party precisely similar to the one at bar, the defendants, who were the charterers, and not the owners, were'liable for the consequences of a negligent selection of a place to. unload and deposit the cargo. The court appears to have been controlled by the fact, as stated in the head note, that the charter party provided, as in the case at bar, that the captain, although appointed by the owners, should be under the orders and direction of the char
It follows that the order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs as to the respondent the American Sugar. Refining Company of New York, but reversed as to the respondent the MunsonSteamship Line, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Woodward, Jenks, Burr and Rich, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed on ' reargument, with, costs as to the respondent American Sugar Refining Company of New York, but reversed as to the respondent the Munson Steamship Line, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.