12 Md. 9 | Md. | 1858
delivered the opinion of this court.
This action was brought to recover damages for the injury which certain articles of property, belonging to the appellee, sustained, while on board the vessel of the appellants, on which they had been placed, for transportation from Baltimore
Before adverting to the language of these prayers, and to the instructions given by the court, we shall, as plainly as we can, point out the liability which a common carrier is under, for, on its ascertainment depends the propriety of the action of the Circuit Court in the premises.
There is no evidence in the record of á bill of lading, and, therefore, the responsibility of the appellants depends upon the law as applicable to common carriers, strictly as such.
There is a distinction in the law as applicable to private and common carriers. What we have to deal with in this case is, the law governing the liabilities of common carriers.
The cases in which this question has been considered, both
In the case before the court, the exemption from liability can only be claimed, from the evidence, on the following grounds: 1st. That it was prudent and proper the vessel should have retired to North Point harbor. 2nd. That, in entering the mouth of that harbor, all care and skill possible were employed, by the master and crew, to guard against injury. And 3rd. That the rock on which the vessel was
On the argument of this motion, which was granted, the court lay down — after asserting the broad doctrine to which we have referred, as governing this case — the principle controlling the one before them. Judge Swift, C. J., says: cTf the rock on which the vessel was struck, had been generally known, then it was the duty of the master to have known and avoided it, and the loss would be imputable to his negligence. If the situation of the rock was not generally known, and the master did not actually know it, then, if he conducted property in other respects, and no fault was imputable to him, his
It will be seen that both of the judges use the expression, “inevitable accident,” as synonymous with that of “act of God.” And, by affixing no other meaning to it, they assert no new principle, and, therefore, those opinions are to be read as though the words, “act of God,” had been used instead of those employed, to convey the same idea. It is true, that every “act of God” is an inevitable accident, because no human agency can resist it; but, because it is so, it does not, therefore, follow, in the sense of the books, that every inevitable accident is an act of God. Damage done by lightning is an inevitable accident, and also an act of God, but the collision of two vessels, in the dark, is an inevitable accident, but not an act of God, such as the stroke of lightning, nor is it so considered by the authorities. Whether Judge Gould be correct, or otherwise, in his definition of the words, “perils of the seas,” it is unimportant to inquire now, inasmuch as there is no bill cf lading in this case, containing these words. His interpretation of them, however, is in conflict with the opinions of others. See the very full and discriminating note on common carriers, by Hare and Wallace, to the case of Coggs vs. Bernard, 1 Smith’s Leading Cases, page 268, &c., edition of 1852, and particularly the case of McArthur & Hurlbert, vs. Sears, 21 Wend., 190. In Gordon vs. Buchanan, 5 Yerger, 72, 82, the act of God, it is said, “means disasters with which the agency of man has nothing to do, such as lightning, tempests, and the like.” “The perils of the sea” include some
In the case before us, the undisputed evidence was, that a buoy pointed out the locality of the rock, and that at low mark it could be seen by the ripple of the water over its surface. It is also proved, by the defendants, that several vessels were safely moored in the harbor, at the time of the loss. The fact that a buoy was placed to indicate the dangerous spot, is, in our judgment, sufficient to establish that the existence of the rock was “generally known,” and, in the language of Swift, C. J., in the case cited, “it was the duty of the master to have known and avoided it.’’ We can perceive of no more effectual mode of making proclamation of the course of channels, the location of bars, rocks, and other impediments to navigation, than buoys; they are the means employed by all commercial nations, for the protection of human life, and the safety of commerce.
Having thus stated the law as ruling this case, we apply it to the prayers of the defendant, and to the instruction given by the court to the jury. The first prayer was properly rejected. It excuses the defendants, if the jury should find the loss was occasioned by inevitable accident, without fault on the part of the carrier, and which no human prudence could have enabled him to avoid, which we have shown, in the case of a common carrier, is insufficient. If it is not actus Dei, it cannot excuse. The second prayer is also defective in several particulars, but one of which need to be stated, namely, it Í3 unsustained by the evidence. There is no proof that the sunken rock was unknown to “pilots carrying on navigation upon the Patapsco river.” Captain Neale speaks of a period twenty-five years previously to the accident, and, in fact, shows, by his cross-examination, that he knew but little of the
Judgment affirmed.