228 F. 497 | 2d Cir. | 1915
Plaintiff was employed on defendant’s steam lighter James L. Morgan. On her forward deck was a hatch about ten feet fore and aft by eight feet across, provided with the usual hatch-cover. The vessel was used largely in transporting packages of acids from which there was leakage. When such packages were stowed on the hatch-cover the leakage would sometimes drip into the hold, doing damage to cargo and boat. To remedy this a drip-pan was installed under the hatch. This was moveable, being so arranged as to slide off from under the hatch when it was open and to be drawn back under the hatch when it was closed. To each side of this drip-pan there were attached three iron wheels two inches in diameter, which ran on the horizontal flanges of angle-irons, one angle-' iron being underneath each fore and aft hatch coaming. Each angle-iron track was twice the length of the pan so that the latter could slide aft entirely clear of the hatch. When this drip-pan was installed it was supposed that because of the sheer and trim of the vessel it would always, when free, run aft and clear the hatch; therefore the only arrangement for moving the pan was a piece of rope,, attached to the forward-end; the pan was drawn up by this rope until it was under the hatch, whereupon the rope was made fast. After the new device was installed it was discovered that it would not always work as had been anticipated; very frequently when the rope was cast off the pan would .not run back by the action of gravity. When this happened one of the men had to stand in the pan and placing his hands against the coamings, or anything else, which would give him a purchase, he pushed the pan with his feet and thus started it out from under the hatch.
The width of the horizontal part of the angle-iron was about two inches. There was a dispute as to whether it was beveled off at the edge; and defendant’s witness Thomas O’Brian admits it “had a round edge.” George Thomson says that only half of the tread of the wheels rested on the angle-irons that “about half of the wheel projected outside of the edge of the angle-iron.” The witness Thomas O’Brian says that the rolling surface of each wheel was from five-eighths to seven-eighths inches across. If only half of this wheel rested on the angle-iron there would be only five-sixteenths to seven-sixteenths inch on each side to hold the pan up. If this be so and the edge of the angle-iron was rounded, the margin of safety would be extremely slight; there would be only a trille above a quarter-inch support on each side. Some unfavorable jar or thrust or twist might overcome so slight a support. It seems to us that a jury might fairly find that such a margin of safety was too small for reasonably prudent construction.
Assuming this to be a defect, it was there continuously from the day the pan was installed, and defendant might reasonably be charged in the knowing of its existence.
The defendant contends that the plaintiff and the captain were fellow servants and that if the captain was negligent in ordering Hansen on to the pan the defendant is not answerable for that negligence.
Exception Was taken to a part of the charge on the ground that it might lead the jury to infer that a corporation defendant is liable for the acts of its agents, when an individual would not be liable for the acts of his agents. If the colloquial charge were susceptible of any such construction, the trial judge abundantly corrected it when his attention was'called to it by the exception.
The amount of damages awarded is a matter which this court cannot consider.
judgment affirmed.