14 Ga. 137 | Ga. | 1853
By the Court.
delivering opinion.
James B. Gorman, the plaintiff in error, as well as in the action in the Gourt below, about the first of January, 1852, hired his boy London to Charles Campbell, the ■ defendant, at the rate of fifteen dollars per month, to go upon the Ocmulgee and Altamaha rivers, as a boat-hand.
Richard Bishop testifies, that on the nineteenth day of May, 1852, the steamer Sam Jones having been tied up for several days, not being able to ascend the Altamaha, the Captain and white hands were engaged in clearing a new passage for her. The negroes were not enrpldyed in the water, it not being the custom for negroes hired as boat-hands to engage in removing obstructions from the river. That the boy London, of his own accord, in presence of the Captain, went into the river and commenced cutting a log. That he was about half an hour in cutting the log in two, and the Captain was present during that time. That the water was very swift at the place he was
“ That in case of a bale or box of goods or other inanimate object, it would have been the Captain’s duty to have placed it in a situation of safety ; and the boat is responsible if not so kept, without the liberty of excuse on the part of the boat.— Rut that it was different with the kind of property in dispute. That it was a sentient being, capable of volition and locomotion ; and if they believed the boy London engaged in the work by the express command or even permission of the Captain, the defendant was liable. But if they believed that the negro engaged in the work of his own free will, and the Captain forbid him to do it, the defendant was not liable. That it was not necessary to use coercion with this kind of property. Because the owner of the boat and its officers were not required to keep the negro in chains, which they must do if they were to be made responsible for any act of his, while on the boat, which might end disastrously”.
The jury found a verdict for the defendant.
Did the Court charge the jury correctly as to the law of this case?
There is no conflict between the testimony of Bishop and that of Dillard and Rondtrce. The two last take up the transaction precisely where the first leaves it. ' They swear exclusively as to what transpired after London got on the log which was drifting down the river. But unintentionally, of course, they wholly abstain from referring to the previous half hour’s cutting in the presence of Captain Dillard, proven by Bishop — and that is the hinge upon which this case turns. Is it possible for London to have been at work for one half hour in the presence of these gentlemen before he attempted to escape, and they not know it ? To their credit they do not so testify. Indeed, he was commanded to desist just as the log he was cutting, was about to fall, and precipitate him into the river, which as it
But to the charge of the Court. It is defective, as many charges are, in laying down correctly a general principle without applying it to the facts of the case before the jury, and which is not true, as restricted to these facts. Our brother ruled rightly in instructing the jury that if the boy acted by the command or even permission of the Captain and officers of the boat, that the owners were liable for his loss.
But this error is one of omission. His Honor next charged the jury that if the boy engaged in this hazardous employment of his own accord, and the Captain commanded him to desist, that the defendant is not liable. And that coercion was not necessary to be used rvith this species of property: otherwise, resort must be had to chains.
Now the first clause of these instructions is a generality: but it is not the law of this case, as made out by the proof. This negro did engage in this work of his own accord; and the Captain did order him to desist; and yet the defendant should be made liable, because the Captain did not arrest the work immediately, and before it was too late. What signifies it that he hallooed to him to got away when the timber was sliding from beneath his feet, after standing by for a half hour previously, and seeing him cutting the log ? Nothing is more dangerous than to lay down general propositions, which, instead of aiding,
In Strawbridge vs. Turner et al. (9 Louisiana Rep. 213) the owners of a steamboat suffered a slave to be employed as a hand on board, by the Captain, without the authority and consent of his owner, and he was accidentally drowned. The Court held that the owners of the boat were responsible and liable to pay his value, because, by using due diligence, they might have prevented the illegal employment of the slave.
In Butler vs. N. G. W. & R. W. Walker, (Rice's Rep. 182)
In Duncan vs. The South Carolina Rail Road Company, (2 Rich. Rep. 613) the slave of the plaintiff was hired to work on the defendant’s road, and it was agreed that he should not be employed on tho cars or locomotives, but that he might be carried on tho same “From any one place to another place, on the rail road, where his services may be required.” The slave, with the knowledge of the Conductor, went on the cars, and was canned beyond the place at which his services were that day required; and in jumping from the cars, while they were in motion, was killed. Tho Court hold that the company was liable to the owner for tho loss.
And in delivering its opinion, the Court say, “ In such a case it is in vain to say that the slave is a moral agent — capable of wrong as well as of right action; and that he killed himself by jumping off when he ought not”.
The judgment of tho Circuit Court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.