9 Daly 119 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1879
The motion for a non-suit was properly denied. The affirmative evidence given by the plaintiffs was amply sufficient to entitle the jury to pass uponthe question, whether the injury sustained was caused by the defendants’ negligence.
There was no offer to prove that, by a local statute, applicable to the port of Liverpool, it was compulsory upon the defendants to place the steamer in charge of a pilot when she moved from the dock, and anchored in the river Mersey for the purpose of coaling; and that, by a general statute of Great Britain, the master or owner of a vessel is not answerable for any loss or damage to any person, occasioned by the fault or incapacity of any qualified pilot, acting in charge of a vessel, where the employment of a pilot was compulsory.
The counsel for the defendants simply proposed to read in evidence certain sections, from what purported to be a local and a general statute, which being objected to, was properly excluded by the court.
But if the existence of these statutes could have been proved, or the fact that it was compulsory, by the public regulations of the port of Liverpool, for the defendants to have a pilot on board of the steamer, whilst she was at anchor in the river, on the night preparatory to her departure, when the accident occurred, the judge held that the evidence could not be deceived, for the reason that it should have been set up specially in the answer, not being available as a defense, under a general denial.
It may be an open question whether it was necessary, if this constituted a defense, to plead it specially. In Mitchell v. Crassweller (13 Com. Bench, 237), which was an action for negligence, Chief Justice Jervis thought that the plea of not guilty put in issue whether, at the time of the accident, the driver of the cart was the defendant’s servant. Justice Maulé said that what was traversed by “not guilty” was whether the defendant, by his servant, negligently drove the
I am, however, inclined to think that the judge was right in holding that this defense should have been set up specially by the answer. It is also a general rule, that, where the act or omission would, at common law, grima faeie, appear to be an act of negligence, and the facts in the declaration cannot be denied, any matter in excuse, or which shows that the act or omission arose from the exercise of a higher authority, over which the defendant' had no control, must be set up specially as a defense (1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 538, 6th Am. ed.; Butterworth v. Soper, 13 Johns. 443). The averment of the declaration here, is that the defendants, their master, mariners and servants, so carelessly, negligently and improperly carried the plaintiffs’ goods, that they were injured. The three judges above mentioned, in Mitchell v. Crassweller (supra), were of opinion that an averment of this kind is put in issue by the plea of not guilty ; but the case was determined upon another ground—that the defendant’s servant, when the accident occurred, was not engaged in his master’s business; whilst other cases, which will be referred to, hold, on the contrary, that in actions for negligence, the fact that the driver was not the defendant’s servant, nor the horses or vehicle his, or that he was not the owner of the vessel that caused the collision, is not put in issue by the plea of not guilty, but only the wrongful act—that is, that the injury was caused by negligence.
The plaintiffs had intrusted their goods to the defendants. The vessel in which they were was ordinarily in charge of the defendants’ officers and servants; and if they were injured from the want of proper care of the vessel whilst she was taking in coal on a rough night, it was grima faeie the
It was held in Taverner v. Little (5 Bing. N. C. 678; 7 Scott, 796), that the defendant, under the plea of not guilty, could not show that the cart was not his, nor driven by him, or his servants, when the accident occurred ; a case which Lord Denmait said (Hart v. Crowley, 12 Ad. & E. 378) was decided upon great consideration. In Hart v. Crowley (supra), under a like plea, it was held that the defendant could not show, that, although the wagon by which the cabriolet was injured was his, the horses and servant were not. In Woolf v. Beard (8 Carr. & P. 373, on appeal, 12 Ad. & El. 34; E. C. L. 92, b), under the same plea, it was held, that the defendant could not show that the cabriolet by which the plaintiff was knocked down was not his ; and in Dunford v. Trattles (12 Mees. & W. 529), it was held that the plea of not guilty only puts in issue the wrongful act, and that it was not necessary for the plaintiff to show.that the defendant was the owner of the vessel that caused the collision. In Lucy v. Ingram (6 Mees. & W. 302) and in General Steam Navigation Co. v. British and Colonial Steam Navigation Co. (L. R. 3 Exch. 330), two leading and important cases, where this defense of compulsory pilotage was interposed and sustained, and in Rodrigues v. Melhuish (10 Exch. 110), where it was relied upon, it was set up specially, and the better opinion, I think, is that it should be.
The judge refused it further, upon the ground that the existence of these statutes would constitute no defense to an action against the owners of the vessel, for an injury arising from negligence in the management of her, in which, I think, he was also right.
If the defendants had offered to, and could show that it was compulsory in Liverpool, when the vessel hauled out from the dock and was anchored in the stream for the' purpose of coaling, to have a pilot on board, and that he had the exclusive charge and control of the vessel whilst she was coaling, it might be that he alone would be answerable for an injury for the want of proper care and diligence on his part in the management of her; that his taking exclusive charge and control of her being a matter of public regulation, the relation of master and servant between him and the owners could not then be assumed to exist, and that they would not be answerable for any injury from the want of skill or proper care and diligence on his part. Baron Martín, in General Steam, Navigation Co. v. British ancl Colonial Steam Navigation Co. (L. R. 3 Exch. 320), said that a pilot taken compulsorily is not a servant of the ship-owner. He does not select him; and that, under such circumstances, the ship-owner would not be responsible for any, injury arising from the fault of the pilot, even at common law. This would probably be held to be the law in this State, where the movement of the vessel is under the exclusive control of the pilot, as she is, when he is carrying her into or out of a port (Snell v. Rich, 1 Johns. 305; Smith
In the examination of Mr. Inman, the manager, as I understand, of the steamships of the company to which the defendants steamship belonged, he said that in the port of Liverpool pilotage was compulsory; that it was' his impression that he did not employ Mr. Briggs (the pilot who was on board when the accident happened); that he was not his servant; that he had taken the vessel in, and was entitled to take her out. The plaintiffs moved to strike out this portion of Mr. Inman’s evidence, when his deposition was offered upon the trial; and it was striken out by the judge, on the ground that it was mere matter of opinion on the part of the witness, and not proof of the facts ; and I think there can be no doubt of the correctness of this ruling. But even if this evidence was receivable it would not have shown that it was compulsory upon the defendants to put the vessel exclusively in charge of a pilot whilst she was at anchor in the harbor, to receive coal, on the eve of her departure. This would not follow from the witness’s statement that in Liverpool pilotage was compulsory. Mr. Inman afterwards said : “ I understand that the pilot is in full charge of the ship; and the officers and crew are only responsible to obey his ordersand that he, Inman, thought that any disobedience of any proper order given by a pilot, of any ldnd, might throw the liability of damage upon the
Upon the former trial of this cause, I thought it exceedingly doubtful whether the defendants were liable upon the evidence, but considered it better to allow the case to go to the jury, than to determine so important a point against the plaintiffs, upon the trial, as there would be a better opportunity afterwards, when the voluminous evidence was printed, for a full and more careful examination of itl The general term, after a full consideration of the testimony, were of opinion that the verdict could not be sustained, and ordered a new trial. Upon the new trial, however, several ship-masters were examined by the plaintiffs, as experts, the effect of whose evidence was that the accident could have been prevented if there had been a proper exercise of care and diligence on the part of those in charge of- the defendant’s vessel. The intro
The inquiry involved practical knowledge and skill in the management of steamships, lying in the stream, at anchor, in the port of Liverpool, whilst engaged, during rough weather, in taking coal, preparatory to their departure; a matter in respect to which it is not to be assumed that jurors have all the information and practical knowledge that is necessary to enable them to. judge what should or should not have been done under the circumstances, to prevent injury to the vessel or cargo. The appellants claim in their points that it was one of those matters, upon which “ the lay or uneducated mind was capable of forming a judgment,” whilst several of their own witnesses, who were masters of steamships, were of opinion that none but those who were in charge of the vessel at the time could properly judge what it was best to do, under the circumstances. The opinion of nautical men, upon questions of this kind, was upheld by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Transportation Line v. Hope (95 Otto, 297). It was held in that case, that the captain of a tug-boat, familiar with Chesapeake Bay, might be asked if, with his experience, it would be safe or prudent on that bay or any other wide water, to tug three boats abreast, with a high wind. The witness, says Judge Hunt, delivering the opinion of the court, was an expert; and his knowledge and experience fairly entitled him to that position. It is permitted to ask questions of a witness of this class, which cannot be put to ordinary witnesses. It is not an objection, as is assumed, that he was asked a question involving the point to be decided by the jury. As an expert, he could probably aid the jury by such evidence,
It is insisted that it was improper to ask the opinion of these experts simply upon their hearing the depositions referred to read on the trial, 'and upon the reading to them of a part of the protest. It is claimed that the proper course was to submit to them a state of facts hypothetically in the form of a question or questions, and then take their opinion upon the facts so submitted. Where there is conflict resj)ecting the facts, before an expert is examined a statement of facts has to be submitted to him hypothetically; but where, as in this case, the facts were sworn to by the defendants’ employees, who were officers and mariners of the steamer, and there was no contradiction or want of agreement between them as to what the facts were, it could make no practical difference, whether the facts were communicated to the experts, from the depositions, and that part of the protest which gavé an account of what happened, or by formulating them hypothetically in the shape of a series of questions. In either case the result would be the same; the opinion of the expert being given in either upon a positive state of facts submitted to him. The defendants, therefore have no right to complain, as the judgment of the experts was asked upon the uncontradioted statement of their. own employees, of what occurred.
It was stated in the protest that at 7 p.m. on the day of the accident, they commenced coaling, with the collier alongside; that the wind was blowing very heavy, in squalls, and continued strong throughout the night, the collier alongside the steamer; that the tide running strong, raised “ a nasty cross sea;” that they found that the steamer had dragged her anchor, and that they veered out to ninety-five fathoms, but she did not come up
The second officer stated in his deposition, that on. the night of the accident there were strong breezes with hard squalls from the southwest, through the night; that early in the morning the wind shifted to the northwest, and that the tide running down against the wind, caused a heavy cross-sea swell in the river, which made the collier heave, rise and fall, and roll against the side of the steamer; and that this rolling, rising and falling, continued from midnight until the leak was discovered, which was after 8 o’clock in the morning; that the wind, with the weight of the collier fastened alongside, caused the steamer to drag her anchor, between night and morning. He also stated that he did not go to sleep, because the weather was too wild. The carpenter deposed that it was very rough weather; that the effect of the weather on the collier and the steamship was very heavy surging; that is, as he described it, “the two ships jumping up and down;” that the collier thumped, and that the surging and jumping described was pretty heavy.
It was upon this state of facts that these experts were asked what, in their opinion, was the proper course of conduct, for the persons in charge of the steamship. Captain Britton answered, that when the ship commenced driving, it was to cast off the collier and get up steam. He also said that in the harbor of Liverpool, where the anchorage was generally very bad, it was a proper precaution, at that period of the year, the winter season, in stormy weather, to keep the steam up; so that if the vessel dragged her anchor she could be easily moved,
It was insisted on the trial, as it is also upon the argument of this appeal, that the facts stated to those witnesses were too uncertain, to form a basis, as I understand the objection, for the judgment or opinion of the witnesses as experts. The experts themselves, who were experienced nautical men, did not think so. They regarded them as sufficient to foim and express a very decided opinion as to what ought to have been done, and which, it appears, was not done, for the security of the vessel and cargo. Our attention is called to an observation of Lord Campbell, “ that experts come with such a bias upon their minds to support the cause in which they are embarked, that hardly any weight should be given to their evidence.” It is unnecessary to comment upon this general and very sweeping remark, which may have had point in the case in which it was applied (The Tracy Peerage Case, 10 Clark Finnelly, 191), for the question before us is the admissibility of this evidence, and not the weight to be attached to it, which was for the jury; and that it was admissible, I do not entertain the slightest doubt.
The fact that there was a pilot on board, in charge of the vessel, neither prevented nor relieved the officers of the ship from taking such precautionary measures as were necessary to keep the collier from chafing and striking against the side of the steamer, through the night. The master was not on board. It was not, according to the testimony of Mr. Inman, customary in that port for the master to remain on board, whilst the steamer was anchored in the stream, preparatory to her departure; but “the first officer,” says Mr. Inman, “always relieves the captain.” The first officer, however, did not do so upon this occasion. It was the annual festival of Christmas, and he went ashore in the evening, and returned to the steamer
When the pilot, was below, which it appears he was after one o’clock, except, coming occasionally afterwards upon deck, it is to be assumed- that the vessel was in charge of some one or more of the subordinate officers; or upon such a night, and under such circumstances, she should have been; and from the quantity of water found when the leak was discovered, the accident must have occurred after midnight, or in the early hours of the morning. As there was, from the statement oftlie carpenter, a very heavy surging of the two vessels, with the collier thumping against the side of- the steamer, it was not necessary to consult the pilot as to the propriety of putting out fenders—long spars that hang down nearly from the water’s edge, up to within a few feet of the vessel’s side— which, according to Captain Briggs, is the usual precaution taken to prevent the vessels from chafing or striking against each other; or as to the propriety of having steam up on such a night, to ■ avert any injurious effect, if the steamer should drag her anchor; or as to casting off the collier, when, from the state of the wind and the sea, she was striking heavily against the sides of the steamer, and it was not otherwise possible to prevent it. The defendants’ carpenter was asked what would be the effect of this rubbing, beating and surging of the loaded collier against the outside plate of the steamer, in such a sea, and he answered that it would not have a very good effect. Captain Britton, the plaintiffs’ expert, said that it could not but injure the steamship; that it would start the rivets ; and that if the collier struck the dead-lights, it would injure or break them; and-Bryan, one of the defendants’ witnesses, testified, that if there was a tender alongside nibbing and bu/m^mg, it would break the port and the side of the ship.
In the case of Roderigues v. Melhuish, 10 Exch. 110, a case in many respects analogous to this, the question was examined how far the local act applicable to the harbor of Liverpool made it compulsory in that harbor, where a vessel is lying at anchor in the stream, to have a pilot on board. In that case, as in this, the vessel was at anchor in the harbor of Liverpool, being under orders to proceed to sea on the following day, and had a pilot on board. Riggers were employed in completing her rigging—vessels in that port being unable to complete their rigging until they have left the docks. She had lost her anchor in the crowded part of the harbor, as she was passing out of the docks, and the plaintiff was the owner of an anchor boat which was engaged to raise it, and whilst it was so employed, his boat, in some way, was swamped by the vessel. It was not compulsory under the local act to have a pilot on board, unless the vessel was “proceeding to sea;” ánd it was held that she was not, as her rigging was not complete when the accident occurred, and she was not to sail until the following day. The court held that, under these circumstances, she was not ready to proceed to sea, that “ she might have refused to take a pilot on board whilst she was thus in the river,
In Smith v. Condrey, 17 Pet. 20; 1 How. [U. S.] 28, it was also held, that, to discharge the owner, it must appear that the accident was the fault of the pilot alone, and that if it was altogether, or in part, caused by the negligence, unskillful
In The Queens, L. R. 2 Adm. 854, a case of collision in which the vessel was in charge of a pilot by compulsion of law, it was held that as the collision was not caused by the incapacity or error of the pilot alone, but by the want of assistance in the discharge of his functions, which he had a right to expect from the crew, in keeping a proper lookout, the owners were liable; for, although a pilot may be on board by compulsion of law, the owners are, in all cases, liable for the negligence of the master, officers or mariners (The Protector, 1 C. Rob. 45; The Diana, 1 Wm. Rob. 131).
The superintending of the coaling of the steamer, and the doing of what was essential whilst she was receiving coal with the collier fastened alongside, to prevent injury to her from the collier striking against her side on that rough night, was more particularly the duty of the regular officers of the ship, than of the pilot. It was not necessarily connected with pilot-age, as the vessel was at anchor, and was not to start upon her voyage until the following day. To hold, under these circumstances, that the accident was owing exclusively to the negligence of the pilot, would, in my judgment, be unwarrantable. In The Bark Lotty (Olcott, 329), it was held that the master was liable for an injury, arising in a gale of wind, from the vessel being imperfectly fastened to the wharf, although the vessel was moored at the wharf under the direction of a licensed pilot, which was an act certainly more connected with pilotage than the coaling of a steamer before her departure. But even if the steamer had been placed solely under the charge of the pilot, as the defendants were under no' compulsion to do so, they would be answerable, if it was from his negligence that the accident happened; so that in no view of this branch of the case—in the testimony given, or in what the defendants wanted to give in evidence—was there anything that would relieve the defendants from responsibility for an injury to the plaintiff’s goods from negligence.
The remaining questions raised upon the appeal may be summarily disposed of. The question put to the shipwright
The judge did not, as alleged in the appellant’s ninth point, instruct the jury, that by giving a notice of sale at public auction, the price at- auction, under such a sale, would bind the defendants. Whatever the judge may have said in his charge, which was by no means as broad as this, he afterwards charged at the defendants’ request, that the sale at auction was not conclusive evidence of the damaged value of the goods, and added that he would regard it as doubtful if there were a more reliable estimate and appraisement; that it was simply evidence of what the damaged goods were fairly worth in the absence of any other evidence to control it. To this the defendants excepted, and I see nothing in the exception. The first proposition which the defendants requested the judge to charge was untenable. It was conceded that the accident was a river peril,' which was one of the perils excepted in the bill of lading, and for which the defendants were not liable, unless the accident was caused by negligence on their part. The law upon this point is well settled, and the defendants were not entitled to a verdict if there was negligence, because the injury arose from
The same remark applies to tire judge’s qualification of the defendants’ fourth proposition. What the judge said was fully borne out by the evidence; that there was no affirmative proof in the case, that the injury to the plaintiffs’ goods accrued-from any other cause than-the water that flowed into the vessel through the port-hole after the iron cover of it was wrenched off. The seventh proposition, refused by the judge, relates to the vessel being in charge of a licensed pilot, upon which I have already sufficiently expressed my views. It suffices, therefore, to say, that it was properly refused, as was also the eighth proposition, the rule of damages laid down by the judge being the correct one. The last request, that the court had no jurisdiction of the action, is disposed of by the decision of the court of appeals in Dougan v. The Champlain Transportation Co., (56 N. Y. 1).
There are some other exceptions in the case, but as they were not discussed on the argument, and are not mentioned in the appellants’ points, it is +o be assumed that they are not relied upon.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Van Hoesen, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.
The judgment entered upon this decision was reversed upon appeal to the court of appeals, January. 18, 1881,' for error in the admission of evidence not given upon a state of facts put hypothetically, and not affecting the points stated in the foregoing syllabus