33 F. 184 | N.D. Ill. | 1887
This is a libel for personal damages claimed to have been sustained by libelant while employed upon the barge by reason of the negligence of the officers in charge. The material facts, as they aplicar in the pleadings and proofs, are as follows: At the close of navigation, in the year 1881, the Lyon was taken into Miller’s dry-dock, on the North branch of the Chicago river, for some slight repairs; and, on the thirty-first of December of that year, these repairs being completed, the master desired to take her from the dry-dock to the Illinois Central slip, near the mouth of the river, for the purpose of there laying her up for the winter. She did not use her own machinery for the purpose of making a change of location, but two tugs were employed to tow her to the Illinois Central slip, and the captain, apparently by way of precaution, employed four men, one of whom was the libelant, to come on board the barge, and render such assistance in the change of berth as might be required. The libelant and another man were directed to go into the wheel-house, and wait there for orders, if it should become necessary to use her rudder for any purpose. At the time they so entered the wheel-house the wheel was lashed so as to hold the rudder straight with the keel. The tugs took hold of the stern of the barge, and backed her out of the dry-dock slip, swinging her stem down the river, to the mouth of what is known as the “Ogden Canal,” when the stern of the barge was drawn into the canal so as to wind her at that point, so that she might proceed down the river bow foremost. In drawing the stern of ihe barge into this canal, the rudder struck upon some obstruction which caused the wheel to revolve violently, and libelant, in attempting to hold it, was thrown over the wheel, and his arm broken, and he was otherwise bruised and stunned, and it is for these injuries that the libelant claims to recover damages.
The claim is based upon two allegations of fact: (1) That the barge was so carelessly and improperly handled that her rudder was allowed to strike against the dock of the canal, whereby the wheel was caused to revolve and hurt the libelant. (2) That the master should have kept a proper lookout at the stern of 1he barge while' she was going stern ways into the canal, whose duty it was to give notice that her stem was about to strike the dock, and that, if such notice had been given to the master, it would have been his duty to give notice to the libelant to stand clear of the wheel; that no such lookout was kept, and no warning or notice was given to libelant that the stem was about to strike the dock.
The case was referred to Commissioner Proudfoot, under our admiralty rules, to take the testimony, and report his findings upon the matters in controversy in the case. The commissioner has taken voluminous proofs as to the manner in which the accident occurred, and reports, .as the result of his examination of this proof, that the allegation that the barge’s stem was allowed to strike the dock is not sustained by the
I have examined very carefully the testimony in this case, and fully concur in the conclusions reported by the commissioner. It appears from the proof that libelant was an experienced seaman; that he. knew that in moving a barge the size of the Lyon, she being something like 275 feet in length, about the crooked and narrow waters of the Chicago river, there was danger of her stern striking the dock, or any sunken obstacle in the bottom of the river, thereby putting the wheel in rapid motion;' and it seems to me the commissioner is correct in his conclusions, when he says that the libelant should have known that such an occurrence was liable to happen, and should have stood sufficiently clear of or away from the wheel to have avoided being struck or injured by it. He knew that the barge was in tow of the tugs; that she was not proceeding by her own power; and that her navigation was substantially in charge of the tug-men. He had received no orders to take the lashings off the wheel, or to do anything with the wheel; and undoubtedly knew, or ought to have known, for he was an intelligent man, that he was only placed in the wheel-house to be called upon, in an emergency which might possibly happen, to do something with the wheel. Hence, as a prudent man, knowing the danger of the wheel being set in motion, and .that he had nothing to do until he received an order from the captain except to stand where he could respond to such order, it was his duty to have kept the wheel lashed as he found it,.until he was called upon to act, and common prudence, under the circumstances, required that he should stand clear of the wheel while he was in the wheel-house.
It is now further urged in behalf of the libelant that, even if he was negligent, and if the injury occurred without any negligence on the part of the officers of the barge, the libelant is entitled 'to be cured, or properly treated medically, at the expense of the ship. There is no dispute as to the rule which prevails that a seaman shipped for a voyage, who is taken sick, or who has received injury by accident, even where he is partly at fault, is entitled to medical treatment during the vojmge, or until he is cured; but I do not think this libelant stood in such a relation to this barge as to be entitled to invoke this rule in his own behalf. This ship was not bound upon a voyage, within the meaning of the eases in which this rule has been applied, or of the circumstances out of which
Ail the cases which have been cited, where the rule now invoked has been applied, are cases where the seamen was shipped for a voyage from one port to another, and where the sickness or injury for which he claimed to be treated was incurred while in the discharge of his duty under such engagement. They all agree that the obligation to “cure,” as the old cases say, or to give “medical treatment,” as the later cases term it, only continues to the end of the voyage. Here this man was employed to aid, we will say, in transferring this barge from a position on the North branch to the Illinois Central slip, a distance of less than two miles. Unless some unexpected delav" intervened, it could not be expected to last more than an hour or an hour and a half, and at the end of that time, if you call it a voyage, the voyage would be over; so that, even in the event that this man had been entitled to this right, the right would be gone so very soon that it would be of very little value to him. I think, therefore, that no recovery can be had for damages to the libel-ant by reason of his rights as a seaman, under the rule referred to.
Much stress has boon laid in the argument, and a large amount of testimony has been taken, for the purpose of showing that the libelant was inhumanly treated by the master of this barge after he was injured; and while I do not think that this testimony bears upon the question of the libelant’s right to recover, at the same time it is but justice to all parties that I should allude to it. The facts, as they appear in reference to this feature of the case, are briefly these: Libelant was stunned by the injuries he received; was picked up and taken into the cabin, where the captain’s wife administered restoratives and stimulants, bound up a cut on his head and his arm as well as she could, and apparently did all that a sympathetic and kind-hearted woman could do under the circumstances to hasten his recovery. After he liad recovered, or partly so, from the stunning effects of the injury, he was asked by the captain if he wanted to go to the Marine Hospital, and he replied that ho did; and when the