The following is the opinion in full:
“ The plaintiff’s intestate was a longshoreman, engaged with others in loading a vessel with flour. In the square of the hatch and above the hold, the workmen had laid plank and built upon it with bags of flour what is called a “ stool,” upon which four men stood and received the flour lowered to. them in slings, and then delivered it to other men who stowed it away. It was customary for the longshoremen to extend the planks upon which the “ stool ” was constructed to some distance outside of it, but that precaution had been omitted, and the deceased was struck by one of the descending loads and killed by falling into the hold. If the plank had been laid in the usual manner, his life would have been saved. The negligence, therefore, upon which the judgment rests is the omission to lay the exterior plank, and the question discussed is to
“ The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.”
reads for reversal and new trial.
Judgment reversed.