20 Wash. 648 | Wash. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The respondents hired the appellants to tow from the mouth of Whiskey creek in Clallam county, Washington, to Ballard, Washington, a certain boom of logs consisting of six sections. The appellants, while towing the logs with their tugboat, encountered a storm in the Straits of Juan de Fuca, during which the boom was torn loose from the tugboat, drifted away and was lost. The respondents sue in this action to recover the value of the logs, alleging ownership in themselves,
The errors assigned on the record are, (1) that the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a non-suit, and (2) the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial.
1. Appellants insist that negligence cannot be imputed to them by the mere fact that the tow was lost during a storm at sea, but that negligence on their part must be alleged and proved, in order to warrant a recovery. They insist further that the basis of respondents’ complaint was the allegation that the master in charge of the tugboat was incompetent, unskillful and unacquainted with the waters over which he was required to make the tow; that respondents failed to offer any evidence on this part of their complaint, and, having so failed, they cannot recover, and the motion for non-suit should have been granted.
While it may be conceded that it was necessary for respondents to allege and prove some act of negligence on the part of the appellants, causing the loss of the tow, before they would be entitled to recover, it cannot be conceded that the allegations of incompetency, unskillfulness and want of knowledge on the part of the master of the waters of the Straits, were the only elements of negligence contained in the complaint. In addition to these allegations, the complaint charges that the master, without the knowledge or consent of the respondents, overloaded the tugboat, by attempting to tow three additional sections of logs, the property of a third person; that he left a place of safety and entered the open waters of the Straits, when he knew, or had sufficient cause to know, that a dangerous
Respondent Thomas Jose, on cross-examination, testified to a certain agreement made between the respondents and the firm of Oarstens Brothers, by which the respondents purported to sell to Oarstens Brothers “all the logs to be logged off” by them from certain described lands, in consideration of supplies to be furnished and conditions to be performed on the part of Oarstens Brothers. The agreement is set out in full in the record, and contains recitals to the effect that the title to the logs shall be and remain in Oarstens Brothers until certain payments provided for therein shall be made, and that Oarstens Brothers shall have full title and control of the logs for the purpose set forth in the agreement. Questioned further, the witness stated that the logs lost by the tug were gotten out under this agreement and that respondents had no other title to them “than the title provided for in this contract.” On re-direct examination he stated that the logs in dispute were not cut from off the lands described in the contract, but were cut from an adjoining-tract, purchased by respondents with their own means, and
It may be doubted whether this agreement is sufficient in itself to warrant the conclusion that the title to' the logs was in Carstens Brothers, even though it be conceded that the logs were cut from off the lands described therein; but, waiving this point, we do not think the lower court erred in submitting the question of title to the jury. The record, it is true, offers but very little explanation of the flatly contradictory statements made by the witness. It does appear, however, that the witness was somewhat hard of hearing; and his answers in other parts of the record, while showing no lack of intelligence or want of frankness, would indicate that he did not, for this or some other reason, always clearly comprehend the purport of the questions put to him. But, had the record offered no explanation, it was not for the trial judge to say which of the statements contained the truth. That question was one within the peculiar province of the jury to determine, and the trial judge very properly submitted it to them.
2. On their second assignment of error the appellants contend there is no evidence in the record from which the jury were warranted in finding the respondents were damaged by the loss of the logs in the sum of $1,000. They argue that the only evidence on the question of value showed the logs to be worth at the place of delivery the amount stated in the complaint, and “the verdict of the jury should have been for $1,925; while the verdict of the jury is for $1,000. The jury had no right to disregard the testimony and bring in a verdict against the appellants
Gordon, O. J., and Dunbar, Anders and Reavis, JJ., concur.