Kraeft v. Mayer

92 Wis. 252 | Wis. | 1896

Pimusv, J.

It appeared from admitted facts and from '.uncontradicted evidence that at the time of the plaintiff’s injury, Rovember 3, 1891, the barge Helena, owned by the defendants, was laden with a cargo of about 2,200 tons of stove-size hard coal, partly in her hold and partly between ■decks, consigned to Hadfield & Co. under a bill of lading which required them to discharge the same, and was lying •at their dock, and they had made a contract with a boss stevedore, Carroll, to discharge the cargo. Carroll and his men commenced the work in the morning, working one hatch forward and one hatch about midship, and he had hired the plaintiff, who was assisting at the latter hatch. The plaintiff was a stevedore of twenty-one years’ experience, and had unloaded the Helena, when laden with coal, ten times on previous occasions, and was familiar with the use and functions of trimming holes in loading and unloading, and with the structure of tl^e barge in that respect. The depth of hold of the barge, from her upper deck, was *257over twenty-two feet, and the distance between decks about eight feet in the lowest part. There were eight hatches in the upper deck, and eight in the lower deck directly under them. These hatches extend crosswise of the barge; those in the upper deck being thirty feet long, and those in the lower deck' twenty feet long, and all of them eight feet wide and, on each deck, sixteen feet apart. Through these hatches the cargo is taken in and discharged. There are also scuttle or trimming holes or hatches in the lower deck, ten inches wide and two feet long. Those called “ wing scuttles,” about three or four feet from the side, are midway between the larger hatches.

Scuttle holes or trimming hatches, such as the one into which the plaintiif stepped and broke his leg, are common to all double-decked steam barges; and one of their purposes is to facilitate the distribution of the cargo and trim the vessel in loading, and to aid in unloading the cargo when it consists of coal, grain, or any cargo that will run. "When loaded with a cargo of that character both in her hold and between decks, it is run in by spouts or chutes through the upper hatches; and the scuttle holes or trimming hatches in the lower deck aid in equalizing the cargo, and are therefore left open when the loading begins, and necessarily so when it is ended. In discharging the cargo, the stevedores begin at one or more of the hatches on the upper deck, and shovel into tubs or buckets, which are hoisted out by means of a steam hoist, and deposited at the proper place on the dock; the stevedores working from the opening of the hatches on the top until they reach the bottom of the vessel; the freight from between decks running, in a great degree, through the scuttles or trimming holes, and towards the hatches below, so that a great amount of shoveling is saved, both in loading and unloading. If a full cargo is to be carried, they level the cargo in the hold by shoveling it through the trimming holes as it comes upon the • lower deck, and then the vessel *258is filled between, decks. If a partial cargo is put aboard, it is run through spouts or chutes into the upper hatches, until they are filled up; and with the aid of the scuttles or trimming holes the cargo trims itself, to a certain extent, by running through them. In either event, if any such cargo is taken on between decks, these scuttle or trimming holes fill up, and are then left unclosed.

In the present instance the cargo had not been trimmed by shoveling, but had been run into the vessel through the upper hatches, and left to trim itself through these holes; and there was 1,600 to 1,800 tons of coal in the hold, and 800 or 400 tons on the lower deck, principally amidship, extending from about hatch 2 aft to hatch 6. One of the plaintiff’s witnesses, who worked with him, testified: “When we started to work the hatch was full of coal. The middle and between deck was full all around. Between this hatch and the forward hatch, it was also rounded full. I mean it was halfways between decks.” The plaintiff began work at 9 A. M. in the midship hatch, and, when returning from dinner that day, went down a ladder in a forward hatch, and while walking aft on the lower deck, towards the hatch where he had been at work, stepped into a scuttle or trimming hole of the size already described, which he testified he had not noticed, between eight and twelve feet from the hatch where he worked, and pretty nearly full from below. The hatch in the upper deck next forward to the one in which he worked was closed at the time. At noon they had gone down in the midship hatch about six feet into the hold, and there still remained coal on the lower deck, but how much does not clearly appear. When the vessel was put alongside the dock, and the stevedores began unloading her, all the upper hatches were open. The plaintiff testified: “ The trimming holes that were around the hatches where I was at work were all open. They were not covered. The hatches were all open. It was light. I saw they were not *259covered, of course. I knew the coal in the hatch was stove-size, and it was the same between decks as in the hold, so-far as I went down at noon time. . . . The reason I did; not go down my hatch was because there was no ladder in it.” - It was found that he could have had a ladder by asking for it. He testified that it was dark where he stepped in the hole, and he did not see it.

The evidence was that while a vessel was being unloaded the stevedores had a right to require that any of the hatches should be opened or closed upon their request; that the officers or crew opened or closed them accordingly, and, if a request to that effect was not attended to, it was enforced by the threat of a strike or the leaving of the vessel by the stevedores; that practically what should or should not be done in these respects, while the vessel was unloading, was under the direction and control of the stevedores. And this was not denied by the plaintiff or any of his witnesses, though they testified that “ the sailors go and take off and put on those little covers on the between decks; ” but there was no testimony tending to show that it was the duty of the officers or crew to do so, until requested. It seems clear, from all the evidence, that the officers and crew, being on the upper deck, would not, in the ordinary course of proceedings, have notice of the necessity of either opening or closing hatches or trimming holes until request made by the stevedores. As to the opening or closing of the main hatches, the evidence was undisputed that how many were opened and how many were closed depended upon the necessity of protecting the stevedores from sun or rain or cold winds, and they had their own way about it, and had substantial control of the portion of the vessel containing the cargo. The main upper hatches were all opened when the vessel was put alongside the dock, and there was evidence showing that upon the request of some of the stevedores the hatch next forward of the *260■one where the plaintiff worked, and near where he was .injured, was closed in the course of the forenoon, but several of the stevedores testified that they did not make or hear any such request. There was no evidence tending to show that there was any complaint made of its being closed, 'or that any request was made of the officers or crew to open or close any of the scuttle or trimming holes in the lower deck, or that any request that they had made had not been properly complied with. It was in evidence that the covers to the scuttle or trimming holes were usually on a beam over or near such holes, and that frequently stevedores closed them of their own accord; and sometimes the hatch boy, who signaled the hoist, and was in the employ of the consignees, attended to it, and at other times the boss stevedore would direct his men to do it.

Starting with the admitted fact that the vessel was laden in the hold in part, and on the between deck in part, and the cargo being all of one kind and that would run, it seems plain, in view of the facts referred to, that there was no evidence to go to the jury to show that the defendants were guilty of any negligence that was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and that the injury of the plaintiff was the result of his own negligence and that of his fellow stevedores. The general rule was stated by the court to the jury, that if a man comes upon the premises of another, not as an employee of the owner, having no special business with the owner, nevertheless, if the place be one to which ordinarily the' public are invited, or to which any particular portion of the public to which the person in question belongs are invited, or are expected to come for the benefit in whole or in part of the owner of the premises, then such person is said to come there by invitation, and he has a right to have the place reasonably safe, the same as employees, and that, as a matter of law, in view of the facts, the plaintiff was on the vessel “by invitation, for a purpose which was for the benefit *261of himself, the consignees, and the owners of the vessel, alike.” The fact that the plaintiff thus entered the barge, and that he belonged to one of the classes who are entitled to ordinary care for their safety on the part of the owners of the vessel, in view of the facts, did not fully or properly meet the relations existing between the parties, and the conditions existing at the time the injury occurred. The plaintiff’s injury was not the result of any defect or insufficiency in the structure of the barge, or of any want of repair which might operate as a trap or pitfall, but was the 'result of what occurred through the action of the plaintiff and his fellow stevedores in relation to matters over which he and they exercised and had full control, with which they were familiar, and they must have reasonably anticipated this effect. There is no evidence tending to show that it Avas the duty of the officers or crew to watch the operations of the stevedores, or take cognizance of their progress or the condition of their work. With that the defendants had nothing to do. They were under no special duty, except to respond to such requests as to opening and closing hatches and trimming holes as the stevedores should make, and which they were accustomed to enforce in a summary and effective manner, and no breach of duty growing out of existing relations would occur in this respect until after such notice or request. The duty arising by laAV from implied inAdtation had been fully met, for it was found that “it was customary, upon the Helena and vessels of her .class, to leave the scuttles or trimming holes open when the vessel was turned over to the stevedores for unloading.” We think, therefore, that as in the present case there was no evidence tending to show that there was any request made by the plaintiff or his associates in reference to the closing or opening of the hatches or trimming holes, or that any request Avas made to the officers and crew which was not promptly complied with, there Avas no evidence of any negligence on the *262part of the defendants which could- he considered as the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and we think that sufficient grounds appear for imputing the plaintiff’s injury to his own negligence.

In respect to the negligence of the plaintiff, in addition to what has already been said hearing on that point, it is plain that, with his experience and knowledge of existing conditions and surroundings, it was his duty to take notice of the effect the discharging of the cargo had in opening and freeing the scuttle or trimming holes of coal, and to take reasonable precaution in respect to such changes, but knowing that some of them were open and others might be opened, he made no request or complaint, nor did be take the precaution of further observation. He left the vessel at noon at a hatch forward from the one where he had worked, though he could have had a ladder by asking for it, and returned the same way. He testified that upon reaching the lower deck, although it was quite dark there, he went back at once towards his hatch, without waiting a moment for his eyes to become adjusted and accustomed to the darkened condition of the place. And, in respect to the want of light of which he complains, it appears that the upper hatch above where he worked, thirty feet long and eight feet wide, was open, and it was about midday, and the scuttle or trimming hole into which he stepped was not more than twelve feet distant from such hatch, and about eight feet below- it. Besides, it is clear that he knew before noon that the next upper hatch forward had been shut, and the condition of the between deck as to light could not but have been known to him; and he made, so far as appears, no complaint of it. . He must be taken to have assumed the risk of any danger arising from the closing of that hatch .and the failure to have it opened.

Eor these reasons the judgment of the circuit court must .be reversed, and it is not material to consider the question *263presented at the argument, whether the verdict is contradictory and uncertain.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.