103 Cal. 258 | Cal. | 1894
Action to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff in consequence of negligence of defendant. Trial by jury. Verdict in favor of plaintiff, assessing damages at twelve thousand five hundred dollars, on which judgment was rendered. Appeal by defendant from the judgment, and from an order denying a new trial.
In October, 1891, the defendant was owner of the steamship Haytien Republic, then engaged in carrying passengers and freight from San Francisco to various northern Pacific ports in British Columbia, Oregon, and Washington, and thence back to San Francisco; and for that purpose was supplied by defendant with the ordinary complement of officers, sailors, and servants. G. W. Brown was captain, George W. David, mate, and the plaintiff a servant in the steward’s department, whose principal duty it was to serve as waiter at the officers’ table, but also to perform such other services as ordered by the steward.
It appears that it was the duty of the mate, Mr. David, to place gangplanks from the ship to the wharf, and to guard the open hatchways while taking in cargo, so far as it was practicable to do so; and the only negligence charged by respondent is that the mate failed to perform those duties, it being claimed that the plaintiff was compelled to pass over the bridge, because no gangplank was in place; and also that he would not have fallen into the hatchway if it had been guarded in the usual way, by chains or ropes supported by stanchions.
The appellant answers: 1. That a gangplank was in place at the times plaintiff passed to the wharf and returned to the ship; 2. That he might have safely stepped from the ship to wharf and back without a plank, as the distance was only about two feet; 3. That it was impracticable to guard the small hatchway in use at the time, as the necessary stanchions for that pur
Although the evidence, as read from the transcript, seems to preponderate in favor of defendant upon nearly all these issues, yet we think there is enough in favor of plaintiff to create a substantial conflict, and therefore pass to a consideration of the only other point made by appellant, which is that the mate, David, and the plaintiff were fellow-servants, “ employed by the same employer in the same general business.” We think this point is well taken, and should be sustained. There is no question that the only negligence complained of was that of the mate, David, nor that plaintiff and the mate were employed by the same employer. Nor is it claimed that there was any negligence on the part of defendant in selecting or employing David as such mate. Nor is it now questionable in this state that a difference in the grades of service does not destroy nor affect the relation of fellow-servants of the same employer, provided only that they are employed “ in the same general business.” In this case the respondent denies that plaintiff, the waiter, and David, the mate, were employed in the same general business; and whether or not they were so is the only question debated under this head.
It is agreed that the general business in which the defendant was engaged was that of carrying passengers and freight by a steamship from port to port so distant from each other as to require several days to make a passage either way, and also requiring probably twenty employees for different grades of necessary service, including captain’s mates, engineers, pilots, sailors, stewards, cooks, waiters, and firemen. In view of the necessity of furnishing meals to passengers, as well as to employees, are not the services of stewards, cooks, and dining-room waiters an essential part of the general business of carrying passengers and freight from San
The judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Hearing in Bank denied.