28 F. 478 | D.N.J. | 1886
This is a libel to recover damages for personal injuries. ' The libelant on the thirty-first of October, 1885, while shoveling coal on board the steam-ship Islands, then lying in her dock at Hoboken, New Jersey, was seriously and permanently injured by the falling of a heavy skid on his left leg, which was so badly crushed as to require amputation below the knee. He alleges that the accident was caused by the carelessness and negligence of the officers or other persons in charge of the ship. He had been employed, with several other longshore-men, by a stevedore named Myers, to assist in hoisting and shifting the coal, and was stationed on the between-deck to help in filling the empty tubs as they came down. The tubs, holding about 400 pounds each, were hoisted by a steam-winch, driven by an engineer in the employ of the ship. The fall and tackle had been rigged under the personal direction of Myers; the rope, etc., being taken from the locker of the ship. The first rope selected for a fall was too short; and another being obtained, which also proved to be too short, was lengthened by attaching to one end of it, by a bowline knot, a chain-sliDg. A double whip was rigged, so that an empty tub went down as a loaded one came up. Two skids, each eight or nine feet long,.by three feet wide, were placed loosely athwart the bunker hatch, three and one-half to four feet apart, and extending half a foot over each side, leaving enough space .for the easy passage of the tubs between them. A gangway-man stood on each skid to keep the fall and tubs clear of the edges. The libelant had been working for almost an hour, when the after-skid was upset by the bowline or tub coming in contact with it, and fell below on the libelant. The complaint is that the sling was not fastened to the rope by a splice instead of a bowline, and that the skids were not tied to the sides of the hatch; that, if either of these things
Evidently this man, by culpable inattention to his duty, was, as far as human agency is concerned, directly responsible for the accident. It was not very difficult to keep the rope or tubs clear of the skids, for it had been done on this occasion prior to the accident, and on hundreds of occasions before in the prosecution of the same kind of work, with precisely similar appliances, including bowline knot, and loose skids. It is customary with longshore-men to use bowlines as often as splices under like circumstances; and, although the latter may make a smoother fall and offer less obstruction, the former are not considered to be specially or ordinarily dangerous. The skids are seldom fastened to the sides of the hatch; the workmen, for the most part, preferring to have them laid over loosely, so that they may go on dock without the trouble of unfastening them. The general custom is not to fasten them. The libelant thought the skid was tied, but the weight of evidence as to the custom is as just stated. One of his own witnesses, Lynch, could not say whether or not the skids were fastened at the time of the accident, but he had worked hundreds of times when they were not. Under this view of the facts preceding and attending the upsetting and fall of the skid, it is sufficiently clear that the misfortune which befell the libelant was solely due to the negligence and fault of a fellow-workman; and, according to the well-settled rule and policy of the law, he must be presumed to have accepted all risks of incompetency and carelessness on the part of his fellow-servants engaged in the same work. Without there is something else in the case, he is therefore without remedy.
(But it was contended by the libelant’s proctor that the instruments and appliances furnished by the ship for hoisting the tubs were insufficient and defective; that the rope used for a fall was too short, and had to be lengthened by the dangerous bowline; that the skids were not provided with fastenings; and that the accident -was the result of these deficiencies. If this were so, there might be some ground for holding the ship liable, since the libelant did not take the risk of
After a careful consideration of the whole case, we have been unable to find any facts or principle which would justify a decree against the claimant.
The Harold, 21 Fed. Rep. 428, a case clearly resembling the present one, contains a clear exposition of the law applicable to a like condition of facts. The opinion of the learned judge, and the authorities cited by him, fully sustain the conclusion to which we have come.
The libel must be dismissed.