48 Minn. 533 | Minn. | 1892
This action is for the recovery of damages for injuries sustained by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant while the plaintiff was engaged in its service. When the evi. dence was closed, the court directed a. verdict for the defendant, both because it was considered that the case did not show negligence on the part of the defendant, and that it did show that by his own
A large steamboat of the defendant was lying at the port of Gladstone, in the state of Michigan, taking in a cargo, consisting, in part, of flour in barrels. The plaintiff, with some other laborers, had been employed only a few hours before the accident to assist in this work. The flour was being lowered from the main deck of the steamer, through a hatchway about eight feet square, into the hold, by means of ropes, which were provided with hooks, to attach to the chimes of the barrels, and which ropes ran through blocks attached to timbers, fitted into the hatchway in the upper , deck, immediately above the hatchway in the main deck, above referred to. The ropes running through such blocks were connected with a winch on the main deck. The barrels descended into the hold by their own weight; the speed being controlled by means of a brake attached to the winch, which was operated by one of the crew. One of these timbers and blocks was near each side of the upper hatchway; the arrangement being such that barrels were lowered into the hold from the main deck on both sides of the lower hatchway; a barrel going down on one side, and then on the other, alternately. The plaintiff was stationed in the hold to unhook the rope from the barrels as they came down on one side only of the hatchway. The timbers across the upper hatchway, with the blocks attached to them, were placed in such position that the barrels going down into the hold would just clear the side of the lower hatchway, so that it was not necessary for the plaintiff to stand out fully under the hatchway, in the way of the descending barrels, but he might as well avail himself of the protection of the deck above his head. It appears without dispute that he was directed by the mate of the boat to “stand clear from the hatch. ” In the course of the operation of lowering barrels into the hold, a barrel to which the rope had been attached was lifted or thrown over the combing of the
. In view of the order to stand clear of the hatchway, we think that the court did not err in his estimate of the effect of the evidence. The only reason suggested for the plaintiff being in the position above indicated, contrary to his orders, is that the hold was getting so full, the barrels being stowed so near to the hatchway, that he had not room to stand elsewhere. But the evidence is to the contrary. It is shown that the barrels were being stowed some 15 feet back from the hatchway, that there was sufficient room for the plaintiff to stand under the protection of the deck, and that there was no reason requiring him to stand where he did. This is only opposed by the testimony of the plaintiff, who does not seem to have known or to have observed how much space remained around the hatchway where cargo had not been stowed. As to this, he says he does not know.
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 51 N. W. Rep. 480.)