92 Me. 39 | Me. | 1898
The plaintiff’s evidence goes only to the following extent. The defendants were operating in Bucksport, on the Penobscot River, a mill for the manufacture of barrel staves and heads from wood. They had occasion in the course of their business in September, 1897, to send some eight of their employees, including the plaintiff’s intestate, up the river some two or three miles to raft and drive some logs down the river to the mill. The party detailed for this purpose assembled at the wharf near the mill a little before four o’clock on the morning of September 21, when it was quite dark. One of the defendant^, Perkins, was in charge of the party and accompanied it. They launched into the water two small boats of the defendants known as “punts,” put into them the pick-poles and other implements necessary for rafting
After the first boat started, its crew did not see the second boat on account of the darkness, but they saw a light as of a lantern moving after them for some fifteen, minutes or half a mile, when it disappeared. They heard no cries, and saw and heard nothing else indicating any disaster; At this time the river was comparatively smooth with little wind, but later, towards seven o’clock, it became rough from a rising gale of wind. The plaintiff’s intestate was a young man nearly twenty-two years of age, and unacquainted with boats as the defendants knew.
The boat itself was an old punt made of inch pine boards with bottom and sides almost flat and straight, and with ends nearly square. It was about fourteen feet long,. 3 1-2 feet wide, and 19 inches deep in the centre. Along one of its sides was an old crack which had been caulked with waste. The top part of one end had been split off, so that only about 7 inches of height of that end remained while the other end was 14 inches high. It did not appear which, or whether either, of the crew was in charge of the boat more than the others.
The four men in the boat were undoubtedly drowned in the river sometime that morning, but where, how and when that morning they were drowned is utterly unknown. Whether they fell overboard, or the boat capsized or foundered is left completely to conjecture.
The plaintiff insists that it can be logically inferred from this evidence that the drowning was the direct result of the unseaworth
The plaintiff admits that contributory negligence on the part of her intestate would bar her action, but she argues that such contributory negligence should not be presumed and that if her evidence does not indicate its existence she is entitled to recover unless the defendants adduce evidence that it did exist. Her counsel have argued the proposition ably and vigorously with many citations especially from other states. The law of this state however is unmistakably and inexorably against her. More than a generation ago, in Gleason v. Brewer, 50 Maine, 222, this court declared through the able, learned and liberal-minded Mr. Justice Kent that: — “The law is clear and unquestioned that the plaintiff must satisfy the jury, as an affirmative fact to be established by him as a necessary part of his case, that at the time of • the accident he was in the exercise of due care.” This clear and unqualified statement has been often affirmed since. In State v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 76 Maine, 357, the court again said more tersely, but not less unmistakably: — “The burden is on the party prosecuting to show that the person killed or injured did not by his own want of care contribute to produce thp accident.” It also said that sometimes the plaintiff’s own evidence shows that he by his own carelessness did thus contribute, but that it is equally fatal to him if his evidence fails to show,that he did not thus contribute. The court has not made this repeated declaration by way of dicta but has made it the foundation of its judgment in several cases. Buzzell v. Laconia Manufacturing Co., 48 Maine, 113; Lesan v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 77 Maine, 87; Chase v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 77 Maine, 62; State v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 81 Maine, 84; Giberson v. Bangor & Aroostook R. R. Co., 89 Maine, 337. It is useless to try to move the court from this ground so long and firmly maintained.
The plaintiff’s counsel further urge that in dealing with moving
Counsel again urge that the rule has been too broadly stated and that the true rule, even in this state, as to the burden of proof upon the issue of contributory negligence may be stated thus: — If the circumstances disclosed and left unexplained indicate any contributory negligence then the burden is on the plaintiff to explain the circumstances, and to show that after all he was free from fault; but that if the circumstances disclosed do not indicate any contributory negligence, there can be no presumption of any such negligence, and there is nothing for the plaintiff to rebut or explain.
It is true that the plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence can sometimes be reasonably inferred from the circumstances without direct evidence of what he did or left undone. When a plaintiff is injured while merely passive in the care of the defendant, without any active agency of his own in the matter, it is fairly inferable that he did not contribute to the injury. In the case of an injury to a passenger in his seat in a railroad train, caused by the train leaving the track or by a collision, he is merely passive in the care of the railroad company, and his freedom from fault affirmatively appears from the shown circumstances. In his seat, in the place assigned to him by the railroad company, he evidently could do nothing to bring about, or prevent such an accident. In the case of the engineer or conductor of the train, or in the case of any person who might be exercising any active agency in the matter, such freedom from fault would not be apparent. So in a disaster to an unseaworthy ship, a person on board, shown by the evidence to be merely passive in the place
But in all cases the plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence in the particular case must affirmatively appear in evidence or at least by some legitimate inference from the evidence. It is not to be presumed. If sought to be established by inference it must be by. inference from facts in evidence in the case. It cannot be inferred from general conduct, nor from the habits or instincts of mankind, nor from the argument that men are likely to be careful in danger. It is as true that men are careless as that they are careful. It is as true that men negligently contribute to their own injury as that they do not. We maintain the statutory rule stated in Chase v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 77 Maine, 62, that the plaintiff must affirmatively show by evidence that in his case he was free from contributory negligence.
The plaintiff in this case cites Guthrie v. Maine Central Railroad Co., 81 Maine, 572, as such a departure from the rule as to authorize her to proceed with this action. That case, however, was decided strictly in accordance with the rule. Guthrie, a brakeman, was injured by the coming together of two box-freight cars, the bumpers and draw bar upon one of them having been broken off, so that the cars came much nearer together than usual and sufficiently near to injure a person between them. The defective car was stationary and the plaintiff was on top of a moving train of freight cars backing up to couple on the defective car. He was directed by the conductor to run to the rear car and “ make the hitch,” meaning for him to go down between the cars and couple them. In compliance with this order he ran along over the top of the train and was seen to begin the descent of the ladder on the end of the car first approaching the defective car. In descending his back was to the defective car and he would not know of its defective condition. While no one saw him at the moment of the injury, and he instantly became unconscious and had no memory of it himself, it was apparent that he was injured
In several cases decided by this court the application of the rule led to a different result. In Chase v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 77 Maine, 62, the plaintiff’s intestate, while driving in a sleigh over a railroad crossing, was hit and killed by a passing train. No one saw him at the time. No evidence was given as to how the accident happened. It did not appear from the evidence that in approaching the railroad track he had taken any precautions to ascertain whether a train was coming. It did not affirmatively appear from the evidence that he could not have avoided. the collision by the exercise of due care on his part. In State v. Maine Central R. R. Co., 81 Maine, 84, the plaintiff’s intestate, a passenger, was last seen alive as he was passing through the train toward the rear while the train was in motion. He was found next morning dead upon the track, with severe wounds and fractures. The plaintiff claimed that he fell off the train solely by reason of a defective platform on one car in the rear, but there was no evidence as to what he was doing or attempting to do at the time of the accident, nor how the accident happened. He was not shown to be in his seat, nor to be merely passive in the matter. As in the case of Chase, it did not appear from the evidence that he could not have avoided the accident by the exercise of due care. In Giberson v. Bangor and Aroostook R. R., 89 Maine, 337, it could not be inferred from the evidence that the plaintiff’s intestate took the proper precautions in crossing the railroad track.
Recurring now to the plaintiff’s evidence in this case, it is pain
The rule herein affirmed may seem to work a hardship in such a case as this, where the plaintiff is prevented from compliance with the rule by the suddenness and magnitude of the disaster itself sweeping away all possible evidence, but if the rule were otherwise it would work equal hardship to a defendant. It is not a peculiar hardship however. Many meritorious claims and defenses often fail for want of legal evidence to establish them. Judgments of courts, however, should never be based upon conjecture, but always and only upon evidence.
Exceptions overruled.