159 Mass. 88 | Mass. | 1893
This is an action to recover for injuries caused by falling down a hatchway, alleged to have been insufficiently lighted, on the British steamship Martello, while upon the high seas. The plaintiff was employed on board as a coal trimmer, and at midnight, when the accident happened, had finished his work and was going forward to his berth. The ship lurched, he stumbled and fell headlong upon the forward part of the hatch, got up, groped, made a step and fell into the hatchway. The judge directed a verdict for the defendant.
We cannot say that the plaintiff was negligent before his first fall, and it would be going very far to say that his conduct in the first confusion of his rising was negligent as matter of law.
The more difficult question is whether there was any evidence of the defendant’s negligence. It seems that the plaintiff made complaints at not being furnished with a lantern when he asked for it; but we lay that on one side,.as it is plain that his request had reference to his work while he was engaged upon it, whereas at the time of the accident his work was over. The deck was lighted by electric lights, and on the night of the accident there was trouble with them and they went out. The testimony for the plaintiff was a little ambiguous, but perhaps may have meant that the electric lights, even when going, were in such a position that they would not light the hatch sufficiently. The going out of the lights was not due to any defect in the apparatus as furnished, but was due to temporary matters, the slipping of a belt, etc., which the engineer could have repaired. After the accident, the hatchway was lighted by a lamp, so that there were lights available for that purpose. The plaintiff knew of the hatchway, of course, and does not say that he supposed, or had reason to suppose, that it was closed. There was no trap in the case, and he was going his own way at his own will. Under such circumstances, it is doubtful if the district judges would find any evidence of negligence as against the crew in leaving the hatch open and unlighted. Dwyer v. National Steamship Co. 4 Fed. Rep. 493, 495. If this were certain, it would be
Judgment on the verdict for defendant.