118 F. 420 | 4th Cir. | 1902
This is an appeal from the decree of the United States district court of Maryland, in admiralty, awarding $4,000 damages to the libelant for personal injuries sustained while in the performance of his duty by reason of defective appliances used on the steamship Venango. Borkmann, the libelant, was one of a gang of stevedores employed to unload the ship, January 22, 1901, while lying at her wharf in Baltimore, and was assisting in rigging a heavy boom which was to be used in discharging the ship’s cargo, and while so engaged a wire rope or band which was fastened to one end of the boom parted, causing the boom to fall. The operation of unloading was in charge of the stevedores, the ship furnishing the appliances. This boom was about 25 or 30 feet long, about 6 inches in diameter, and its weight, with the rigging attached, was probably about one-half a ton. While the boom was being raised, three men were stationed on the port side to hold the lines on that side, so that the boom should not swing to starboard, as it had a strong tendency to do on account of a heavy list to that side. BorE mann was holding the guy rope on the starboard side. It does not appear to have been necessary for him to have been on that side, as the ship had a heavy list to starboard, but it cannot be said that he was improperly there. The boom was raised by a winch, and after being elevated to its proper position, and while two of the stevedores were on the mast, endeavoring to fasten it to the mast, where it was to be used as a derrick, the strap or'band with which it was to be fastened gave way, and the boom fell with a sudden crash, and at the same time Borkmann fell senseless to the deck. One of the witnesses nearest to the scene says that when the boom fell it struck the after house, breaking off a piece about three feet in length, and that this broken piece struck Borkmann on the head. Other witnesses say that the boom did not strike the house, but struck the hatch combing, and that Borkmann was not struck by it, but slipped on the deck, which some of the witnesses say was icy. Other witnesses deny that there was any ice on the deck. The wire band or rope, covered with what is called variously “service” or “parceling” or “season,” was not produced at the trial below, but by leave of the court was produced later, and was one of the exhibits before us. According to the testimony of the mate, it was made from a wifie hawser between three and four months before the accident, and would have had strength, if new and in good condition, to bear ten times the weight of the boom. That it broke while being properly used, and while subject to no unusual strain, is a fact which is not disputed, and that seems to demonstrate that it was not safe and sufficient for its purpose. Several witnesses have testified that the wire looked rusty. It is claimed by the appellants here that, inasmuch as it was covered with the parceling or service, no weakness or defect was apparent, and that the ship is not liable for injuries caused by latent defects. We cannot allow this defense, for the testimony shows that the wire rope used in making the band was cut from an old hawser
The decree of the district court is affirmed.