| E.D.N.Y | Jul 2, 1884
This is an action to recover damages for injuries done to tho steam-boat City of Boston while being raised by tbo defendants upon a balance dock. The libel avers that on May 16, 1882, the defendants agreed with the libelants to receive the libelants’ boat, the City of Boston, upon its balance dock, in tlie city of New York, and carefully raise her out of tho water in such a way as to avoid injury to her, to retain her so raised until the libelants could do certain specified repairs upon her, and upon the completion of such repairs, and when so requested, to return the boat to the water; that in accordance with such contract the defendants received the boat from the libelants and commenced raising her upon the dock, but when the dock had risen almost to the surface of the water the boat fell from the blocks upon which she had been placed in the dock and received serious injuries. These injuries the libel charges to have been caused by the defendants’ negligence in the preparation of their dock, and in the raising of the boat, and by their failure to properly perform their contract. The answer admits an agreement to raise the boat, hut leaves the terms of the agreement to be proved by the libelants. It also admits receiving the boat from the libelants, and that while being raised upon the dock she fell. It avers that the defendants prepared the dock according to the instructions of the libel-ants; that such preparation was done carefully and skillfully, and was approved by tho libelants, and that the dock so prepared was approved by the libelants. It also avers that the boat was in an un
Next will be considered the issue raised by the averment of the answer, that the condition of the boat rendered her unfit for raising, and that the fall of the boat was a result of that condition. The evidence fails to show that the fall of the boat was caused by her condition. Nor would it avail' the defendants to hold that it was so caused. Dry-docks are, in general, not employed for the purpose of raising vessels of sound condition. Vessels loaded and light, broken and sound, water-logged vessels, hogged vessels, vessels out of shape from stranding, vessels toó old and weak to run longer without repairs, are the vessels requiring the services of a dry-dock; and, as was said on a former occasion, (Howes v. Balance Dock, 9 Ben. 232" court="E.D.N.Y" date_filed="1877-10-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/new-york-balance-dry-dock-co-v-howes-8635125?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8635125">9 Ben. 232,) the contract of the dock-owner is, in the absence of representation or special agreement, to raise the vessel as she is; the care and skill required of him in each case depending upon the condition of the vessel he undertakes to raise. In this case no representation by the libelants, respecting the condition of the boat, is claimed to have been made. Nor is it contended that it was impracticable to raise the boat safely in the condition she was. If, then, it had been shown that the condition of the boat rendered her fall inevitable, blocked as she was, it is not seen how the defendants’ liability for the injuries resulting from the fall could be disputed. Nor, if such were the case, would it avail the dock-owners to hold that they were ignorant of the condition of the boat. The boat was dismantled. Her walking-beam was out, much of her engine was out of position, and the known object of having her raised upon the dock was to bolt down her engine keelsons. In these and other circumstances there was abundant cause to put the dock-owners upon inquiry as to the boat’s condition. A failure by the defendants, under such circumstances, to be informed in regard to the actual con-
Passing now to consider the testimony offered in support of the averments of the libel, 1 find it proved that the libelants applied to the defendants to raise the City ox Boston out of water upon the defendants’ balance dock, the boat to be sufficiently elevated above the floor of the dock to enable bolts seven feot long to be passed up through tiie bottom and the engine keelsons without being bent. The defendants agreed so to raise tho boat, and in pursuance of such agreement proceeded to construct upon the floor of the dock tho blocking upon which the boat’s keel was to rest when raised. The elevation of the boat from the floor of the dock, called for by the contract, was unusual. Ido boat of the size of tlie City of Boston had ever before been blocked to such a height upon this, nor, so far as appears, upon any other floating dock. Two methods of constructing this blocking were open to be adopted: one by placing single blocks of timber one upon the other till the requisite height should he reached; the other to arrange the blocks of timber crib fashion. Cribbing the blocks is a method well known, and often employed in constructing blocking for vessels. By adopting it, all danger of falling is avoided. This method had never, previous to the fall of the City of Boston, been employed on the defendants’ dock, where many vessels have been raised in safety without cribbing.
After the City of Boston fell she was raised by the defendants upon the dock with the blocks fore and aft cribbed, and then she was raised in safety. When tho first attempt to raise her was made, however, the blocks were not cribbed, but placed one upon the other single until the requisite height was reacdied. The blocks were then dogged together, and between some of the piles of blocks at each end, and also between an uncertain number of the piles in the center, cross-braces of spruce plank were placed, running from tho foot of one pile to near the top of the next. Tho blocking having been thus prepared by the defendants and the dock lowered, the boat was taken by the defendants into their possession and placed in position in the dock, and the work of raising her, by pumping out the water from the sections of the dock, begun. As the dock rose the keel of tho boat took the blocking over which it had been placed, and thereafter as the dock rose the boat rose until the keel was four or five feet out of the water, when the boat and blocking on which it was resting toppled over backwards, and the boat fell heavily upon the floor of the dock.
These facts are not in dispute, and it is contended by the libelants that they afford ground for a decree against the defendants for failure to discharge the obligations assumed in making tho contract stated. The question thus presented is novel. Adjudged cases where courts have been called on to consider the obligations assumed by the owner of a dry-dock who undertakes to raise a vessel upon his dock are rare, and no case has been referred to on this occasion which can be fairly
If it is true — and the fact is not easy to deny, upon the evidence— that the libelants’ vessel when injured was within the exclusive control of the defendants, and had been placed.in the defendants’ exclusive possession to enable the defendants to perform their agreement to raise the boat, there might, as it seems to me, be difficulty in finding ground upon which to base a sound distinction between the obligations assumed by the defendants and those of a carrier in respect to goods intrusted to. him to be carried. But assuming in favor of the defendants that all the reasons upon which the liability of a carrier of goods is supposed to rest do not exist in the case of a dry-dock owner having possession of a vessel intrusted to him for the purpose of being raised, still there is, as it seems to me, abundant reason to be found in the nature of the employment and the character of the service for holding the dry-dock owner to a high degree of responsibility as regards the sufficiency and management of his docks. The service to be rendered relates to property peculiarly situated* namely, vessels constructed for the purpose of floating upon the water, and, as already remarked, either weakened by age or accident, or from some other cause requiring instant repair upon the land; and, while it cannot be said that the dock-owner possesses a franchise, yet by reason of the cost of constructing and erecting a structure like a-dry-dock, the location necessary for the use, and the character of the-service to be rendered, the dry-dock owner has what is nearly, if not q'uite, equivalent to an exclusive privilege. A refusal of employment made by a dry-dock owner, without cause, would, in the majority of cases, work irreparable injury, and be unjustifiable. Moreover, docks of this character, when employed, must always be operated by those-who own them. The conditions and capacity .of the dock are unknown except to the owner. In general, the employment of the dock is compelled by necessity, and must be contracted for by the master of the ship in the absence of the ship-owner, who is forced by circumstances to intrust his vessel, greater in value it may be than the dock, upon a structure, the condition of which is necessarily unknown to him, or to his agent, the ship-master, and which is to be operated by persons wh'ose character and skill are likewise unknown, and where a slight relaxation of care or a defect of skill may result in a fatal straining of his ship, or, as here, in a serious fall.
The employment of the dry-dock owner is therefore of necessity confidential. It is in a substantial sense a public employment, and while it may be that'due protection of the public can be secured without-attaching to this employment those several obligations which the law
It will be observed that the case here is not that of the giving way of the blocking through some latent defect. The boat did not fall because tkq blocking under her gave way by reason of some latent defects in the blocks, but because the method adopted by the defendants in building up the blocks rendered the blocking unstable and insufficient when subjected to the weight of the boat, and the movement necessarily incident to the raising of the dock. Such, at any rate, was the fact, if, as the defendants contend, the dock was raised evenly, and no motion imparted to the vessel. The case, therefore, in this aspect is one of damages resulting from the use of blocking which proved insufficient for the purpose to which it was' applied; and if I am, right in the opinion that the defendants warranted the blocking as sufficient to support the ship, liability for the damages resulting follows, of course. In support of this conclusion reference may be made to the somewhat analogous case of a carriage being transported on a ferry-boat, and damaged because of a defective chain placed behind it to prevent its running off the boat. In such a case the ferry-master, although held not to he a common carrier, was hold responsible for the damages resulting from the employment of defective iron in a link of the chain. Clark v. Union Ferry Co. 35 N.Y. 485" court="NY" date_filed="1866-09-05" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/clark-v--union-ferry-company-3611754?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3611754">35 N. Y. 485; Wyckoff v. Queens Co. Ferry Co. 52 N.Y. 32" court="NY" date_filed="1873-01-21" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/wyckoff-v--queens-county-ferry-co-3611873?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3611873">52 N. Y. 32. So, in the case of Cook v. Floating Dry-dock, I Hilt. 436, the dock-owner was held chargeable with the obligation to make the stanchions of the dock sufficiently strong to support a stage, and liable for damages arising from insufficiency of the stanchions; such liability being there placed upon the ground of a warranty against all such faults and defects as would render the contemplated use of the dock dangerous. That the defendants’ dock was defective in the blocking, and dangerous to be used as it was used because of that defect, is shown by the result.
The decision of this court in Howes v. Balance Dock, 9 Ben. 232,
As already remarked, the work undertaken by the defendants was attended with unusual risk of the vessel’s falling, owing to the elevation of the vessel’s keel from the floor of the dock at which, according to the agreement, the boat was to be placed. The care demanded in constructing the blocking is to be measured by the risk of the' falling involved in the operation as it was to be conducted, taken in connection with.the character and value of the property to be subjected to danger. It is, therefore, not too much to say that it was incumbent upon the defendants to employ all means at command to reduce that risk to the minimum, and failure in this respect was negligence. Means were at hand by which to remove all danger of th.e vessel’s falling. To secure absolute safety it was only necessary to crib the blocks. This method of avoiding danger of a fall was well known in connection with the raising of vessels, and the fact that this method had never been resorted to in this dock during many years prior to the fall of the City of Boston does not prove the expedient to be unavailable or unnecessary, for no such vessel as the City of Boston was ever thus raised at such an elevation from'the dock, while the other fact, that cribbing was employed when the City of Boston was next raised immediately after the fall, goes far to prove the necessity, as well as the reasonableness, of the precaution in question. Instead of adopting this precaution, known to be sufficient to remove all danger of falling, the defendants adopted a method of arranging the blocks necessarily involving a risk of the vessel’s falling, and endeavored to diminish the risk by dogging the blocks piled single, and, for the first time in the use of this dock, by putting braces between the blocking. So far as the evidence discloses, the decision to pile the blocks single was not arrived at because of any difficulty or expense attendant upon cribbing the blocks, nor because single blocking, secured by dogs and braces, was supposed to be more secure than cribbing. The only reason for the course pursued, suggested to me by the testimony, is that cribbing would require a greater number of blocks than those at hand. But, whether impelled by this reason or some better one, the fact remains that between two methods of constructing the block
But it is said the defendants judged the blocking, as constructed, to be sufficient, and the reasonableness of this conclusion is confirmed, it is said, by many experts who have testified here that they would have judged the blocking, as constructed, to be safe. The liability of the defendants does not, however, depend upon the question whether the error of judgment which they committed was committed in good faith, but whether they were justified in committing that error under the circumstances as they wore. Without sufficient cause they made the safety of the libelants' vessel while on the dock, and the safety of the lives of the men who were to be put to work under her, depend upon the soundness of their judgment in regard to the sufficiency of blocking, up to that time untried in .similar circumstances, when there was opon a method well known to them, although not employed by them, as to the safety of which there could be no question whatever. To commit such an error under such circumstances was culpable, and renders the defendants guilty of negligence. The books contain many cases where the selection of the most dangerous of two methods lias been held to be negligence. I recollect none where the choice made seems to me more indefensible than the choice made by the defendants on this occasion.
In the case of The Louisiana, 8 Wall. 173, a ship which broke from her moorings was prosecuted for damages caused by her drifting upon another vessel, anc! there the supreme court of the United States held that to escape conviction of negligence it was incumbent on the defense to show an accident which human skill and precaution, and a proper display of nautical skill, could not have prevented: and expressly declared that belief in the sufficiency of the ship’s fastening was no defense. In tho case at bar there was no accident. According to the contention of the defendants, nothing unforeseen or unexpected occurred in the management of the dock during the raising of the boat, save only the boat’s fall, and that, as all concede, would not have occurred if the blocks placed under the boat had been cribbed instead of piled single. Judged according to the principle applied by the supreme court in the ease of The Louisiana, I do not see how the defendants can escape liability for the injuries in question, even if the extent of the obligation resting upon them was to raise the vessel without negligence.
There is still another aspect to the case deserving oí notice. It is proved and not denied that by reason of a sag in the dock, the dock, when raised, retained a very considerable body of water upon its Boor, sorae 15 or 20 inches deep in the deepest part, and there is evidence tending to show that motion was imparted to this water upon the Boor during the raising of the City of Boston. I do not think the inference unwarranted that a jar was given to the dock sufficient to top-