112 Wash. 480 | Wash. | 1920
The plaintiff, Sandanger, commenced this action in the superior court for King county, seeking recovery from the defendant packing company for personal injuries alleged to have been the result of the negligence of the defendant in furnishing as a part of the equipment of one of its motor boats, upon which he was employed, gasoline in a one-gallon kerosene oil can, under such circumstances as to induce him to innocently use it as kerosene; resulting in a flareup or explosion, causing him to be seriously burned. Trial in the superior court sitting with a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and a judgment rendered thereon in the sum of $4,175, from which the defendant has appealed to this court.
Respondent, Sandanger, is a resident of this state. Appellant packing company is a corporation created and existing under the laws of this state, with its general offices in Seattle. It owns and operates a salmon cannery near Cordova, Alaska, in connection with which it owns and operates several motor boats. On and prior to March 7, 1917, respondent was employed by appellant to work in and about its cannery, and also upon its motor boats as he might be directed. On that day he was assigned to duty upon one of appellant’s motor boats as one of the crew consisting of himself
Eespondent had worked upon this boat as a member of its crew on several former occasions ■ and was well acquainted with its arrangement and equipment, including the kerosene oil can, and also the custom of using kerosene from the can to start fires in the stove. About seven o’clock in the morning of the day in question, the boat left the cannery to go some twenty miles southwesterly to a place where suitable sand could be procured for some contemplated masonry work, with a view to bringing back a load of the sand in sacks. The boat arrived at its destination about an hour or so before noon. The boat was provisioned for the noon meal of the crew, in view of the fact that the trip would take all day. One of the crew started a fire in the cook stove for the purpose of preparing the noon meal, using, instead of kerosene, a bunch of waste which had
About an hour and a half or two hours after serving the meal, when the fire in the cook stove was allowed to go out, and after it actually had gone out and the stove and ashes therein had become cold, according’ to positive testimony, which the jury had a right to believe, respondent was directed by Stensland to start a fire in the stove and heat water to wash the dishes. He went into the cabin, placed some wood in the stove, took the kerosene oil can from its accustomed place, poured a small quantity of whatever was in the can on the wood, then holding the can in one hand away from the stove, lighted a match and dropped it upon the wood, in the stove, when instantly there was a flareup of great violence, amounting practically to an explosion, which was of such force as to cause some damage apart from the mere burning that immediately followed. Respondent was thrown across the cabin, but soon recovered himself and rushed upon deck with his clothes on fire. His associates being unable to put out the fire on his clothes, he jumped overboard, when a plank was thrown to him and he was taken on board. The fire in the cabin was extinguished and the boat proceeded to Cordova as fast as possible, arriving there late in the afternoon, when respondent was given medical treatment. Respondent’s counsel prosecuted the case, and was awarded recovery, upon the theory that appellant had negligently furnished gaso
It is first contended in appellant’s behalf that the trial court erred in overruling its challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support recovery on the ground of its negligence, presented by proper motions timely made. Practically the whole of the argument of counsel touching this contention, apart from the Federal maritime question to be presently noticed, has to do with the question of whether the kerosene oil can contained gasoline or kerosene at the time respondent used whatever was in the can to start the fire in the stove. If it was kerosene, appellant would not be responsible for respondent’s injuries; while if it was gasoline, it seems plain that, because of the liability of gasoline to generate explosive gas when so used, appellant would he responsible for respondent’s injuries ; or, rather, a jury could well find from the evidence that the furnishing of gasoline under such circumstances was negligent and the proximate cause of respondent being injured. There was testimony fully warranting the jury in believing that, when the boat returned to the cannery from its previous day’s trip, there was no kerosene or other fluid in the can, it being all used that day in filling the boat’s lamps, and there being none left even for the starting of a fire in the cook stove on that day; that whatever was in the can at the time respondent was injured was put into it from appellant’s store of supplies on shore between the time the boat returned the day before and the starting of the boat on its trip that day, and that no one attempted to use whatever was in the can to start a fire in the cook stove that day until respondent did so.
“Speculation and conjecture, when used in this connection, mean the same thing. The cause of an accident may be said to be speculative when, from a consideration of all the facts, it is as likely that it happened from one cause as- another. As soon as the balance of possibilities is broken, the jury is put to the burden of weighing the evidence.”
We think the jury was put to such burden in this case, and conclude that the trial court did not err in refusing to sustain the challenge made to the evidence
Counsel for appellant contend that respondent’s recovery, as to its measure, is controlled exclusively by the maritime law as administered in the Federal courts in admiralty cases, and that he possesses no rights whatever under substantive common law, because his employment and service on the day he was injured was purely of a maritime nature; and, while admitting that respondent may seek recovery from appellant in the common law courts of the state, that his recovery is limited under the maritime law by the amount of necessary expenses he may incur in his cure, and maintenance while being cured, which is conceded to be $175, in addition to the service of that nature already rendered him by appellant.
It does seem that respondent’s employment and service on the day in question was maritime in its nature. We shall so assume in our disposition of the case, without further discussion of that question. The Minna, 11 Fed. 759; Saylor v. Taylor, 77 Fed. 476; Lawrence v. Flatboat, 84 Fed. 200; Domenico v. Alaska Packers’ Ass’n, 112 Fed. 554; The J. S. Warden, 175 Fed. 314; The Virginia Belle, 204 Fed. 692; North Alaska Salmon Co. v. Larsen, 220 Fed. 93.
Counsel for appellant invoke the Federal statute defining the admiralty jurisdiction of the Federal district courts, reading as follows:
“Sec. 24. The district courts shall have original jurisdiction as follows: . . .
“Third. Of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, saving to suitors in all cases the right of a common-law remedy where the common law is competent to give it; . . .” 36 U. S. Stat. at L., 1091.
“Upon a full review, however, of English and American authorities upon these questions, we think the law may be considered as settled upon the following propositions :
“1. That the vessel and her owners are liable, in case a seaman falls sick, or is wounded, in the service of the ship, to the extent of his maintenance and cure, and to his wages, at least so long as the voyage is continued.
“2. That the vessel and her owners are, both by English and American law, liable to an indemnity for injuries received by seamen in consequence of the unseaworthiness of the ship, or a failure to supply and keep in order the proper appliances appurtenant to the ship.
“3. That all the members of the crew, except perhaps the master, are, as between themselves, fellow servants, and hence seamen cannot recover for injuries sustained through the negligence of another member of the crew beyond the expense of their maintenance and cure.
“4. That the seaman is not allowed to recover an indemnity for the negligence of the master, or any member of the crew, but is entitled to maintenance and cure, whether the injuries were received by negligence or accident.”
“Our conclusion is that an action in personam may be maintained for a tort committed on the high seas if the accident is attributable to the ‘unseaworthiness’ of the vessel; that the common law courts of a state have jurisdiction concurrent with the Federal courts' when proceeding in personam, and that the state court will grant the relief that a common law court would have granted had the case been originally triable in such court.”
This, it seems to us, is but a recognition, and correctly so, that, as to injuries resulting in consequence of unseaworthiness, the rules of common and maritime law governing such a suitor’s rights are the same. Now, if the insecurely fastened chair pedestal, the giving way of which caused the plaintiff Larson to be injured, was “in consequence of the unseaworthiness of the ship,” as we think was correctly held in that case, so as to enable him to recover under the maritime law, which in effect adopts the rule of the common law as to injuries so occasioned, it seems to us equally plain that the negligent furnishing of gasoline as kerosene under the circumstances inducing its dangerous use, as was done in this case, rendered this boat unseaworthy in the same sense that the ship was rendered unseaworthy in the Larson case. It seems hardly possible to state in general terms a definition of “unseaworthiness, ’ ’ as used in the maritime law in this connection, which will furnish an exact standard in all cases in determining just what defects in structure or equipment should be considered as rendering a vessel unseaworthy. In Carver on Carriage of Goods By Sea (6th ed.), § 18, it is said: “The ship must be fit in design, structure, condition and equipment to encounter the ordinary perils of the voyage, (a) She must also
Counsel for appellant call to our attention, and strongly rely upon, the decision of the supreme court of the United States in Chelentis v. Luckenbach Steamship Co., 247 U. S. 372. That decision, it is argued, establishes the law as different from our conclusions reached in the Larson case, and also different from what was theretofore generally thought to he the law as gathered from expressions of the courts found in previous Federal and state decisions. A seaman was washed overboard and his leg broken, as it was claimed, as a result of a negligent and improvident order given by a superior officer. It was held that he could not recover as for injuries received “in consequence of the unseaworthiness of the ship,” and therefore could not
We conclude that respondent’s recovery in this case may be sustained upon the theory that his injuries were received in consequence of the “unseaworthiness” of the boat upon which he was working.
A number of assignments of error are made by counsel for appellant touching the court’s giving instructions and its refusal to give certain requested instructions. What is said in the briefs touching these claims of error is practically nothing more than assertions of error, they being presented to us practically without argument. We do not feel called upon to dispose of them other than in an equally summary manner, and deem it sufficient to say that, as is disclosed by the record and brief of counsel before us, we are unable to say that the court committed any prejudicial error in the giving or refusing to give instructions.
The judgment is affirmed.
Holcomb, O. J., Main, Mitchell, and Tolman, JJ., concur.