The plaintiff, a member of the crew of the fishing vessel “Catherine L. Brown,” brought an action in the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts against the United Fisheries Vessels Company to recover damages for injuries to his hand, which became caught in the door of a drag net that was being hauled into the vessel. The first count of the declaration was based on the Jones act, U. S. C. (1940 ed.) Title 46, § 688, and alleged that the defendant corporation owned, operated and controlled the vessel, that the plaintiff was an employee of the defendant corporation, and that his injuries were caused “by the fault of the defendant, its agents or servants.” The second count was to recover for maintenance and cure during the period of disability caused by his injuries. The
The defendant contends that this appeal is not properly here because it does not come within any of the three classes that comprise the only cases where an appeal may be taken from the Superior Court in an action at law. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 96. Styrnbrough v. Cambridge Savings Bank,
The correctness of the order for judgment depends upon the issues that were adjudicated at the earlier trial. The plaintiff at that trial proved that he was an employee of the defendant corporation, and the. direction of a verdict for the plaintiff on the count for maintenance and cure was the equivalent of a ruling that such a relationship had been shown. Jamison v. Encarnacion,
The conduct of the captain, Brown, which in the present . action is alleged to be negligent is the same conduct as that which in the previous action was found not to be negligent. What the plaintiff is seeking is a second opportunity to prove the negligence of the captain after he has had his day in court and failed to prove such negligence. He is not entitled to relitigate that issue in the present action against the captain. The principle is well established that, where a plaintiff seeks damages against a master for injuries alleged to be due to the negligence of his servant and fails to prove such negligence and then brings an action against the servant for the same injuries, the servant may assert the defence of res judicata on the ground that it has already been adjudicated in the earlier action that he was not negligent. ■ The present case is governed by Giedrewicz v. Donovan,
Order for judgment affirmed.
