66 F. 362 | 6th Cir. | 1895
(after stating the facts as above). The record leaves no doubt that, but for the willful obstruction of the Alice M. Campbell by the E. D. Holton, the stranding of the Hanson, and necessarily upon the facts stated the stranding and consequent damage of the Campbell, would not have occurred. The argument of the appellants, while formally denying the Holton’s misconduct, rests their appeal mainly upon two grounds: (1) That the Hanson was aground before the Campbell made fast to her, and in the attempt to release her the Campbell voluntarily assumed the risk of injury, stimulated by the hope of salvage compensation; and (2) that the Holton’s action was not the proximate and responsible cause of the injury.
1. The first proposition is conclusively negatived by the facts. At the time the Campbell, in compliance with the hail of the master of the Hanson, started to take the latter’s line the schooner was drifting to leeward, and without the aid of a tug would eventually have stranded, but the danger was not immediate. Ordinary care and skill, such as the law exacts from the tugboat and as the position of the vessel obviously demanded, would have sufficed to take her safely into the harbor, and the proofs are conclusive that until the repeated interference of the Holton there was no suggestion of similitude to salvage service in the undertaking of the Campbell to tow the vessel. There is not a scintilla of evidence to support this theory of appellants’ case. There was no danger in the Campbell’s efforts to aid the vessel until the Holton created it, after the Campbell had entered upon the performance of the towage service at the request of the master of the Hanson.
2. The second proposition raises the oft-vexed question of what constitutes the proximate cause of an injury. This is generally a question of fact, to be determined, in each case, by the circumstances attending the injury and conditions in which it happened. In Railway Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469, it is said:
“The primary cause may be the proximate cause of a disaster, though it may operate through successive instrumentalities. * * * The question always is, was there an unbroken connection between the wrongful act and the injury,— a continuous operation? Did the facts constitute a continuous succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole, or was there some new and independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury? * * * The inquiry, therefore, must always be whether there was any intermediate cause disconnected from the primary fault, and self-operating, which produced the injury.”
The district judge determined as a fact the relation of the wrongful act of the Holton to the disaster to the Campbell. What would
The consequence of the like acts of interference, if committed, in the open lake, where there was no danger of grounding either tug or tow, might haye been limited to the loss of time they occasioned, but they' would obviously be the direct cause of such loss. The fact that their consequences in the locality', and under the conditions existing in the case at bar, were more serious, does not change the relation of the wrongful act to its results. The delay’ caused by the Holton’s obstruction of the Campbell was the responsible cause which gave the conditions their capacity for harm. It was the primary cause of the stranding, and a continuous factor in the result, its connection with which was never broken. It is not a defense that natural forces and local conditions were the agencies by which the material or physical injury' was inflicted. It is unquestionable, upon the proofs, that had the Campbell been permitted to take the line upon the first approach to the schooner, there would have been no difficulty’ whatever in towing the vessel safely into the harbor. Whether or not the Campbell’s second attempt to take the schooner in tow would have been as successful is less clear, yet the reckless character of the Holton’s navigation would resolve doubt upon that question in favor of the Campbell, in view of the fact that the third attempt was so nearly successful, notwithstanding the time lost in the second. The third effort of the Campbell is not to be condemned because it resulted disastrously. At most, it was an error of judgment in an emergency which left hut two courses open to the master of the Campbell, ami