21 F. 417 | S.D. Ga. | 1884
The libelant, Margaret McGinty, complains that her husband, Thomas McGinty, while employed as foreman of a stevedore’s gang on board the steam-ship Gladiolus, on the nineteenth day of September, 1883, fell through a hatchway, which had been negligently and carelessly left open, and was so badly injured that he died from the effects of the fall in about six hours, and she brings this action for $15,000 damages.
The only questions in the case found necessary to consider have been as to the negligence of the officers of the ship in leaving the hatchway uncovered, or that of the party killed in falling through it. The ship was constructed with wliat is known as a cross coal bunker, forward óf the engine-room, used sometimes for reserve coal, and frequently for carrying cargo. This was separated from cargo hold No. 2 by an iron hulk-head up to the lower deck, and above that from between-deck No. 2 by a wooden partition to the upper deck. Through this partition or wooden bulk-head were two doors, twelve feet apart, each three feet and seven inches wide, leading from between-deck hold No. 2 into this betwecn-deck coal hunker. Just inside this partition and between the doors, was the hatch through which McGinty folio It was twelve feet athwart ship, and three feet fore and aft, immediately over it, on the main deck, was a hatchway of the same ("'««ensions. It appears from all the circumstances of the case, although it is not stated in exact language, that this portion of the ship had been fitted to receive cargo, and turned over to the stevedores. One of their gangs had been at work the day before, taking out the last of the coal, and sweeping and getting ready for cargo. On the morning of September 19, 1883, the gang, of a portion of whom McGinty was foreman, came down to commence stowing hold No. 2. They found the main-deck hatches all on, and removed those over hold No. 2, but the between-deck hatches they found off. They had received but two or three bales of cotton when the deceased passed through one of the open doors into the between-
It is urged in behalf of the libelant that it was gross negligence on the part of the ship’s officers to leave this hatch off and the doors open, so that any one could go in so as to fall through it, and that although deceased was not actually assigned to work in that compartment it is usual and customary for the stevedores to go anywhere through the ship in search of dunnage. In reply it is claimed that MoGinty had no business in this bunker, as they were not stowing it that day, and it was negligence for him to go there without having the upper hatches removed, if there was not sufficient light to see, and if "there was light it was negligence that caused his fall, and that there was no negligence in leaving the hatchway open at the time it was. The leaving open a common between-deck hatchway while the vessel is lying in port, under ordinary circumstances, is not presumptive evidence of negligence on the part of the ship. This is not only shown to be the custom by the testimony in this case, but it has been so frequently commented upon in decisions as to be too well settled to be questioned. The Victoria, 13 Fed. Rep. 43; Dwyer v. Nat. Steamship Co. 4 Fed. Rep. 493; The Carl, 18 Fed. Rep. 655; The Germania, 9 Ben. 356; The Helios, 12 Fed. Rep. 732. While the falling through an open hatchway by a stranger, a landsman, visitor, or passenger on board a vessel might not be presumptive of negligence on his part, where such accident occurs to a seaman or stevedore, who is accustomed to hatches, their presence, necessity, uses, character, and location, the case is different, and unless the circumstances of the particular case are such as to rebut it, the first presumption is of his negligence.
Do the circumstances in this case overcome the presumption in favor of the claimant, and esiablish that in favor of the libelant? This was not, as in the case of The Helios, supra, a small, unused hatch, without coamings, but was one for the frequent, if not general, stowage of cargo; such as, the learned judge in that case remarks, “stevedores must at their peril look out for, and are presumed to know about.” There was a main-deck hatch directly above it, which, although closed at the time of the accident, was notice, if any such was needed, of the existence of this one. There was no presumption that any of the between-deck hatches were closed) as none of them were found to be when the main-deck hatches were removed; but, on the contrary, the presumption to a careful man would have been that they had been left off intentionally, to dry, air, and ventilate the ship. The testimony shows that but a short time before, deceased had assisted in stowing a ship of similar construction, with like bunkers and hatches as this, and in that case helped stow the bunkers, and he knew these were to be loaded. He had been stevedore for years, and was familiar with the hatches and their locations. . The amount
The conclusion on these points precludes the necessity of considering the numerous other questions raised in the argument.
Although the case is one that appeals strongly to the sympathy of the court, under the law I can reach but one decision, and the libel must be dismissed; but since there may have been, before a full and careful investigation of the case, reasonable grounds for considering the ship liable, and as I believe the suit has been prosecuted in good faith upon the principle of equitable discretion in such matters in courts of admiralty, it is ordered that the claimant pay the costs.