220 F. 192 | E.D. Pa. | 1915
The exception to this libel is based upon the principle of law disclosed by the following statement of facts:
The third or charging paragraph of the libel sets-forth a charge of negligence upon the part of the respondent, through which negligence personal injuries were sustained by the libelant. The libelant was a deck hand on a scow which was in tow of the tugboat. The scow was to be brought to a pier. The libelant stood at the forward cleat on the starboard side. When the scow reached the pier, another deck hand jumped ashore with the eye of a mooring line, which he intended to place around a cleat on the pier, and notified the master of the tug that the line was fast. It turned out that the cleat to which the deck hand expected to make fast the line had been torn out of place, or so broken as to be useless. Because of this he was unable to make the line fast as he expected, and he went to the river end of the pier looking for a mooring post. The tug was then under way, and this obliged the li-belant to haul the slack of the line to the next cleat on the scow. The night was cold, the line coated with ice, and so heavy as to be handled with difficulty. The deck hand on the wharf made fast his end of the line, and libelant attempted to make fast his end at the cleat. He had made one turn on the cleat, but the strain on the line was such as that the line would not hold, and in attempting to make another turn his finger was caught between the line and the cleat. The proximate cause of the injury is alleged to be the neglect of the Redding Railway Company, the owner of the pier, to replace the broken cleat, or provide suitable means for fastening the float.
We do not see that the libel sets forth any cause of action, and the exception filed to it is sustained.
The libel is therefore dismissed.