153 F. 855 | 2d Cir. | 1907
The main facts of the case are set forth in the opinion of the district judge as follows:
“The vessel in its charter party agreed to furnish tackle for loading and discharging cargo. At each hatch a fall was provided to lift the cargo (bags of sugar) from the hold, and, save at the bunker hatch, there was another fall to carry out-hoard and deposit it on the dock. All falls of the first class were made of wire, and all of the second class were made of rope. At the spare bunker hatch hut one fall was used, and that was made of wire. The ship discharged a part of her cargo at Yonkers, and then went to Arbuckle’s dock in New York, where, after the work had begun, the stevedores not employed by the ship substituted the rope fall of No. 3 for the wire fall at the spare bunker hatch, for the probable reason that the wire fall was on account of greater length more available at No. 3 hatch. The libelant, a longshoreman employed by the Arbuekle company, was in the hold under the spare bunker hatch making up the slings. As a sling containing five hags was rising, it caught under the coamings of the between-decks hatch, and thereupon the rope broke and the sling fell upon libelant’s knee, causing serious injury. Some portion of*856 the rope was produced in court on the trial April 4, 1906, and as it then appeared was unfit for the purpose of a fall. The rope had beeu used somewhat since the accident, which was October 9, 1905. * * * The sling came into contact with the coaming. The winch continued to work and the rope broke. * *. * The hatch was 14 feet athwartship and 5 feet 6 inches fore and aft, and through this opening in rapid discharge of cargo the sling was taken. The collision with the coamings at times was expectable, and a fall was required that should withstand reasonably the shock of such contact. To meet this demand the ship had provided and rigged wire falls, and the stevedores had for their own convenience substituted the rope.”
„ The district judge held the ship liable because it did not “use suitable care to furnish falls that would meet the duty that the stevedores would allot to them, and because “both the stevedore’s' foreman and the ship’s officer were negligent in allowing the rope to be used.”
We are unable to concur in this conclusion. Besides the facts above set forth others appear in the record, either undisputed or established by the fair weight of evidence. First as to the rope. The expert witness called by libelant testified that a new four-inch fall such as the one in question, if used for lifting cargoes from the deck of a vessel over the side where the rope does not come in contact with any sharp or hard surface, would have a life of from 30 to 36 hours; that if used for hoisting cargo from under deck, where it is being constantly exposed to chafing over the sides of the hatch, and to sudden strains as a sling catches under the hatch, it ought not to be used over 15 hours. And he added:
“It all depends on how the rope is used. I have seen some rope that wouldn’t last three hours with the gang of men aboard that boat.”
There is evidence that for a considerable time the stevedores used this fall to lift out five bags to a sling, instead of four, although cautioned not to do so. The extra weight, is not important; but, since five bags made t}ie draught more bulky, the chances of catching under the hatch were greater. Moreover, there is evidence to show carelessness in guiding and in directing the hoisting, so that such Catchingwith consequent sudden strain on the rope was increased. The fall had been in such use four or five hours before the accident. To whatever extent use subsequent to the accident had deteriorated it, it is manifest that its condition on the trial, was considerably different from what it was when the stevedores substituted it for the wire fall which would have stood the chafing and the strains for a vastly longer period. There is not a particle of evidence to show that if left where the ship-had placed it, to serve in lifting cargo from the deck to the dock, it was not in perfectly proper condition to complete the discharge of all this cargo.
The ship had also provided an abundance of spare falls, wire and 'rope both, which were at the service of the-stevedores whenever the appearance or the use of any fall indicated that reasonable prudence required a change. Where a ship supplies proper falls for unloading cargo, with an abundant supply to take, the place of such as show signs of wearing out during the operation, all 'at the disposal of the stevedores, the authorities do not sustain the proposition that she is to be held in fault because the stevedores make improper use of such appliances. When she has done this, she has used suitable care to fur
The facts in Jeffries v. De Hart (Third Circuit) 102 Fed. 765, 42 C. C. A. 615, are similar to those in the case at bar. The stevedores themselves selected from the ship’s tackle what rigging they preferred, and the ship was held not to be in fault because their selection turned out to be improvident.
The conclusion of the district judge that both the stevedore’s foreman and the ship’s officer were negligent is based solely upon the circumstance that the mate, about 10 a. m., some time after the substitution, noticed that the change of rope for wire had been made and asked the foreman the reason for it. The reply was that they wanted the wire for aft, and that the rope was quite good to lift anything they wanted to lift. This is not sufficient to hold the ship in fault. For aught that appears, the rope was perfectly good if it were used carefully and overhauled from time to time to see if it was being chafed by use.
The decree is reversed, with costs of this appeal, and cause remanded, with instructions to dismiss the libel.