19 F. 633 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia | 1884
(charging jury.) It. must be gratifying to you that we are at last approaching the conclusion of this protracted trial. Its great importance, both to the country and the accused, fully justifies the time consumed in its investigation. The defendant is indicted under section 5344 of the Devised Statutes, which declares “that every captain, engineer, pilot, or other person employed on any steam-boat or vessel, by whose misconduct, negligence, or inattention to his duties on such vessel, the life of any person is destroyed; and every owner, inspector, or other public officer, through whose fraud, connivance, misconduct, or violation of law, the life of any person is destroyed, shall be deemed guilty of manslaughter. ” The indictment in this case contains four distinct counts, setting up and charging the offense in as many different ways. The difference in the counts consists in the manner the offense is stated, and in describing different acts under the statute charged as general misconduct, negligence, and inattention to duty. Each count in the indictment constitutes a distinct and separate offense; and if you find from the evidence that the allegation as laid in any one of the counts in the indictments are true, it will be your duty to return a verdict of guilty, although you may find against all of the remaining counts. It is not the practice of this court to discuss the effect of evidence submitted to the jury, but to leave its consideration with the jury, as being more properly within the province of its duty. It is my duty to give you the law applicable to the issue as made up, which you a*e sworn to try and a true verdict to render, under the law and the evidence.
The court is asked to tell you that in the trial of criminal cases the jury is the judge of both the law and the fact. Such is not the case.- The court explains the law, and it is both your moral and legal duty to accept it as given you “unless you can say upon your oaths that you are better judges of the law than the court.” Of course you*can disregard the instructions of the court and refuse to accept the law as given to you by it; but if you do you exercise a purely arbitrary power, which, in the case of an acquittal, makes the decision final, although the guilt of the party may have been fully established. It therefore follows that a jury which desires to discharge its whole duty must take the law from the court and apply it to the facts of the case it is called to pass upon. Before you can return a verdict of guilty against the accused, under this indictment, you must reach the conclusion that all the material allegations contained in some one of the counts in the indictment have been fully proved. It is not enough to convict that there is a preponderance of > evidence against the defendant; but you must be satisfied from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, of his guilt as charged in the indictment. This doubt must be real and substantial, and not an
In this connection it is proper that I should inform you wliat constitutes negligence. It has been well defined to be “a breach of duty.” I think, however, the better definition is that it is an omission to perform some duty, or it is a violation of some rule, which is made to govern and control one in the discharge of some duty. Applying this rule of law, if you should find from the evidence that the accused omitted to perform any duty, or that there was an absence of proper attention, care, or skill, and the performance of his duties as pilot of the Scioto, then you must of necessity find him guilty of negligence; and that if in consequence of such negligence the life of any person was lost, then yon must find him guilty as charged in the indictment. Upon your retirement to your chamber the first inquiry that should engage your attention is whether any of the persons named in the indictment lost his life in this collision. The fact that a number of lives were lost at the time of the collision is not disputed; but it is claimed by the defendant that the collision was not the immediate cause of the losing of life of any one of the persons named in the indictment. You will determine this question of fact, and ascertain whether the collision was the immediate cause of the death of any one of the persons named in the indictment. If you find the fact to be as the prosecution claims it, your next inquiry will be whether the loss of life was in any respect attributable “to tiie misconduct, negligence, or inattention to duty of the accused;” for if it was solely due to other causes, then the defendant would be excused. If, however, it is answered in the affirmative, you should then ascertain whether the accused was, as charged in the indict
I have heretofore called your attention to the rules of criminal law applicable to this ease, and it now becomes my duty to construe the rules and regulations for the government of pilots of steamers navigating the rivers flowing into the Gulf of Mexico and their tributaries. These rules are authorized by an act of congress, and were adopted by the board of supervising inspectors, June 1,1871, and, as amended in 1880, were in force on the fourth day of July, 1882, when the collision occurred. Since their adoption they furnish the paramount rules for pilots in guiding and steering steamers on the rivers flowing into the Gulf of Mexico.
Under rule 1
Under rulo 2
Under rule 4,
In this case the defendant is responsible only for his own negligence and inattention to duty, and not for that of any other. You are to pass upon the charges as stated in the indictment against him, as it is a matter of no importance, so far as this trial is concerned, whether the pilot of the Lomas was guilty or not guilty of contributing to the collision. Both may be guilty, or one may be guilty and the other innocent. And in this connection it is to be remembered that any wrongful act of the pilot of the Lomas does not justify this defendant for neglect of duty; and the fact that the pilot of the Lo-mas accepted the cross-signal given by the pilot of the Scioto in replying with two blasts, is no justification for the action of the defendant in this case, and does not release him from the consequences of, or justify his act in, refusing to accept the first signal given by the pilot of the Lomas. And by this I mean that the rules did not authorize the pilot of the Scioto to change the signal. All he could properly do, if the signal given was one he could not accept, was to stop his boat and use all the means in his power to avert a collision. And it is for you to say whether he did follow the rules adopted for his guide in steering his boat; and whether he did all that any prudent and
I trust that you will bring to the examination of this case that calm and considerate reflection that a case of this importance requires. It is important both to the country and the defendant that the facts should be fairly and impartially considered, and the law properly applied, that you may arrive at a just and proper conclusion, and your action fully justified.
The jury found the defendant guilty of manslaughter in manner and form as charged in the indictment against him; and the court refused to set the verdict aside.
Rule 1. When steamers are approaching each other, the signal for passing shall be one sound of the steam-whistle to keep to the right, and two sounds of the steam-whistle to keep to the left; the signals to be made first by the descending steamer.
Rule 2. Should steamers be likely to pass near each other, and these signals should not bo made and answered by the time such bouts shall have arrived at the distance o£ 800 yards of each other, the engines of both boats shall be stopped; or should the signals be given and not properly understood from any cause whatever, both boats shall be backed until their headway shall be fully checked, and the engines shall not be again started ahead until the proper signals are made, answered, and understood. Doubts or fears of misunderstanding signals shall be expressed by several short sounds of the-whistle in quick succession.
Rule 4. TYhen a steamer is ascending and running close on a bar or ■shore, the pilot shall in no case attempt to cross the river when a descending boat shall be so near that it would be possible for a collision to ensue therefrom.