111 F. 765 | 7th Cir. | 1901
The action below was to recover damages from the appellee,—a company operating a steamship line in the Georgian Bay in the Province of Ontario, and to Sault Ste. Marie and Mackinac,—for the death of Carmi A. Van Anda, said to have been brought about by the appellee’s negligence in furnishing him with a wet mattress on board the appellee’s steamship “Brittanic” between French River and Killarney. The action is based upon an act of the Provincial Parliament of Ontario,—similar to Lord Campbell’s act—Chapter 166 of the Revised Statutes of Ontario 1897.
The facts were substantially the following:
The deceased had purchased, on the twenty-fourth of August, 1897, at Collingwood, Ontario, for himself, his wife and daughter, tickets good for passage, meals and berths,on the Steamship “Brittanic” from Parry Sound to Killarney. On presentation of these at Parry Sound, on the following day, he was informed that there were no berths for his party, as none had been reserved; but, on his urging that his party must go, was told that if he would sleep on a cot or mattress, the wife and daughter would be furnished a berth.
At about nine o’clock that evening, when the steamer was in the
On this day of arrival, at about ten o’clock, Van Anda had a chill, which developed into pneumonia, from .which he died eight days thereafter, on Mackinac Island, having been taken there upon another steamer at the beginning- of his illness.
One of the issues of fact on the hearing in the District Court, was, whether the mattress thus furnished was damp or dry, and upon this, considerable evidence was offered pro and con. The facts already set forth, however, were not in controversy; and it was admitted, in addition, that the number of passengers traveling upon that occasion, the close of the summer season, was extraordinary; much larger indeed than the ordinary sleeping facilities of the steamer could accommodate. Upon the case thus presented, the District Court entered a decree dismissing the libel.
We have not found it necessary to pass upon some of the interesting questions raised by this appeal, such as, whether the death having occurred on land, the Court of Admiralty would have jurisdiction; or, whether, under the Maritime Daw of the United States, a right of action survives to the representative of the deceased. The decree of the District Court is sustainable upon other grounds.
It is not necessary to determine to what extent the company, operating a passenger steamship, is responsible for the condition of its usual sleeping facilities; nor how far it must go in providing- such facilities for the usual number of passengers. In the case under consideration, the number of passengers was extraordinary. It was near the close of the vacation season, and cool weather having come on, tourists were hurrying to their homes. Few days in the year probably found so many passengers aboard.
This unusual passenger list created an emergency for the officials of the steamship, and they seem to have met it in the only way available. The proffer of a mattress, under the circumstances indicated, was not the proffer of the steamship’s usual sleeping facilities, and, when accepted by Van Anda, was upon the knowledge that it was a mere makeshift for the occasion. Equally with the steward of the ship, Van Anda had opportunity to inspect the condition of the mattress. He chose to take it, rather than to sit up, and in so choosing, under the circumstances, assumed whatever risk its condition may have exposed him to.
/ Nor is the fact that Van Anda held tickets good for a berth relevant to this character of action. The suit is not to recover for violation of the contract, evidenced by the ticket, but for negligence in furnishing an improper mattress ; and, as already indicated, upon the facts presented, no actionable negligence is shown.
The decree of the District Court is accordingly affirmed.