268 F. 464 | 6th Cir. | 1920
On the 14th day of July, 1919, Henry Thomas filed a libel in personam in the District Court of the United
The respondent in his answer denied that John Eynch was “master of the vessel,” that any assault was made upon libelant as recited in the libel, and averred that, if any assault did in fact take place, he is not liable therefor, for the reasons, first, that the assault did not take place on the boat or river, but on the Arkansas bank; second, that the assault, if it did take place, was a personal difficulty between Eynch. one employe of the boat, and the libelant, another employé on the boat; that whatever Eynch did in this respect was clearly without the apparent scope of his authority and not binding upon the respondent, who was not present and had not authorized Eynch to make such assault. He also denied that he or any one else connected with the vessel had anything to do with the libelant leaving the boat. The respondent further averred that, if the plaintiff suffered any damage whatever on account of injuries inflicted by Lynch, such injuries were caused by acts of Eynch upon the shore in the state of Arkansas, and for this reason clearly without the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty.
The District Court overruled the plea to its jurisdiction and awarded damages to the libelant in the sum of $1,500, from which decree an appeal was taken to this court.
The evidence is undoubtedly sufficient to support the finding of the trial court that John Lynch at the time stated in the libel was acting as master of the boat, at least in the absence of its owner, Wolfe, notwithstanding his original employment may have been,as clerk. The evidence also sustains the finding of the trial court that Lynch, while so acting as master of the vessel, assaulted and beat libelant on board the steamboat Whisper while it was lying in the waters of the Mississippi river and discharging freight at Upper Turnages Landing. Lynch specifically denies this, but Thomas testifies that when he came back on the boat, after having dropped a package of crackers, Lynch struck him a couple of times with a piece of iron pipe; that he (Thomas) then ran around the boat; that after awhile Lynch came on the left-hand side of the boat and told him to go up forward. This evidence of Thomas is corroborated by Lillie Cooper and George Cooper, who were on the boat at the time. This is all the evidence touching that particular transaction.
After this occurrence on the boat, Lynch ordered Thomas to assist some men in rolling a barrel of sugar up the hill from the landing. The evidence does not disclose how long it was, after he had struck Thomas with a piece of pipe on board the vessel, that he ordered him to assist these men with the barrel of sugar; but it is apparent from the evidence of Thomas himself that it was some considerable time. It was after Lynch had gone around upon the left-hand side of the vessel, which was the side away from the bank, discovered Thomas there, and ordered him forward. While assisting these men to roll this barrel of sugar up the hill from the' landing, Thomas slipped and pulled two or three other men down with him. Thomas testifies that at that time Lynch “was behind me with a piece of pipe, and poking me with it, and when I slipped it hit me, and I trotted off a little piece, and he throwed the iron pipe, and the iron pipe hit me and stood me up, and I was too weak; I fell.” He further testifies upon cross-examination that after he had fallen, “the engineer, night watchman, kicked me in my head, and the engineer stood me up.” Thomas also testifies that Lynch, after throwing the iron pipe and knocking him down, drew a pistol and
■ It is clear from all the evidence in the case that the major injuries to this libelant were occasioned by the assault and beating upon the shore. For that injury he has a remedy in another forum. He is also entitled to recover in a court of admiralty jurisdiction whatever damages he actually sustained from the injuries inflicted upon him on board the vessel. Spencer v. Kelley, 32 Fed. 838; The Sallie Ion, 153 Fed. 659; The Vueltabajo, 163 Fed. 594.
It is true that by reason of the second assault and beating on the shore, following so closely the first assault upon the boat, that it will be a difficult task for a court to determine the exact amount of damages suffered from injuries inflicted by the master when he struck him with the piece of iron pipe on board the vessel. It would be wholly impossible to do this from the evidence in this record. It may be possible, however, upon the retrial of this case, when the evidence is directed solely to this maritime tort, for a court to ascertain the exact
Judgment reversed; cause remanded.