Jandreau v. Witherbee
Opinion of the Court
Libelant was the captain and owner of the canal boat Lyman Hall, which on June 24, 1896, was being loaded with iron ore at defendants’ wharf, on the west shore of Lake Champlain, at Port Henry, N. Y. The loading began about 7 a.m., and, according to the usual custom, the first part of the load was brought aboard in wheelbarrows, and, when dumped, was trimmed by libelant’s men. It was trimmed even on the boat, from bow to stem, the whole length of the boat, about one foot deep. The ore brought on in wheelbarrows amounted to about 105 tons. They then began, about 2:30 p. m., to load some 35 tons more through a chute. There were fire ears loaded with ore, holding 6 or 7 tons each. These cars ran upon a trestle, which followed the line of the wharf, about 12 or 15 feet back from its front. The trestle was about 20 feet high, and from it there ran a chute so arranged as to catch the ore as it was discharged from the bottom of a car, and conduct it down to drop beyond the edge of the wharf into the boat. The mouth of the chute was 4 or 5 feet above the deck of the boat, the distance varying with the amount of load in the boat and the height of the water in the lake. The chute was arranged with a lever, which opened and shut a gate, thus admitting or preventing the running of the ore. The lever was worked by a man known as the “lever man,” from a platform nearly on a level with the trestle. Inasmuch as the chute was stationary, the method of loading practiced that day (as usual) was to move the boat along the dock, so that different parts of the deck pamc, in succession, under the mouth of the chute. The boat was moved by men standing on it, and pushing it along. On the day in question the bow of the boat was first placed under the chute. When
The district judge, in a brief memorandum, found the libelant to blame for not stopping the chute while he went forward, and that the defendants are not chargeable for the neglect of the “pusher” to attend to the chute properly, the libelant having left that matter in his care. From these findings no appeal has been taken. He further found “that the superintendent and lever man were to blame for sending down ore in such quantities when the captain was forward necessarily, and could be seen there; they must have known such quantities of ore in one place were dangerous.” We are unable to concur in this conclusion. The method of loading at that wharf was well known to everybody. To the captain of each boat, himself familiar with its strength or weakness, with its capacity, and with the draught required for his future navigation, it was left to regulate the quantity of ore to be taken in from the chute, and the place where it was to be dumped. Libelant’s own testimony on this point is most positive. He said: ‘When they drop the ore [from the chute], it is for the captain of the boat to say ‘Stop,’ you see.” ‘When we began on tire bow, I told him to let it come easy. He let it go until I told him to stop. Whether it fills the boat or not, I suppose they would wait for me to give orders.” The way they “know when to let the ore run and when to stop it [is that] we let him know from down below. We tell him to stop; we tell him to go ahead. * ⅜ ⅜ [They] take orders from me when to start and slop.” The superintendent of the dock, having general charge of all that was going on there, had a right to rely upon the libelant attending to the matter
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JANDREAU v. WITHERBEE
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- 1 case
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- Published