R. C. VINCENT and Another v. LAKE ERIE TRANSPORTATION COMPANY
Nos. 16,262 - (102)
Supreme Court of Minnesota
109 Minn. 456; 124 N.W. 221; 1910 Minn. LEXIS 588
January 14, 1910
PRIOR HISTORY:
Action in the district court for St. Louis county to recover $1,200 for damage to
plaintiffs' wharf, caused by defendant negligently keeping its vessel tied to it. The
defendant in its answer alleged that a portion of the cargo was consigned to plaintiffs'
dock and on November 27, 1905, its vessel was placed alongside at the place and in the
manner designated by plaintiffs and the discharge of cargo continued until ten o'clock
that night, that by the time the discharge of cargo was completed the wind had attained so
great a velocity the master and crew were powerless to move the vessel. The case was tried
before Ensign, J., who denied the defendant's motion to direct a verdict in its favor, and
a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiffs for $500. From an order denying
defendant's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, it
appealed. Affirmed.
OPINION BY: O'BRIEN, J.
The steamship Reynolds, owned by the defendant, was for the purpose of discharging her
cargo on November 27, 1905, moored to plaintiffs' dock in Duluth. While the unloading of
the boat was taking place a storm from the northeast developed, which at about ten o'clock
p.m., when the unloading was completed, had so grown in violence that the wind was then
moving at fifty miles per hour and continued to increase during the night. There is some
evidence that one, and perhaps two, boats were able to enter the harbor that night, but it
is plain that navigation was practically suspended from the hour mentioned until the
morning of the twenty ninth, when the storm abated, and during that time no master would
have been justified in attempting to navigate his vessel, if he could avoid doing so.
After the discharge of the cargo the Reynolds signaled for a tug to tow her from the dock,
but none could be obtained because of the severity of the storm. If the lines holding the
ship to the dock had been cast off, she would doubtless have drifted away; but, instead,
the lines were kept fast, and as soon as one parted or chafed it was replaced,
sometimes with a larger one. The vessel lay upon the outside of the dock, her bow to the
east, the wind and waves striking her starboard quarter with such force that she was
constantly being lifted and thrown against the dock, resulting in its damage, as found by
the jury, to the amount of $500.
We are satisfied that the character of the storm was such that it would have been highly
imprudent for the master of the Reynolds to have attempted to leave the dock or to have
permitted his vessel to drift away from it. One witness testified upon the trial that the
vessel could have been warped into a slip, and that, if the attempt to bring the ship into
the slip had failed, the worst that could have happened would be that the vessel would
have been blown ashore upon a soft and muddy bank. The witness was not present in Duluth
at the time of the storm, and, while he may have been right in his conclusions, those in
charge of the dock and the vessel at the time of the storm were not required to use the
highest human intelligence, nor were they required to resort to every possible experiment
which could be suggested for the preservation of their property. Nothing more was
demanded of them than ordinary prudence and care, and the record in this case fully
sustains the contention of the appellant that, in holding the vessel fast to the dock,
those in charge of her exercised good judgment and prudent seamanship.
It is claimed by the respondent that it was negligence to moor the boat at an exposed part
of the wharf, and to continue in that position after it became apparent that the storm was
to be more than usually severe. We do not agree with this position. The part of the wharf
where the vessel was moored appears to have been commonly used for that purpose. It was
situated within the harbor at Duluth, and must, we think, be considered a proper and safe
place, and would undoubtedly have been such during what would be considered a very severe
storm. The storm which made it unsafe was one which surpassed in violence any which might
have reasonably been anticipated.
The appellant contends by ample assignments of error that, because its conduct during the
storm was rendered necessary by prudence and good seamanship under conditions over which
it had no control, it cannot be held liable for any injury resulting to the property
of others, and claims that the jury should have been so instructed. An analysis of the
charge given by the trial court is not necessary, as in our opinion the only question for
the jury was the amount of damages which the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, and no
complaint is made upon that score.
The situation was one in which the ordinary rules regulating property rights were
suspended by forces beyond human control, and if, without the direct intervention of some
act by the one sought to be held liable, the property of another was injured, such injury
must be attributed to the act of God, and not to the wrongful act of the person sought to
be charged. If during the storm the Reynolds had entered the harbor, and while there had
become disabled and been thrown against the plaintiffs' dock, the plaintiffs could not
have recovered. Again, if while attempting to hold fast to the dock the lines had parted,
without any negligence, and the vessel carried against some other boat or dock in the
harbor, there would be no liability upon her owner. But here those in charge of the vessel
deliberately and by their direct efforts held her in such a position that the damage
to the dock resulted, and, having thus preserved the ship at the expense of the dock, it
seems to us that her owners are responsible to the dock owners to the extent of the injury
inflicted.
In Depue v. Flatau, 100 Minn. 299, 111 N.W. 1, 8 L.R.A. (N.S.) 485, this court held that
where the plaintiff, while lawfully in the defendants' house, became so ill that he was
incapable of traveling with safety, the defendants were responsible to him in damages for
compelling him to leave the premises. If, however, the owner of the premises had furnished
the traveler with proper accommodations and medical attendance, would he have been able to
defeat an action brought against him for their reasonable worth?
In Ploof v. Putnam (Vt.) 71 Atl. 188, 20 L.R.A. (N.S.) 152, the supreme court of Vermont
held that where, under stress of weather, a vessel was without permission moored to a
private dock at an island in Lake Champlain owned by the defendant, the plaintiff was not
guilty of trespass, and that the defendant was responsible in damages because his
representative upon the island unmoored the vessel, permitting it to drift upon the shore,
with resultant injuries to it. If, in that case, the vessel had been permitted to
remain, and the dock had suffered an injury, we believe the shipowner would have been held
liable for the injury done.
Theologians hold that a starving man may, without moral guilt, take what is
necessary to sustain life; but it could hardly be said that the obligation would not be
upon such person to pay the value of the property so taken when he became able to do so.
And so public necessity, in times of war or peace, may require the taking of private
property for public purposes; but under our system of jurisprudence compensation must be
made.
Let us imagine in this case that for the better mooring of the vessel those in charge of
her had appropriated a valuable cable lying upon the dock. No matter how justifiable such
appropriation might have been, it would not be claimed that, because of the overwhelming
necessity of the situation, the owner of the cable could not recover its value.
This is not a case where life or property was menaced by any object or thing belonging to
the plaintiffs, the destruction of which became necessary to prevent the threatened
disaster. Nor is it a case where, because of the act of God, or unavoidable accident,
the infliction of the injury was beyond the control of the defendant, but is one where the
defendant prudently and advisedly availed itself of the plaintiffs' property for the
purpose of preserving its own more valuable property, and the plaintiffs are entitled to
compensation for the injury done.
Order affirmed.
DISSENT BY: LEWIS; JAGGARD
I dissent. It was assumed on the trial before the lower court that appellant's liability
depended on whether the master of the ship might, in the exercise of reasonable care, have
sought a place of safety before the storm made it impossible to leave the dock. The
majority opinion assumes that the evidence is conclusive that appellant moored its boat at
respondents' dock pursuant to contract, and that the vessel was lawfully in position at
the time the additional cables were fastened to the dock, and the reasoning of the opinion
is that, because appellant made use of the stronger cables to hold the boat in position,
it became liable under the rule that it had voluntarily made use of the property of
another for the purpose of saving its own.
In my judgment, if the boat was lawfully in position at the time the storm
broke, and the master could not, in the exercise of due care, have left that position
without subjecting his vessel to the hazards of the storm, then the damage to the dock,
caused by the pounding of the boat, was the result of an inevitable accident. If the
master was in the exercise of due care, he was not at fault. The reasoning of the opinion
admits that if the ropes, or cables, first attached to the dock had not parted, or if, in
the first instance, the master had used the stronger cables, there would be no liability.
If the master could not, in the exercise of reasonable care, have anticipated the severity
of the storm and sought a place of safety before it became impossible, why should he be
required to anticipate the severity of the storm, and, in the first instance, use the
stronger cables?
I am of the opinion that one who constructs a dock to the navigable line of waters, and
enters into contractual relations with the owner of a vessel to moor the same, takes the
risk of damage to his dock by a boat caught there by a storm, which event could not have
been avoided in the exercise of due care, and further, that the legal status of the
parties in such a case is not changed by renewal of cables to keep the boat from being
cast adrift at the mercy of the tempest.
JAGGARD, J.
I concur with Lewis, J.