
    John C. Maher, by His Guardian ad Litem, Ellen Gleason, Respondent, v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, Appellant.
    First Department,
    December 31, 1913.
    Negligence—injury to longshoreman employed as “ signalman ” and “hooker-on” in lowering cotton into hatch of vessel — evidence — detail of work — proximate cause — contributory negligence.
    In an action by a. longshoreman to recover for personal injuries sustained while working on defendant’s vessel as a “ signalman ” and “ hooker-on,” by being struck by a bale of cotton which struck a guy while being transferred by a derrick from the dock into the hatch of the vessel, it was claimed that the defendant was negligent in attaching the guy to a ventilator instead of attaching it to ring bolts in the deck, and in furnishing five employees instead of six, thereby compelling the plaintiff to do the work of two men..
    Evidence examined, and held, that the fact that the plaintiff was performing the duties of two men was not the proximate cause of the accident which apparently resulted from his contributory negligence;
    That the fastening of the guy upon the ventilator was a detail of the work for which the defendant was not liable.
    Appeal by the defendant, Oompagnie Generate Transatlantique, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 12th day of May, 1912, upon the verdict of a jury for $5,500, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 15th day of May, 1913, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Joseph P. Nolan of counsel [Nolan Brothers, attorneys], for the appellant.
    
      Richard J. Donovan of counsel [Herbert D. Cohen with him on the brief], for the respondent.
   Clarke, J.:

Plaintiff was injured while working for defendant as a longshoreman on December 22,1911. He was then two days less than nineteen years old and had been employed by various steamship companies during the year previous. He was a rigger, deckman or sailor. The longshoreman works by the hour. He watches for ships to come in and moves from ship to ship, from one steamship line to another. The men are picked "at the gate and know where to go without being told. The boss stevedore hired plaintiff on the noon previous to his injury. The method is that the stevedore goes to the gate of the dock and blows a whistle. The sailors, riggers and deckmen get in line and the first man picked acts as gangwayman or takes the hatch, and the others take their places according to custom. The gangwayman gets five cents more than the others. The sailors or riggers do hooking up, passing the word, turning on steam, running the winch or act as gangwaymen. Hooking up is putting on the hook that lifts the draft, and removing the hook. Passing the word is signaling by word of mouth or by hand when everything is clear for receiving the draft on the ship. Punning the winch is doing by machinery what a person running a derrick by hand would do, turning a crank so that the lifting rope winds round a drum or spool. Turning on steam is letting steam run into the winch. Acting as gangwayman is standing over the hatch, looking into the hold to see that all is clear for the draft and giving the word to the assistant gangwayman or passing-the-word-man to bring in the draft. When the general foreman or assistant foreman directs, the gangwayman changes the place of loading, and, incidentally, adjusts the guys and the rigging to the new conditions with the assistance of the men of the gang.

On the day of Maher’s accident cotton was being loaded into the steamship Hochctmbeau. She was a new ship carrying only one class of passengers. She had four hatches. Maher was working forward of the bridge at No. 3 hatch. She was moored at the time on the south side of pier 51, North river, her bow inshore. He was working at the port or inshore side of the ship. She was breasted off from the dock, coal boats being alongside. Her deck was about twenty-five feet above the floor of the dock from which cotton was being swung up. On the dock was a derrick run by electricity and operated by Weldon. To this winch was attached what is called the Burton fall. The hook known as the Burton hook at the end of the Burton fall would be attached to a draft of cotton and the cotton would be swung up across the deck, a distance of eighteen or twenty feet and suspended over the hatch while Maher took off the Burton hook. At this time the up and down fall, operated by the winch on the deck by Hansen, received the weight of the draft and lowered the cotton into the hold.

Maher’s duty, as pass-the-word-man, was to stand at the rail near the dock and signal to Weldon, the man at the winch on the dock which operated the Burton fall. As soon as Weldon started his winch Maher would give the signal to Hansen, the winchman on the ship, to go ahead, as both the Burton fall and the up and down fall, which was attached to a boom and ran down alongside the boom through a pulley at the base thereof to the winch on deck, were attached to each draft. Each winchman had to take in the slack of his line when the other fall was bearing the weight of the draft. When the draft got up over the rail of the ship the up and down fall, attached to the deck winch, drew it over to the hatch and held it suspended. Maher’s duty was to watch the draft, go over to the hatch opening and then to signal to slack away with the Burton fall, then, as hooker-on, unhook the Burton fall from the draft so that its weight would rest on the up and down fall. He testified: When the draft got the height of the rail there was no need of me standing there, because I would be knocked down with the draft. I started for the hatch, watching the draft coming in. * * . * When it got as far as the guy [alluding to a guy from the end of the boom Which was made fast to a ventilator on the deck] the comer struck the guy and came back and came away over here and struck me. That draft of cotton swung over to strike me about five or six feet toward me. It swung aft. * * * That is away from the boom. It swung away from the head of the boom. It came in half a circle. It came out toward the rail of the ship a little; * "x" * came out towards the rail of the ship first and swung around behind my back. It hit me right in the left shoulder. Hit me full on the shoulder. The whole thing happened so quick I could not get out of the way. I had my shoulder to it. As I walked over I was looking at the draft and looking at the gangwayman, and I told him to go out and give the man swinging up the cotton a call for not slinging up the cotton properly. Q. That was what you were going over to say to Albert Nelson ? A. And I was looking at the draft at the same time coming fin. I was looking at the draft and talking to Albert at the one time. The man that I wanted my own boss to give instructions to was some dock man. I do not know who he was. He was sending it in, but he was not slinging it up right. If I unhooked a draft there, if it was not slung up right, it would drop down and kill a couple of men in the hold. ”

In his notice of injury he states that he was “ informed that the cotton was caused to swing out of the usual course by striking a guy rope.” At the trial he swore that he saw the draft hit the guy. Conway, his eye-witness, testified: “Maher was from the combings of the hatch when the cotton hit it, about a couple of feet. * •* * I saw it going to hit the guy rope. I hollered to him across the hatch, to both men. Hollered to get out of the road. He was facing me, and he had his back to the draft. * "x" * He thought he was out of the way. He was standing there, waiting for the draft to come in. Standing perfectly still. He was not talking to anybody as I know of. Q. Did you hear him say yesterday he was talking to Albert Nelson? A. I could not hear that across the hatch.” Defendant’s two eye-witnesses testified that Maher had his back to the draft and was not looking at it.

The particular negligence complained of was in attaching the guy in an improper and dangerous place, in view of the fact that the cotton was coming in on an angle, in not having ring bolts in the deck to which the guy could be attached in proper places, therefore compelling it to be made fast to the ventilator, and in not furnishing a sufficient number of men, the claim being that instead of five men in this gang there should have been six. As there were only five men the plaintiff was compelled to do the work of two men, to wit, that of a signal-passer and a hooker-on.

During the charge Mr. N olan (for the defendant) said: “I also ask your honor to charge the jury that they are instructed that the fastening and placing of the guy rope was a detail of the work for the placing of Which the defendant itself was not liable. The Court: The fastening and placing of the guy upon the ventilator was a detail of the work for the placing of which the defendant itself was not liable. I will charge it.” That, then, was the law of the case. If so, negligence could not be predicated upon the position of the guy. A verdict based upon such negligence would be against the law as charged.

Nor can actionable negligence be found from the fact that five men were in the gang instead of six. Five only were frequently employed, and witnesses testified they had served as “hooker-on” and “pass-the-word-man” at the same time. The fact that Maher was so acting was not the proximate cause of the accident. The plaintiff testified that he went over to speak to Nelson about the way in which the man on the dock'was slinging the draft, so, according to his testimony, he would have put himself in the same place he was in at the time of the accident whether he had any duty as hooker-on oí* not. It seems to me that, with negligence based upon the placing of the guy eliminated, there is no basis for this judgment.

The accident was apparently caused by plaintiff’s own negligence. He knew this draft was swinging over. He should have watched out for and avoided it. Having failed to prove negligence on the defendant’s part, the verdict should not stand.

The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.

Judgment and order.reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event, Order to be settled on notice,  