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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Cairns v. Clyde Navigation Trustees [1898] ScotLR 35_808 (17 June 1898) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1898/35SLR0808.html Cite as: [1898] ScotLR 35_808, [1898] SLR 35_808 |
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Page: 808↓
[Sheriff of Lanarkshire.
A labourer engaged in loading a ship at a harbour was injured by the fault of the craneman “slewing” round the crane instead of lowering as ordered by the stevedore. The loading or discharge of vessels at the harbour was regulated as follows:—All the cranes belonged to a body of Navigation Trustees, and the men who worked these cranes were appointed and paid, and could be dismissed only by them. When the owners of a ship wished to load or unload the vessel they applied to the trustees for an order for a crane and craneman. On receiving this order they delivered it to the stevedore whom they had instructed to load or discharge their vessel. The stevedore showed this order to the crane superintendent, who appointed a man to work the crane allotted to the shipowners. If the craneman refused to obey the stevedore's orders, neither the latter nor the shipowners could dismiss him; their only remedy was to complain to the trustees, who might, as they thought right, either retain the same craneman at the crane or replace him by another of their own selection.
Held that on the occasion in question the craneman was the servant of the Navigation Trustees, and that the latter were liable in damages for the injury caused through his fault.
While Francis Cairns, quay labourer, Dundee, was working on 27th January 1897 in the hold of the steamship “Ardgowan,” which was being loaded in the harbour at Glasgow, he was injured by being crushed by some steel plates, owing to the fault of the craneman, who “slewed” round the crane bearing the steel plates instead of lowering it as he was ordered to do by the stevedore.
Cairns brought an action for £250 damages against the Trustees of the Clyde Navigation, averring that the craneman was their servant.
The defenders denied that they were responsible for the accident, on the ground, inter alia, that the craneman on the occasion specified was not their servant, but was under the orders and control of the stevedore engaged by the shipowners to load the ship.
The pursuer pleaded, inter alia—“(1) The defences are irrelevant. (2) The pursuer having been injured in the manner libelled, through the negligence of the defenders' servant, is entitled to compensation for said injuries from the defenders.”
The defenders pleaded, inter alia—“(1) The pursuer's statements are irrelevant and insufficient to support his pleas-in-law. (2)The pursuer having had no contract with the defenders, and the latter having no duty to perform towards him, the defenders should be assoilzied with expenses. (3)The accident to the pursuer not having been caused by the fault of the defenders, or those for whom they are responsible, the defenders should be assoilzied with expenses.”
On 7th April 1897 the Sheriff-Substitute ( Balfour) dismissed the action as irrelevant, and on 23rd November the Sheriff ( Berry) adhered.
The pursuer appealed to the Court of Session, and on 27th February 1898 the Second Division of the Court sustained the appeal, recalled the interlocutor appealed against, and of consent allowed a proof before answer.
Lord Moncreiff heard the proof, which
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showed that the following was the system under which vessels were loaded and unloaded in Glasgow Harbour. The Clyde Trustees were the owners of all the cranes in the harbour, and the men who worked these cranes were appointed and paid and could be dismissed only by them. When the owners of a ship wished to load or unload the vessel in the harbour they applied to the Clyde Trustees for an order for a crane and craneman. On receiving this order they delivered it to the stevedore whom they had instructed to load or discharge their vessel. The stevedore showed this order to the crane superintendent, who appointed a man to work the crane allotted to the shipowner. If the craneman refused to obey the stevedore's orders, neither the latter nor the shipowner could dismiss him; their only remedy was to complain to the Clyde Trustees, who might, as they thought right, either retain the same craneman at the crane or replace him by another of their own selection. By joint—minute the parties to the action agreed that in the event of the defenders being found liable in damages to the pursuer the amount of damages should be fixed at £50.
Argued for pursuer—It was conceded that the craneman was alone in fault, and that he was the general servant of the defenders. The onus was therefore on the defenders to show that on this occasion he had ceased to be their servant. This onus they had not discharged. The maxim respondeat superior applied. The defenders selected the craneman, they alone paid him, and they alone were entitled to dismiss him. They were therefore responsible for his fault— Jones v. Corporation of Liverpool (1885), L. R., 14 Q. B. D. 890; Stephen v. Thurso Police Commissioners, March 3, 1870, 3 R., opinion of Lord Gifford, 542. The carriage cases were authority upon the point— Quarman v. Burnett (1840), 6 M. & W. 499. It was admitted that a man might be responsible for the servant of another if he was given absolute control over him, but in the present case the stevedore had no power to dismiss the craneman, and that distinguished the present case from Donovan and the other cases quoted by the defenders.
Argued for defenders— The question seems to be, whose servant was the craneman at the time that the accident occurred, and under whose instructions was he acting? The only answer could be—he was the servant of the stevedore and not of the Clyde Trustees. A general servant of one man might be the servant of another for the purpose of a particular operation, and so long as he was the servant of the latter and doing his work the latter was responsible for his actions. The case was identical with Duncan v. Laing, &c., Construction Syndicate (1893), 1 Q.B. 629, and was ruled by it. It was also on the same lines as Murray v. Currie (1870), L.R., 6 C.P. 24; Rourke v. White Moss Colliery Company (1877), L.R., 2 C.P. 205. The case of Union Steamship Company v. Claridge, L.R. (1894), Ap. Cas. 189, was quite distinct from the present, as in that case the stevedore had no control over the winchman and never gave him orders, while in the present case the craneman took his orders from the stevedore. The carriage cases, as pointed out by Bowen, L.J., in Donovan, (1893), 1 Q.B. 634, had nothing to do with the point presented in this case.
At advising—
The facts necessary to be considered in the disposal of this question are few, and none of them in controversy. To enable the ship to be loaded the use of a steam crane was required, and this could only be obtained from the defenders. They have steam cranes at certain berths in the harbour of Glasgow, which they let out, and for the use of which they charge. They do not let out any steam crane except on condition that one of their own cranemen, selected by themselves, goes to work it, whose wages they pay. If the craneman acts improperly, as, for example, if he refuses to work at the hours which the stevedore requires, or disobeys any order given to him by the stevedore, the stevedore cannot dismiss him, his only remedy being to complain to the defenders, who may, as they think right, either retain the same craneman at the crane or replace him by another of their own selection. It appears, therefore, that the defenders have the selection of the craneman—they pay him his wages, and they alone have the right to discharge him for disobedience or any other reason. I should have thought that these considerations all pointed to the conclusion that the craneman was the servant of the defenders. What other material element is there in the relation of a master to his servant beyond the appointment, payment of wages during the service, and termination of the service at pleasure? But the defenders maintain that the craneman was the servant of the stevedore. It is difficult to see how this could be. The stevedore entered into no contract of employment or otherwise with the craneman; the stevedore did not ask the defenders for their crane or craneman; he did not know what craneman was to work the crane, or whether the same craneman would be at the crane for two consecutive days. That all depended on the pleasure of the defenders. And alt that is inconsistent with the idea of the craneman being the servant, or, in any proper sense, under the control of the stevedore. Nor, for the same reasons, can it be said that the craneman was the servant of the shipowner. But if not the servant of the shipowner or of the stevedore, then he must have been the servant of the defenders.
Page: 810↓
Again, there is nothing in the cases referred to to indicate that the engineman or the craneman could not be dismissed from the employment by the person under whose control they were. But admittedly in the present case the stevedore could not dismiss the craneman. He could complain to the craneman's employees—the defenders; it remained entirely with them to say whether the craneman should be dismissed or replaced by another, or not. Lastly, in the cases referred to, the person who had hired or borrowed the engine or crane with the man to work it was at liberty to choose from whom he would hire or borrow. Now, it was from the defenders alone that a crane or craneman could be hired. The present case, in my opinion, is much more like the case of Claridge than the case of Donovan.
I think this case is analogous to the carriage cases, and may be decided on the same principle. The hirer of a carriage has so much control over the coachman as entitles him to order the coachman to go on or stop at his pleasure, but such control does not make him the coachman's master or responsible for the coachman's fault. The stevedore had no more control here over the action of the craneman. He could direct him when to raise and when to lower, but beyond that he could give no orders and exercise no control in the working of the crane.
But the true view of this case, in my opinion, is one which the Sheriff-Substitute has rejected. I think the shipowner, under separate contracts, engaged both the defenders and the stevedore to load his vessel— the defenders in so far as the loading involved the necessary use of the crane; the stevedore in so far as the use of the crane was not necessary. If that is the correct view, then the defenders are liable for the wrong done by their servant to the pursuer, on the principle which governed the case of Johnson v. Lindsay, L.R. (1891), A.C. 371.
Page: 811↓
Coming now to the question of control, Shaw had no general control over the craneman. He was entitled to order him to raise, lower, or slue the crane as occasion required; but if the craneman refused to obey him he could not dismiss him and put another in his place; he could only complain to the defenders' foreman, who might or might not substitute another craneman. If the foreman refused to change the craneman, the stevedore had either to acquiesce or to give up loading or unloading the vessel.
These being the conditions of the craneman's employment, and the limits of the stevedore's control, I have no hesitation in holding that the defenders are liable for the consequence of McDonald's negligence.
As regards authority, I am of opinion that what are called the carriage cases are directly in point—in particular Quarman v. Burnet, 6 M. & W. 499; Jones v. Mayor of Liverpool, 14 Q.B.D. 892; and Anderson v. Glasgow Tramway Co., 21 R. 318. The authority of these cases is not disputed, and if they apply they are conclusive. I am unable to see any solid distinction between those cases and the present. The driver of a hired carriage is in precisely the same position as regards the hirer as was the craneman to the stevedore in the present case. The driver of a carriage is bound to obey the orders of the hirer, who may tell him where to go, when to stop, when to go on, to go fast or slow, and so forth. What difference is between such orders and those which a stevedore gives to the craneman, which are simply to raise, lower, or slue as occasion requires? Neither the hirer of the carriage nor the stevedore has power of selection or dismissal, and if either of them is dissatisfied with the driver of the carriage or the crane he can only complain to the driver's employer.
There may be cases in which A's servant may for a particular purpose be regarded as the servant of B, though for other purposes he continues the servant of A; but in the present case I do not think that we could decide in favour of the defenders without holding that in no case could A's servant work to the order of B without rendering B liable for the consequences of his negligence.
Stress was naturally laid by the defenders upon the case of Donovan [1893], 1 Q.B. 629. That case certainly very closely resembles the present; but it has features which may serve to distinguish it. First, the craneman who was engaged by the wharfingers was not forced upon them; he was supplied to them along with a crane at their request by the defendants; they were not bound to take him, and they could dismiss him. Secondly, the contract under which the crane and driver were supplied was not to supply them for a single job, but whenever they might be required. Lastly, for the time crane and craneman were placed unreservedly at the disposal of the wharfingers. It may be that under these circumstances the Court were justified in holding that the craneman was fully under the control of the wharfingers, and that thus the defendants, his original employers, were not liable.
The case of Rourke v. White Moss Colliery Co., 2 C.P. Div. 205, can also be distinguished from the present case. Although the engineer who was lent to the contractor Whittle was the servant of the defendants, he was taken over by Whittle to assist him in the execution of a contract of considerable duration, and while with him was fully under his control as his servant.
In Murray v. Currie, L.R., 6 C.P. 24, the stevedore Kennedy selected Davis, one of the crew, to assist him and act as his servant, and he paid him and could dismiss him.
On the whole matter I think that the defenders are liable, and that the pursuer is entitled to damages.
Page: 812↓
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor
“Sustain the first plea-in-law for the pursuer: Assess the damages at the sum of £50, and decern against the defenders to make payment thereof to the pursuer.”
Counsel for the Pursuer— Young— A. S. D. Thomson. Agents— Whigham & Macleod, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defenders— Ure Q.C.— Deas. Agents— Webster Will & Ritchie, S.S.C.