It is insisted by appellant that the judgment in this case can not be sustained, because the record, it is claimed, shows that deceased, both before and at the time of the accident, was not exercising ordinary diligence. It is said that the vessels and tugs were rightfully in the slip, and that deceased had notice that those vessels were liable to be towed out of the slip at any time; that deceased had notice of the uses to which this slip was put; that he had worked on the elevator from the time it was built; that, as one who is on a railroad track must take notice that trains are liable to run thereon, and that one who is in the street must observe that others have a right to use that thoroughfare, so he must have known that jibbooms may extend over the dock line; that the winds blow; that ships can not be managed with entire certainty, and so that it was gross negligence—certainly not ordinary care—for him to sit in this elevated position, twenty-eight feet above the dock, working with his back to the river regardless of what vessels and tugs therein were doing.
This insistance of appellant must be predicated upon the idea that in towing vessels out of the slip, appellant had a right to do so in such a manner that their bowsprits would project over the dock, for it is clear that if appellant had no such right, then the deceased was not bound to take any note whatever of its proceedings. One who is sitting peacefully upon his own premises is not required to keep watch lest he may be injured by the acts of those who trespass thereon.
What is said as to the obligation of one walking on a railroad track or passing down a street is-quite true, and would be applicable to this case if deceased had been working in or above any part of the river. But it appears, and .appellant’s counsel states in his brief, that the scaffold on which deceased was working was on the river side of the elevator, twelve feet over the dock line. It is only in and along the river that vessels have a right to move. They have no right to move, either the vessel itself, which is of course impossible, or any part thereof, the masts, spars or booms along and above the line of the dock. The right of passage up and down the river for vessels extends only to the dock line. Parties have a right to, and in many instances upon the Chicago river, actually do construct buildings upon the dock line, and any interference with or breaking into such buildings by the bows, masts or attachments of any vessels would be a trespass upon the rights of the persons owning the property so interfered with.
When the jibboom of the vessel projected over the dock line and struck the elevator, it was in a position where it had no right to he, and where appellant, in endeavoring to move this schooner out, had no right to place it. The deceased was not called upon, situated as he was twelve feet inside the dock line, to be upon the watch to see that' some one did not trespass upon the ground of his employer by moving the jibboom of a schooner up and down and over the dock.
In the case of Johnson v. The Chicago & Pacific Elevator Company, 105 Ill. 462, a judgment for damages done by a tug running into an elevator situated on the bank of the Chicago river, was affirmed. It is true that in that suit no such point as is insisted upon here was made. It does not seem to have occurred to the defendants in that case, that vessels moving up and down the Chicago river had a right to move their bowsprits along and above the dock as far as might be necessary; and no case has been cited, and we are aware of none in which it has been held that the right of vessels moving up and down a navigable stream for their convenient or necessary passage, extends to a use or occupation in any way of any portion of the territory beyond the line of the dock.
It is also urged that deceased, in seizing hold of the jibboom stay of the Lookout, and letting go of the rope which supported the platform, not only failed to exercise ordinary diligence, but was reckless. We do not think that the conduct of deceased in this regard can be properly characterized as either reckless or a failure to exercise ordinary diligence.
There is nothing in the record to show that deceased endeavored to do anything other than what he thought was necessary and best for his own safety. Granting that he made a mistake as to what, under the circumstances and in the emergency of the moment, it was best to do, his conduct then amounts, not to a failure to exercise ordinary care, but merely to a misjudgment as to xvhat; in the endeavor to exercise the highest care, it was best to do.
The law not only does not require a person suddenly placed in a position of great peril to exercise that coolness of judgment which, under other circumstances, he would exercise, or which prudent men ordinarily exercise, but tabes note of the fact that there are few persons who, when suddenly called upon to act hastily, do not act less wisely than they would have done had they been afforded time for deliberation. The question is not what, in after hours, when á calm review of all the circumstances can be taken, and when results are known w'hich could not then with certainty be predicted, one can see it was best to do, but whether the party, under the circumstances of peril in which he was placed, did what, at the time, seemed to him the prudent thing to do. Moreover, it is to be borne in mind that in this case the circumstance of sudden peril in which the deceased was placed, and the necessity for hasty action upon his part, was entirely the result of the negligent conduct of appellant; andthe wrong doer can hardly be heard to urge that, having placed deceased in this position of extreme peril, he, in the surprise and excitement of the moment, failed to do that which was best for his own security.
The language of the Supreme Court of this State in the case of C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Becker, Adm’r, 76 Ill. 25-31, is applicable to this case :
“ Where, for instance, the defendant has been. guilty of negligence, but seeks to defend on the ground that the party injured might have avoided the injury by the exercise of ordinary care and caution, it sometimes happens in such cases that as a direct and immediate cause of the defendant’s negligence the party injured was placed in a position of compulsion and sudden surprise, bereft of independent moral agency and opportunity of reflection. In such a case it would be against the common judgment of mankind to hold the injured party either morally or legally responsible for contributory negligence.”
It is true that the wind was blowing briskly at the time of the accident, but it does not appear that this was unknown to the managers of the tug at the time they commenced their operations, and they were as much bound to take note of what the effect of the wind might be upon the movements of the vessel, as they were of what movement might be imparted to it by the operation of the tug álone.
This accident seems to have been the result of the negligent and wrongful conduct of appellant. We find nothing whatever to show that deceased was not exercising ordinary care and diligence, or that he in any way or wise failed, under the circumstances, to do what, in the peril of the moment, seemed to him best for his own safety.
The judgment of the court below will therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.