Albina Ferry Co. v. The Imperial

38 F. 614, 13 Sawy. 639, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMarch 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 F. 614 (Albina Ferry Co. v. The Imperial) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albina Ferry Co. v. The Imperial, 38 F. 614, 13 Sawy. 639, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76 (D. Or. 1889).

Opinion

Deady, J.

This suit is brought bydhe libelant, the Albina Ferry Company, to recover damages in the sum of $500, alleged to have been caused by a collision of the ship Imperial, while being towed by the steam-boat S. G. Reed, with the ferry-boat Veto No. 2.

The facts appear to be as follows: Between 1 and 2 o’clock in the afternoon of September 14, 1888, Albert Betts, a Wallamet river pilot, was employed to dock the Imperial at the Irving dock, in East Portland, and for that purpose obtained from the claimant, the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, the use of the steam-boat S. G. Reed and crew.

The Imperial was lying at anchor in the river some distance below Montgomery dock, in Albina, and to the west side of the river. Her length is 198 feet, and her beam 38 feet. She had just arrived from Wilmington, Cal., in ballast, and was 15 feet out of water and 18 feet in.

At the time of the collision the Veto No. 2 was being run by the libel-ant, a corporation formed under the laws of Oregon, under a license, as a ferfy-boat between her slip or landing on the east side of the Wallamet, in Albina, just south of river lot 19, and her landing on the west side of the same, on lots 26 and 27, in the Couch addition to Portland; the width of the river between such landings being about 1,200 feet. North of the ferry-slip the river front is occupied for about 1,000 feet by the Allen & Lewis warehouse and the Montgomery dock. About 100 feet south of the ferry-slip is Shaver’s wharf, and Irving’s dock is about 350 feet south of the same.

In the space between the ferry-slip and Shaver’s wharf is a small floating wood wharf of pontoon, with a waiting-house on it. The ferry-boat is run on a steel wire cable three and a half inches in circumference, and fastened to the shore at either end.' The cable is supported by and passes over a sheave or block held in a hanger 18 inches above the wa[615]*615ter, which is fastened to the under side of the guard on the upper side, and at each end of the boat, about 18 feet from the end of the same.

The Veto, when in its slip on the east side, extends about 60 feet into the water beyond the dock line, and immediately off the outer end thereof the water is from 25 to 30 feet deep, and deepens to the middle of the river.

At the ti fue of the collision, the cable off the end of the boat was within 10 feet and 5 inches of the surface of the water, and at 18 feet beyond, it was within 11J feet.

The Reed made fast to the Imperial on her starboard side, and the two vessels, propelled by the wheel of the former, and navigated as one, under the charge of Pilot Betts, started up stream, heading eastward for the lower end of Montgomery dock. The wind was blowing from the east, according to the report of the signal-office, at the rate of six miles an hour; and, to avoid being blown over to the west side, the pilot pun-posed to keep the vessel under the lee of the docks on the east side.

When the vessel was within 100 feet of the dock line, at the lower end of the Montgomery dock, she was straightened up the river, and the engine on the Reed stopped to lessen the headway; but the vessel commencing to drift to the west, at about 300 feet from the ferry-slip the engine was “started up” again, and at about 100 feet therefrom it was stopped again, and the vessel moved along in the direction of Irving’s dock at not exceeding two miles an hour.

At this time the ferry-boat was at her east landing, under the charge of a collector and engineer, who had seen the Imperial coming up the river, some 600 or 700 feet away, and thought, as they say, that she was going to stop below them, because she was so close in to the docks. There were some vehicles and passengers on the boat, apparently bound west. The collector and engineer were on shore examining the condition of the cable and the pontoon on which the boat made its landing. As the Imperial came in front of the slip the engineer saw her, and being, as he says, alarmed at her proximity to the ferry-boat, he jumped on board, ran into the engine-room, and commenced to work her ashore into the slip, which the collector says he did.

And here arises the disputed question in the case. It is alleged by the libelant that the Imperial ran on and against the apron of the ferryboat and pushed it around and up stream, until the cable broke, when it gave way in the direction of the shore, and allowed the ship to pass on to the dock. On the other hand, the claimants insist that the Imperial did not strike the ferry-boat at all, and was not nearer to her than 20 feet, but that in passing along at that distance or more in front of her, the keel of the Imperial caught the cable of the ferry-boat, and pulled the latter around until the cable parted or pulled loose from its fastenings on the bank. ■

Neither the collector nor the engineer of the ferry-boat can say that the Imperial touched her, because they were not in a condition to see whether she did or not. The collector was on shore, and I suppose the house on the ferry-boat obstructed his view. However, without expía-[616]*616nation, he-says he could not see whether the ship touched the boat or not. The engineer was in the engine-room and could not see, but he says he felt a jar, which he thought was caused by a collision of the vessels.

One witness called by the libelant, Marshal Peterson, who was engaged in shingling a small wharf-house to the south and in the immediate vicinity of the ferry-boat, says the ship struck the apron of the ferryboat, and pushed it around. John Lund, who was called by the libel-ant, and was also shingling on the same house, says the ship was 15 or 20 feet from the boat. She struck the cable, and turned the boat around. Arthur Bell, who was on Shaver’s wharf at the time, saj’-s the ship did not touch the ferry-boat, and that she was between 20 and 30 feet away from her. Albert Betts, the pilot in charge of the Imperial, says the ship was 20 or 30 feet away from the ferry-boat; and that, as the latter came abreast of the ship’s forerigging, he saw the ferry-boat commence to move away,- when he knew that the ship’s keel had caught the cable. He iln-mediately gave orders to back the engine, but before the ship could be stopped something parted or gave away, the boat righted, and the ship passed on.

On this testimony it must be found that the ship did not collide with the boat, and that she passed outside of her at least 20 feet. There is scarcely any room for doubt on the subject. Peterson appears to have been very much alarmed for his own safety, and must be mistaken.

Several independent circumstances in the case also point to the same conclusion.

For instance, the apron of the boat does not appear to have sustained any appreciable injury. One of the witnesses for the libelant says it was twisted some. The hanger at the outer end of the boat, through which the cable passed, was torn out of the guard. Now, if the apron had been caught between the Imperial on the lower side and the cable on the upper, it would have been seriously injured, if not destroyed.

And, if the Imperial had so come in contact with the apron and thereby pushed the boat against the cable, it is not possible that the hanger by which the latter was supported could have been pulled out. But if the Imperial caught the cable on its keel, 20 feet distant from the boat, and thereby dragged the latter around, and up stream, it is easily seen that the hanger might have been pulled out or given away, as it did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 F. 614, 13 Sawy. 639, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albina-ferry-co-v-the-imperial-ord-1889.