Barrett v. City of New York

73 F. Supp. 832, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2199
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 F. Supp. 832 (Barrett v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. City of New York, 73 F. Supp. 832, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2199 (S.D.N.Y. 1947).

Opinion

LEIBELL, District Judge.

On December 22, 1943 a libel was • filed by Edward E. Barrett, as managing owner of the steamtug Grace A. Barrett, against the City of New York, as owner of the ferryboat Gold Star Mother, for $20,000 damages arising out of a collision between the tug Barrett and the ferry Gold Star Mother in New York Harbor on September 27, 1943 which libellant alleged was caused solely by the fault and negligence of the Gold Star Mother. The City of New York filed its answer to the libel on May 6, 1944, denying the allegations of fault and negligence, and on the same date filed a cross-libel against the tug Grace A. Barrett for $1,000 damages sustained by the City of New York by reason of the alleged negligence and fault of the tug. The claimant, Edward E. Barrett, filed an answer to the cross-libel on April 27, 1945 denying any fault or negligence. The libels were tried together on January 29-30, 1947.

The Barrett’s Version of the Collision.

The Grace A. Barrett, built in 1941 was a wooden hull steamtug, 99.5 feet in length, 24.7 feet in beam; depth 12.2 feet; 176 tons gross weight, with a single screw and developing 450 horsepower. On the morning of September 27, 1943 she departed from Morse Drydock, Brooklyn, New York City, bound for Port Newark, New Jersey, and proceeded down Bay Ridge Channel and thence on a general northwesterly course from the lower end of Bay Ridge Flats towards Kill van Kull in the Upper Bay, just north of the ferry racks at St. George, Staten Island. She was near one of the cross-roads of the Upper Bay. The weather was clear with a light southwest wind prevailing and the tide was the first of the ebb. Visibility was good. The mate of the Grace A. Barrett, a licensed pilot, was in charge of the navigation of the tug. He was in the wheelhouse alone. A deck hand was in the kitchen near a door. The captain was some place below. The pilot was the only man above deck. The Barrett was proceeding light, at full speed (8 knots), when her pilot first observed the ferryboat, Gold Star Mother, just below Robbins Reef Bell Buoy (No. 27), bearing about 4 points or broad on the tug’s starboard bow, distant about 2,000 feet, proceeding in a southwesterly direction at a speed he estimated to be about 16 knots.

Britain, the pilot of the tug, testified that he did not observe any other vessels in the immediate vicinity; in particular he did not observe a tug with carfloats in tow which at that time was about 700 feet ahead of the Barrett and about 50 feet to -the southward proceeding in the same general direction as the Barrett. The tug’s pilot also testified that having observed the ferry on his starboard bow, he rang a stop signal to the engine room in order to permit the ferry to maintain its course and cross his bow; that when the ferry was about 1,500 feet distant from .the Barrett, about one-half minute after the execution of the stop signal, he rang a full speed astern signal to the engine room. He says that the ferry, when about 1,000 or 1,200 feet away, executed a change of course to port of about 5 points or 56°, and sounded a two blast whistle signal when 300 or 400 feet away. Such a signal would indicate that the ferry intended to pass astern of him and that he was permitted to cross her bow. He testified that he did not answer the signal with an assenting two blast signal because he did not have any headway on at the time and did not believe he could get enough on to cross the ferry’s bow in compliance with the signal. He says he continued backing at full speed and sounded a three blast. backing signal. The [835]*835Barrett was a single screw ship and the execution of this maneuver would cause her stern to turn somewhat to port.

The ferry continued its approach and although its quick water indicated that her engines were backing just a moment before the collision, she came on to collide with the Barrett at about 8:55 according to the tug’s clock. The point of impact was about 10 or 12 feet aft of the ferry’s bow on the starboard side. The overhang of the ferry’s main deck sheared off the upper portion of the tug’s bow, about 2 feet above the water line, from the stem back for a distance of about 4 feet.

Britain contradicted some of his own testimony, testifying later that he stopped the tug when 800 or 900 feet from the ferry and started to go back; and in another part of his testimony he said that the tug was actually backing when 1,000 or 1,200 feet from the ferry.

The Barrett’s engineer, Davis, who was in the engine room at the time, testified that he got a bell to slow and seconds later a signal to stop the engines, and that after two or three minutes he got two bells to go astern, and then a hook up bell to go full speed astern; and that the collision occurred about a minute or two after the full speed astern bell. He got an order to stop the engines a couple of minutes after the collision.

Anderson, the deck hand, who was in the kitchen having coffee for about 10 minutes before the collision, looked through the kitchen door on the starboard side and saw the ferry heading right for them, about two or three lengths away. He testified that the ferry blew two whistles and that the tug blew three and stopped. It looked as if the ferry turned right toward the tug. The collision occurred a few seconds later. The tug captain, who was below, hurried up to the wheelhouse right after the collision. He was not a witness. The failure to produce him was not explained.

The Ferry’s Version.

The Gold Star Mother is a double-end ferryboat operated by The City of New York between St. George, Staten Island, and Whitehall Street, New York City. She is 252.5 feet in length; 47.8 feet in beam; depth 18.1 feet; 2,126 tons gross weight; and develops 4,000 horsepower driven by screws placed fore and aft.

On the morning of September 27, 1943 the Gold Star Mother departed from the ferry slip at Whitehall Street, New York City at 8:32 A.M., on her regular route bound for St. George, Staten Island. Shortly after clearing the slip the Captain turned the wheel over to Edward P. Ferrell, a licensed pilot, and the ferry proceeded at full speed (13-14 knots) down the main ship channel in the Upper Bay on a southwesterly course about 150 to 200 feet east of the line of channel buoys marking the westerly limits of the channel. About halfway between buoys number 27 and 29 the pilot observed a tug (the Eleanor Bush) with two carfloats in tow, one on each side, bearing about 3 points or 33 degrees off the ferry’s port bow, distant about 2,000 feet, and proceeding on a northwesterly course so as to cross the ferry’s projected course at right angles. Without any exchange of signals between the vessels the Gold Star Mother’s pilot rang up an “ahead slow” signal on the engine order telegraph, and the engines responded, in order to permit the tug Eleanor Bush with carfloats to pass ahead of the Gold Star Mother. After continuing on ahead slow for about one minute he rang up a stop signal on the engine order telegraph to allow the tug with car-floats to clear his bow.

About a half-minute after first observing the tug Eleanor Bush with carfloats, the ferry pilot observed the tug Grace A. Barrett about 3 points on the port bow, distant about 1,800 or 1,900 feet, on the same course as the Eleanor Bush and carfloats and astern thereof about six or eight hundred feet, proceeding at a greater speed than the Eleanor Bush and the carfloats. As the ferry pilot sighted the Grace A. Barrett she was not dead astern of the carfloats but about 50 feet outside of their starboard side towards the ferry.

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Bluebook (online)
73 F. Supp. 832, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-city-of-new-york-nysd-1947.