Boston v. T. A. Scott Co.

265 F. 538, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 18, 1920
DocketNos. 1397-1399
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 265 F. 538 (Boston v. T. A. Scott Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston v. T. A. Scott Co., 265 F. 538, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440 (1st Cir. 1920).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

These three cases arose out of the stranding in the Cape Cod Canal of the Bay Port, a lake-built steamer of the whaleback type, 265 feet long and of 38 feet beam, which was brought to the Atlantic coast about 1905, and after some alterations was used for carrying coal between Atlantic ports.

Soon after noon on December 13, 1916, she appeared at the westerly or Wing’s Neck entrance of the Cape Cod Canal, loaded with 2,393 tons of coal, and having a draft of 18 feet 2 inches aft and 17 feet 8 inches forward. Pier captain was Hiram W. Hammett, who had been a master mariner 27 years and for 4 years had held a master’s license for steam vessels. He had been through the canal twice with the Bay Port when unloaded, but never when loaded. Upon one of those trips he had been given by the Canal Company a book containing information in regard to the navigation of the canal and its general features, including the statement that it had a depth of 25 feet at mean low water.

[540]*540Having obtained the necessary permission to go through the canal, she began its passage in tow of a tug and with a competent pilot.

The court below has found that neither the pilot nor the tug weré so far the agents or servants of the Canal Company as to make it answerable for their negligence; that while, previous to September 1, '1916, under the authority given by its charter, it had furnished pilots and tugboats to vessels for the navigation of the canal, it then discontinued this practice, and had given notice to vessel owners using the canal, including the owners of the Bay Port, that it had done so. We are satisfied with this finding.

The tide was about half ebb and running west with a velocity of about 3 knots when the Bay Port started to go through the canal. She had proceeded about half its length, when she took a short sheer toward its north bank, which the tugboat succeeded in checking. After continuing a. short distance parallel with the north bank, and on the north side of the channel, she sheered again toward the south bank, upon which she grounded. Assistance was summoned by her whistle, and two other tugs, which were used for towing through the canal, came to her aid, and with them Superintendent Geer of the Canal Company. All attempts of the tugs to pull her off the bank were unsuccessful and were given up, as the tide was falling.

The T. A. Scott Company, Incorporated, engaged in salvage operations, with an office in Boston, was notified by the agents of the owners of the steamer, and it sent to the canal Capt. Joseph Lewis, an experienced wrecking master.

One of the regulations issued by the Canal Company provided that — •

“In the event of grounding, the canal authorities shall have the right to direct all operations 'for floating the vessel.”

When Capt. Joseph Lewis arrived, Superintendent Geer turned over to him the work of getting the Bay Port afloat, and ordered the tugboat captains to render him such assistance as they could. The Bay Port was kept upon the bank that night by two of the tugs, under steam, pressing her against the bank, and her pumps were kept working. The next morning a diver sent down by the Scott Company discovered a hole in her, which was plugged up, and the pumping of water from her hold by her own pumps was continued. Arrangements had also been made by the Scott Company to lighten her cargo, when, unexpectedly, about 10:15 a. m., she slid off the bank into the channel of the canal. The tide was then running east at about 3 knots an hour. The pilot who upon the day before had undertaken to pilot her through the canal was not present, but another canal pilot, Capt. Williaip T. Lewis, was upon one of the tugboats, and when the Bay Port slid off the bank he jumped from the tug aboard the steamer and ran upon her bridge with her captain, of whom he inquired if he had steam up, and, being told that he had, he directed him to start his> engines full speed ahead to prevent her drifting upon the opposite bank.

When she came off the bank into deeper water, she was down at the head about 18 inches, according to Capt. Hammett, and about 30 inches, according to Pilot Lewis, and had a list to port of about 15 [541]*541inches, according to the former, and about 24 inches according to the latter. The tide had then been flowing easterly in the canal since 6 a. m., and the Bay Port was caught by it and commenced to- drift to the eastward. The three tugs, with steam up, were all hanging to the port side of the Bay Port, but were headed toward the west; and upon the same side, about amidships, was a small wrecking boat of the Scott Company. Pilot Lewis gave a command to one of the tugs to take the wrecking boat in charge, and to another to get a hawser upon the Bay Port’s bow, which it did after it had turned about, and commenced to tow the Bay Port eastward. She liad proceeded only about a mile when the Bay Port sheered toward the north bank, and, the tug being unable to break the sheer, her bow grounded heavily, her stern was swung by the current across the canal and grounded upon the south bank, causing her bow to slide off the north bank, and she rapidly filled and sank.

The allegations of negligence in the libel of the Canal Company against the Scott Company are in substance that the Scott Company did not take adequate means for holding the Bay Port to the bank after her first stranding, and that, by such failure, they permitted her to come afloat in the canal in an unsafe condition for navigation and negligently failed to be prepared to complete her passage through the canal.

The allegations of negligence in its libel against the owners of the Bay Port are that the Bay Port was allowed to enter the canal when she was difficult to steer and control and apt to become unmanageable; that they also neglected properly to care for the Bay Port while she was resting on the bank subsequent to the stranding of December 13th, and negligently suffered her to slide off the bank when she was not prepared to complete the navigation of the canal; and that they attempted to navigate the canal with a steamer which was very difficult to steer and control, and apt to become unmanageable and fail to answer her helm.

The allegations of negligence in the libel of the owners of the Bay Port against the Canal Company are that the Canal Company had misrepresented the depth of water in the canal, having represented in its book isstied to the public in regard to the canal that it had a depth of 25 feet at mean low water, while in the vicinity of both standings of the vessel there were shoals over which there was only a depth at mean low water of between 18 and 19 feet, and also that the canal had been so constructed that, near the place of the first stranding, there was a projection from its north'"bank toward its channel, which had been left when the canal was constructed, and caused a current to set toward its south side when the tide was flowing from the eastward.

The learned judge of the District Court has found that, while there was a less depth of water than 25 feet near the places in the canal where the two strandings occurred, there were from 21 to 22 feet of water on the shoal over which the Bay Port passed before the first stranding and 23 feet or more on the shoal passed over by her before the second, and that, as her greatest draft was a little [542]

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Bluebook (online)
265 F. 538, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-v-t-a-scott-co-ca1-1920.