Browning v. Baker

4 F. Cas. 453, 2 Hughes 30, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 27, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 453 (Browning v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. Baker, 4 F. Cas. 453, 2 Hughes 30, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99 (E.D. Va. 1875).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

Towards the middle of February last the brig Kewadin was wrecked on the beach immediately south of Cape Henry; she had a cargo of sugar, in boxes of about three hundred pounds each. News came of the disaster to the wreckers, B. & J. Baker & Co., at Norfolk, on the 15th of that month. Mr. Joseph Baker, of that firm, immediately sent for Captain Joseph Brown, master of the steamer Aroma Mills, 84 tons, of Camden, N. J., then in Norfolk, to come to see him at his office at Ferry Point He told Captain Brown of the news he had just got, and said there was another job for him. Captain Brown had been about Norfolk for some time, and had recently assisted the Bakers in several wrecking enterprises, at ?35 a day for his steamer and crew, consisting of three other men, aided by Captain Simmons and other persons furnished by the Bakers in addition to his own crew. • On bp-ing sent for on the 15th of February, Brown consented to engage again and asked for Simmons. Mr. Baker suggested Captain King, but Brown preferred Simmons, as they had always done well together before. After some little while Simmons was found and was again engaged by the Bakers for this occasion. The reason of Brown’s insisting upon being accompanied by Simmons was that he knew nothing of navigation outside of the capes, or of wrecking, and did not feel competent to direct the steamer’s movements on the coast, in the enterprise they were to engage in. Simmons went along, not, it would seem, in the character of full master of the vessel, but as commander of her, and agent of the Bakers, in whatever appertained to the wrecking operations. Nothing was said, on this particular occasion, of compensation, or other terms. There was no written charter-party, and no oral one. Each party understood that the service was to be similar to that which had been rendered by the Aroma Mills on recent occasions; that the terms of compensation were to be the same; and the relations of Simmons to the steamer the same. The service was of course to be more or less hazardous to the steamer; and on a former occasion Captain Brown had endeavored to insure his vessel in some office at Norfolk, but without success. He had had some conversation after doing so with Mr. Joseph Baker about that firm insuring his vessel, in which Mr. Baker had indirectly refused by mentioning a rate so high that Captain Brown had dropped the subject. A hoisting steam engine was put on board the steamer before she left Norfolk, to be used for wrecking purposes. No objection to this was made by Captain Brown. On several former occasions the Aroma Mills (having no hoisting steam engine of her own) had taken one on board from the Bakers, and had, while unloading wrecked vessels (the San Marcos at False Cape, among others), used the hoisting engine on board her own deck in hoisting cotton from the wreck, for some twenty days in succession. (See evidence of libellants’ witness, White.)

The steamer left Norfolk on the 15th. She lay at Old Point wharf most of the time waiting for suitable weather until the morning of the 17th. She then went out of the capes and reached the brig Kewadin between 8 and 9 o’clock, a. m. The water was smooth enough to admit of her going alongside, which she did in a short time early in the day. Captain Simmons had ordered the fire in the hoisting engine to be made up. The brig was lying bow to shore and stern to anchor east from the shore. The steamer was. put alongside, her bow to the brig’s stern, with anchor to northeast of the brig. Captain Brown preferred that the hoisting engine should be put at once on the brig that morning, and so did Captain Simmons. But Captain King, another employe of the Bakers, who was master-wrecker of the brig, and as such had the direction of all proceedings, determined to let the engine remain on the steamer and to use it there. His reasons for this course were: 1st, that two horn’s would be lost in putting out fire, cooling off the engine for handling shifting it to the brig and rigging the purchases there for hoisting the boxes of sugar; 2d, that the purchases for shifting the engine were found to be too short for the purpose; and 3d, that he was expecting the Bakers to send him down that day from Norfolk another hoisting engine to be put on the brig. All hands were engaged all day in transferring boxes of sugar from the brig to the steamer, until after 9 o’clock at night. Some time before night, Captain Brown requested Captain Simmons to have the hoisting engine shifted to the brig, his object being to be ready to leave' for Norfolk when night came on. But Captain Simmons replied that Captain King would shift it when he got ready. Making the best of the good weather, and working very hard all day, they had taken three hundred and fifty boxes of sugar on board the steamer by between 9 and Iff o’clock at night, when a sudden wind struck down from the nor’-nor’east, and all work was suspended. Then the task of shifting the hoisting engine from the steamer to the brig was commenced. In doing so the same tackle was used that had been habitually used for taking in the brig’s anchor, weighing some 1,500 pounds. The hoisting engine weighed by estimation some 1,800 or 2,000 pounds. One of the libellants’ witnesses testified that he had seen this same hoisting engine lifted “with jrist such a sized line” as was then used. In lifting the engine the wind blew very strong, the sea rolled heavily, a party of men was heaving to anchor on the steamer at the capstan, and the deck of the brig was considerably more elevated than the deck of the steamer. From some of these causes the purchases used for lifting the engine were subjected to extraordinary strain, besides that of its mere weight, so [455]*455that while lifting the engine something “parted,” and it fell back upon the deck of the steamer, on her coal-bunker, and covered it One of the libellants’ witnesses says that it was a “snatch-box” (I suppose one of the pulleys rigged with a hook) that broke, and not a rope. By this time the storm had increased considerably, and the sea had become rough.

The attention of those in control was now directed to getting the steamer clear of the brig, so that she could get away, carrying the hoisting engine along with her. It would seem that the only object of putting the hoisting engine aboard the brig had been that it might be used in further discharging her cargo, and in getting her off the beach. This object was of course relinquished, after what had happened. The hoisting engine had fallen on the coal-bunker and prevented it from being covered, so that afterwards water went in through the bunker-hole. No effort was, at once or at any time, made to remove the engine from the bunker and close the opening. One of the libellants’ witnesses, Stephen Bell, testifies that two men could have slided the engine off the bunker; that he and three more could have moved it off by prizing. It does not seem, therefore, to have been deemed important to remove the engine. Except the delay which had been incurred in trying to shift it, which delay itself may have been a remote cause of the disaster afterwards happening, in view of the increasing violence of the storm, nothing connected with the engine had any influence upon subsequent events; and the voluminous evidence ■ in the case respecting this article is of little moment To ascribe the subsequent wrecking of the steamer to the fact that this hoisting engine lay on the bunker, would be to impute to all concerned in the care of her the ‘most shameful imbecility.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 453, 2 Hughes 30, 1875 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-baker-vaed-1875.