Chunk

139 F. 747, 1905 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 5, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 F. 747 (Chunk) 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
Chunk, 139 F. 747, 1905 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148 (S.D.N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

These actions were decided on the merits June 17,1903 — 124 Fed. 786 — and referred to a commissioner to examine the claims, &c. He now reports that there were 53 claims filed and testimony presented in 39 of them. Exceptions to his report have been filed in a number of the cases, mainly directed to the amounts reported. I have examined the matters involved carefully and conclude that the commissioner has been very conservative in his estimates of the losses and as he had the witnesses before him, I do not think it would be proper for me to take up anew the questions of amounts.

There are a few questions, however, which require attention at my hands.

In the cases of deaths resulting from the collision, the commissioner has allowed funeral expenses, in addition to damages. It is claimed that the statute does not cpver such items and reference is made to Dalton v. South Eastern Ry. Co., 4 C. B. (N. S.) 296; Boulter v. Webster, 13 Weekly Reptr. 289; Holland v. Brown (D. C.) 35 Fed. 43, 49, and Consolidated Traction Co. v. Hone, 60 N. J. Law, 444, 38 Atl. 759.

A matter of the same kind has, however, been passed upon in this court and such expenditures allowed. The Catskill (D. C.) 95 Fed. 700, 701. And in Murphy v. N. Y. Cent. & Hudson R. R. Co., 88 N. Y. 445, the question was considered in connection with the law of England, referred to in Dalton v. South Eastern Ry. Co. and Boulter v. Webster, supra, and it was held that in this state and country, such expenses can be recovered if the law imposes upon the relatives for whose benefit the suit is brought the obligation to bear them. In the Catskill, supra, which was an action resulting from a collision between two vessels and limitation of liability on the part of the owners being sought, as here, the funeral expenses of the deceased were specifically allowed. Judge Brown there said (702, 703) :

“3. It is further contended, inasmuch as by the law of the states of New York and New Jersey no liens are given for death claims, while a maritime lien does exist for the damages received by the Catskill, that this entitles the Catskill to a priority for her claim over the death claims. I cannot sustain this contention. Section 4284 of the Revised Statutes [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2943], providing for the distribution of the proceeds upon a surrender of the vessel, declares that the proceeds shall be distributed among the claimants “in proportion to their respective losses’; and no distinction is made between the different kinds of damage, whether to property or person. Injuries to person and loss of life are held to be claims within the scope of the statute (In re Long Island North Shore Passenger & Freight Transp. Co., 5 Fed. 599, 624; Butler v. Steamship Co., 130 U. S. 527, 552, 9 Sup. Ct 612 [32 L. Ed. 1017]), and recovery in personam against the owners of the vessel for loss of life is restrained upon the surrender of the vessel in proceedings under the statute (section 4285 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2944]).. It is evident, therefore, that the státute not only makes the fund derived from the sale of the vessel a fund applicable to all claims pro rata (see, also, rule 55 in admiralty), but that it bars all other remedy. The necessary effect of this is to make every admissible claim a statutory lien upon the fund. The fund must be distributed, therefore, according to the statute itself, i. e., pro rata among the claims arising from the collision (Butler v. Steamship Co., supra; The Maria and Elizabeth, 12 Fed. 627), saving any special equitable rights as between the parties.”

[749]*749Another question arises out of the claim of the Compañía Transatlántica for damages caused by the alleged obstruction of that company’s pier, 10 East River, by the sinking of the Northfield across the end of the pier.

The commissioner says in connection with this claim:

“Claim of Compañía Transatlántica.
This claimant, which operates a line of steamships between New York and Ports in Spain, the Philippines and Mexico, was the lessee of pier 10, East I-tiver, and had the right to use one-half of the slip on each side of the pier. The claim is in the nature of wharfage, the statement filed alleging that the Northfield sank at the end of pier 10, where she remained several days, during which time the hawsers were run from her to the end of pier 10, and the pier was otherwise used by the owners of the sunken ferryboat and by men engaged in raising her, and their lighters, barges and other craft made use of both sides of pier 10, whereby access to and use of the pier and slip were rendered impossible, and the claimant suffered a loss of §1,500.
When the berths were unoccupied by the claimant’s steamships, it let them out to such vessels as applied for them. The Northfield lay sunk a little distance off pier 10, from about 6 o’clock in the evening of June 14 until about 9 o’clock in the morning of June 20, 1901, when she was raised and removed. During this interval her upriver end was further off than the downriver, which was some 15 or '20 feet away from the lower corner of the pier. The downriver end extended across the mouth of the slip between piers 9 and 10 for a good part of its width, while the upriver end was about on a line with the upper side of pier 10. The testimony satisfies me that the Northfield would have prevented the use of the claimant’s berth on the lower side of pier 10, but not the berth on the upper side, although the presence of the wrecking outfit would have embarrassed the use of the upper berth if a vessel had attempted to dock there. None of the claimant’s vessels were in port during the period in question, but an attempt was made to prove that the berths had been let to other vessels which would have used them, and that these engagements had to be cancelled because of the obstructions. The only distinct testimony to that effect was from a Mr. Palmer, in the employment of claimant’s agents. He had charge of the making of arrangements for docking, and says that there were two vessels, a steamship and a bark, that would have occupied the berths, but were unable to come there because the slips were blocked; they were each to pay §50 per day. The value of this testimony was, however, so much impaired on cross-examination that I do not think that I would be justified in finding the facts in accordance with the direct testimony of the witness, especially as time and opportunity were afforded for corroborative testimony and none was furnished. The testimony shows, however, that use was made of the pier in the wrecking operations, lines being run from the ferryboat to the end of the pier, on which were also landed carts, wagons, benches and other articles taken from the ferryboat There is testimony that about one-fourth of the pier was thus used, but it also appears that the lines were run and the pier used by the Merritt & Chapman Wrecking Company, which raised the Northfield. The petitioner did not employ the wrecking company, and does not appear to have participated in its operations. Indeed, there is nothing to show that this use of the pier was without the consent of claimant If consent was given, the claim would be on an implied contract against the wrecking company. If it was not given, and the use of the pier was tortious, the tort -would be an independent one on the part of the wrecking company, and not one springing naturally and directly from the collision.

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Bluebook (online)
139 F. 747, 1905 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chunk-nysd-1905.