Contino v. Wilmington Steamboat Co.

226 F. 991, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1257
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 24, 1914
DocketNo. 864
StatusPublished

This text of 226 F. 991 (Contino v. Wilmington Steamboat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Contino v. Wilmington Steamboat Co., 226 F. 991, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1257 (D. Del. 1914).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

This is a libel in personam by Giovanni Contino, administrator of Andrea Contino, against the Wilmington Steamboat Company for the recovery of damages for the death of the decedent alleged to have been caused by negligence in the navigation of the steamboat City of Philadelphia while owned and operated by the respondent.' The evidence is voluminous and conflicting and all of it has been examined by the court in connection with the briefs of the proctors for the respective parties. On the most careful consideration I have been able to give the case I have reached the conclusion that the libelant is entitled to a decree for damages on the ground that the decedent, without fault on his part, came to his death through negligence in the operation and management of tire steamboat. The story told by the witnesses for the libelant is more reasonable and natural and in accord with the inherent probabilities of the situation than the account given by those ■ testifying for the respondent. Indeed, the improbability of the correctness of many of the statements of the latter is so strong as well-nigh to render them incredible, even in the absence of directly opposing evidence. Among the facts touching which there is no dispute, or the proofs of which are so satisfactory as to leave no room for substantial doubt, are the following: The gasoline launch, Mary R., of about eight horse-power, left Pennsgrove, New Jersey, for Wilmington, Delaware, about half past four'o’clock in the afternoon of Sunday, July 21, 1912; her owner, Henry A. Blackwell, Sr., managing the engine, and his son, Henry, having charge of the steering wheel which was located in the bow of the launch. In addition to tire Blackwells there was on the launch a pleasure party consisting of two young men, -five young women and a boy. The launch was about twenty-two feet long and seven and one-half feet wide, and was provided with a canopy top and canvas curtains. At the time the party left Pennsgrove the weather was clear, but while tire launch was pursuing a diagonal course from that place toward Edge Moor tiróse on board observed a storm approaching from the west, and shortly the sky became overcast and the wind and water rose; and when the launch was nearing the Delaware side of the river and at a point nearly opposite Edge Moor they saw a row-boat of about the same size as the launch with three Italians in it, — two men and a small boy — who [993]*993y ere calling and beckoning for assistance. The two men were Andrea Confino whose administrator is prosecuting this suit, and Frank Velino, both of whom were drowned later that afternoon. The boy was Joseph Ca rallo, one of the witnesses for the libelant. The launch being thus hailed went to the row-boat and passed its own line, — a three-quarter inch manilla rope, which had been used during a season, — to the Italians who made it fast to the row-boat, the length of line between the launch and the row-boat being from twenty to twenty-five feet. About the line 1he launch picked up the row-boat the steamboat was seen from the former a considerable distance up the river. The launch proceeded with her tow to and into the mouth of the Christiana creek where the tow-line between the two boats was shortened to about twelve or fifteen feet to enable the launch better to control the movements of her tow, and Blackwell, Sr., warned those on the launch to waich out for the steamboat. The wind and rain continued to increase, and when the launch with its tow had nearly reached a point in the channel of the creek opposite the old government light-house, at the inner end of the jetty, the storm broke with violence. The wind was approximately from the northwest and unusually high. The rain fell in torrents accompanied by thunder and lightning. The steamboat reached the mouth of the creek about 5:19 p. m., some three or four minutes after the storm had burst in its severity at or near Edge Moor, and reducing her speed followed the middle of the channel toward Wilmington. When she reached a point where her bow was probably about lier own length above the light-house she first saw directly before her in the channel, which extends at the width of two- hundred and fifty feet to a point above the railroad bridge, the launch with its tow about live hundred feet distant. Here begins a material divergence in the evidence. There is testimony for the respondent to the effect that as soon as the steamboat saw the launch and her tow she gave a danger signal and stopped her engines for a very short time, probably not exceeding half a minute; that immediately thereafter the launch with its tow, either before or after a signal of two blasts from the steamboat, directed its course to starboard and passed entirely beyond the northerly side of the channel, the,steamboat starting up her engines and continuing to- follow the channel practically along its center; that although the steamboat closely watched the launch and its tow nobody was seen in the row-boat; that when the steamboat reached a point nearly abreast of the launch and a little below but nearly opposite the mouth of Lobdell’s canal, which opens on the south side of the creek, the launch suddenly turned to port and went across the bow of the steamboat, about at right angles to the line of the channel; that at the time the launch took this turn the row-boat became separated from her; that the steamboat passed between the launch on her port and the row-boat on her starboard side, clearing the former by from forty to fifty feet and the latter by from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet, approximately; and that nobody was in the row-boat. On the evidence there can be no reasonable question that the three Italians were in the row-boat and continued in it until after the launch with its tow had entered and was proceeding up the channel of the [994]*994creek. If either before or after the steamboat sighted the launch and her tow the three Italians had during the raging of the storm jumped from the row-boat into the water, in all human probability the boy Ca-vado would not have been found alive on the southerly side of the creek, but would have shared the fate of his older and stronger companions. Further, although thp launch and her tow were in full view of and were watched by h number of persons on the steamboat from the time they were first sighted until the steamboat passed between them, not one of them has testified to seeing the Italians or any Of them jump overboard; nor has anybody testified to seeing any of the Italians jump or fall from the row-boat while in any position assigned to it by the witnesses for the respondent. Yet it cannot reasonably be questioned that during the storm two of the three Italians including the libelant’s decedent jumped or fell from the row-boat into the creek and were drowned. But when, where and how did the catastrophe happen ? The respondent’s fitnesses utterly fail to> throw light on the subject. It is well-nigh inconceivable that any of the Italians should have jumped out of the row-boat if the account given by those witnesses as to the relative positions of the steamboat and tire row-boat at the time the steamboat passed between the launch and the row-boat is to be believed. That the Italians were excited and alarmed when found off Edge Moor on the approach of the storm is beyond question. But after they were taken in tow by the launch and were under its control and protection there was nothing, if credence is to be given to the evidence for the respondent, to cause them or any of them to jump into' the water. The instinct of self-preservation would have restrained them from so doing.

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Bluebook (online)
226 F. 991, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/contino-v-wilmington-steamboat-co-ded-1914.