Dutton v. Strong

66 U.S. 23, 17 L. Ed. 29, 1 Black 23, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 447
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 23, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 23 (Dutton v. Strong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dutton v. Strong, 66 U.S. 23, 17 L. Ed. 29, 1 Black 23, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 447 (1861).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD. *

This case comes before the court upon a writ of error to the District Court of the United States for the district of Wisconsin. It was an action of trespass ppon the case, and was instituted in the court below, on the seventh day of July, 1856, by the present defendants. They were the owners of a certain vessel called the Homer Ramsdell, and the plaintiffs in error,.who were the defendants in the original suit, were the owners and occupants of a certain bridge pier, situated at Racine, in the State of Michigan, southerly of the harbor at that place. Like other similar erections, it was connected with the land at the mar *27 gin of the lalce, and extended into the water, so that ves seis could approach it for the purpose of taking in freight, serving both as a.wharf to the navigable water of the lake, and as a place of deposit for merchandise designed for transportation by water. As stated in the bill of exceptions, the defendants were forwarding merchants, and the case shows that they had used the bridge pier for the purpose of mooring vessels coming there in the course of their business; but it' does not appear that it had ever been used for that purpose by any other persons. , Another bridge pier, situated south of the one owned by the defendants, had been constructed, and was occupied by other parties, and was used for the same purpose by its owners as that of the defendants. According to the transcript, the declaration contained four, counts, but .they were all founded upon the same transaction. Three of the counts were substantially the same, and alleged, in effect, that the plaintiffs were the owners of the vessel; that, while she was lawfully employed in navigating the waters of Lake Michigan, she had, by stress'of weather and the perils of navigation, been driven alongside of a certain dock and common mooring place at Racine, commonly called a bridge pier, to which she was then and there moored and fastened by cables and lines, and that the defendants, on the seventh day of May, 1855, wrongfully cut and severed the mooi’ings by which the vessel was fastened, and cast her loose from the pier; and that, in consequence thereof, she was driven, by the force of the wind and waves, against a certain other dock and pier there situate, and on to the shore of the lake, by reason whereof she was greatly damaged, and so injured that she sunk in the lake. - ! Unlike' the first three counts, the fourth alleged that the ' defendants, at the same time and place, did, wrongfully and unlawfully, erect, and cause.to be erected, a certain permanent bridge or structure on the navigable waters of Lake Michigan, whereby the vessel of the plaintiffs was wholly unable to make the harbor at Racine, or to put out into the lake,’ as she 1 otherwise might and would have done; and, in consequence ' of the obstruction, was, by the wind and waves, driven on the shore, and against a certain dock, and greatly damaged, as *28 alleged in the other counts of the declaration. To the whole declaration, as more fully set forth in the transcript, the de-' fendants pleaded that they were not guilty, and on that issue the parties went to trial. None of the evidence given by the defendants is reported in the bill of exceptions; but it appears, from that introduced by the plaintiffs, that the schooner was bound from Chicago, in the State of Illinois, to Eacine, in the State of Wisconsin, and that she was sailing in ballast. Assuming the testimony of the master to be correct, she left Chicago- on the sixth day of May, 1855, and arrived off the harbor of Eacine between twelve aud one o’clock at night in perfect safety. When she was about one-fourth of a mile from the harbor, the wind suddenly changed from south to north-northeast, and blew hard. Those in charge of the vessel state that they could see but one light at the time;' and,supposing it to be the light on the northern pier in the harbor to which they 'were bound, they headed the vessel for that light. .Contrary, however, to what they supposed, there was no light on either of the harbor piers, and, in point of fact, it was a light on the bridge pier of the defendants. Heading for that light, the vessel, as she advanced, was approaching the shore, and she soon passed between the two bridge piers, already described as situated southéríy of the harbor. When they got close to the light they discovered the mistake; but, instead of changing the course of the vessel, they took in sail and let go the anchor, to prevent her from going on to the beach. Whether these precautions were the best that could have been adopted, or not-, they had the effect tó check the speed of the .vessel, and, as she ceased to make headway, she sagged over against the southern bridge pier without receiving any injury. Their next step -was to get out lines on to the bridge pier of the defendants, in order to work the vessel away from the southern pier, and prevent her from pounding. Finding that the lines were insufficient, they got out the large -hawser and two other lines, and finally, with the aid of six. additional men, and after getting out another hawser belonging to the vessel, and purchasing a new one for the purpose, they succeeded -in getting the vessel up to the bridge pier of' *29 the defendants, or near it, at four o’clock in the morning. Her bow, as the master states, was still thirty or forty feet from the pier; and he says he bought the new line and employed the additional help to heave the vessel up to the pier, which was not fully accomplished until ten o’clock in the forenoon. Seeing that the wind and sea had increased in the meantime, they then concluded to make her fast to the pier.; and, accordingly, got out the chain and fastened it to a'pile on the opposite side of the pier, using, for that purpose, the hawsers and lines previously got out to work the vessel up. to the pier. About twelve o’clock the vessel commenced pounding, and the pile to which the chain was attached started and passed through the pier eight or ten feet, and the clear inference from the testimony is, that all the fastenings gave way, except the new line and the chain.

Another witness, examined by the plaintiff, states that when the vessel commenced pounding, the pier began to start; and he says it was two o’clock in the afternoon when the pile to 'which the chain was attached gave way. Although it gave way, it did not then pass entirely-through the bridge pier, but lodged against other piles on which the pier was built; and, consequently, the chain would still assist in holding the vessel,, unless the pile broke, or that part of the pier was carried away. At this juncture, one of the defendants came upon the pier and directed the master to get the vessel away from the pier, informing him that if he did nothe would cast her' adrift; to which the master replied, that he would leave, if possible; and if not, he would continue to hold on to the bridge pier. But he did not make any attempt to leave, and a person in the employment of the defendants cut the hawser. When the hawser was severed, and the strain came upon the chain, the second mate of the vessel says the rest of the piles gave way, and the vessel went over to the south bridge pier, carrying away her stanchions and bulwarks on her larboard side; and, to prevent further damage, she was scuttled, by the order of the master, and presently sunk. Such is'the substance of the testimony introduced by the plaintiffs, as reported in the bill of exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 23, 17 L. Ed. 29, 1 Black 23, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutton-v-strong-scotus-1861.