Hoboken Land & Imp. Co. v. The Pavonia

26 F. 106, 23 Blatchf. 403, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 F. 106 (Hoboken Land & Imp. Co. v. The Pavonia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoboken Land & Imp. Co. v. The Pavonia, 26 F. 106, 23 Blatchf. 403, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380 (circtsdny 1885).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

This libel is filed by tlie owners of the ferry-boat Weehawken to recover damages sustained by a collision between that boat and the ferry-boat Pavonia. The collision took place on the North river on the fifteenth day of October, 1883, at about 6 :30 i>. n., on a clear moonlight evening. The tide was strong flood, running three miles an hour, and there wras a heavy north-west wind. There were no vessels or intervening obstacles to obstruct the movements of the ferry-boats from tlie time when they ought to have distinctly seen each other at a sufficient distance to avoid danger to tlie time of the collision. The Pavonia was making one 'of her regular trips from Jersey City down and across the river to her slip at Chambers street, and tlie Weehawken had left her slip at the foot of Barclay street to make one of her regular trips up and across the river to Hoboken. The slips of the two boats on the New York side were about 750 feet apart, the Barclay slip being the lower or southerly one.

The boats were each about 215 feet long. In making their trips each crossed the other’s course, the slip of the Pavonia being below the slip of the Weehawken on the New Jersey side of tlie river. It was the custom betw'een the boats to allow the right of way to the Pavonia from the time she commenced to swing for her slip. It was usual, however, when she was making her slip on the New York side witli a strong flood-tide, for her to commence to swing below it sufficiently far in view of the existing tide and wind to drift upward into it with the tide, and this practice sometimes made it more convenient for the Weehawken to go inside the Pavonia and keep up tlie river between the Pavonia and her slip. Each boat was aware of the practice of the other, which was equivalent to an understanding between them that the Weehawken should keep out of the way when the Pavonia was swinging for her slip unless she was so. far below her slip and so far out in the river that it was safe for the Weehawken to pass between her and her slip. The case turns mainly on tlie question whether, on the occasion in controversy, the Weehawken was justified in keeping up the river between the Pavonia and her slip, thus crossing the Pavonia’s bow as she was about to swing for her slip, or whether it was the Weehawken’s duty to keep out of the way by passing under the Pavonia’s stern, or by stopping or reversing.

[108]*108As the Pavonia left her slip at Jersey City the ferry-boat Secaucus was proceeding down the river about in the middle of the channel, and the Pavonia came abreast of her, and they proceeded abreast of each other fora short distance, when the Secaucus slowed and let the Pavonia cross her bow in order to reach the slip. The Pavonia was then about 600 yards from her slip, and thereupon the Pavonia made for the New York shore, swinging gradually from southerly to southeasterly, until, when somewhat below her slip, she began to swing sharply to the eastward to make the slip. Her slip was 200 feet wide, with two divisions, and she intended to make the upper division, as the lower division was occupied by her companion boat, the Delaware. Owing to the wind prevailing at the time, she did not go as far below her slip in order to swing up to it as she usually did on a flood-tide, and it was not necessary to do so.

The Weehawken emerged from her slip soon after the Pavonia passed across the bow of the Secaucus. The pilot of the Weehawken, assuming that the Pavonia would go further below her slip before swinging to drift upward on the flood-tide into her slip than she in fact did, supposed he could pass between the Pavonia and her slip before the Pavonia would be brought so near the Weehawken as to be perilous. He accordingly headed his boat to'a southerly course. After he straightened on his course he signaled the Pavonia by one blast of his whistle that he would keep inside. That signal was not heard by the Pavonia. The pilot of the Weehawken, hearing no response from the Pavonia, immediately repeated his signal. This signal was not heard by the Pavonia, and the pilot of the Weehawken then blew an alarm whistle, and directed his engineer to stop and reverse, and ported his wheel. When this whistle was given the Pa-vonia was swinging easterly to the north-east' for her slip; while the Weehawken, which had been going at nearly full speed, making with the flood-tide 12 miles an hour, was rapidly approaching the Pavonia on an intersecting course, and was so near the entrance of the Pa-vonia5 s slip that before her headway could be stopped she was almost opposite the slip and directly in the path of the Pavonia. The Wee-hawken had been coming up the river at a distance of between 100 and 200 feet out in the channel. The boats came into collision at a point about 200 feet off the southerly side of the lower division -of the Pavonia’s slip, the port bow of the Weehawken coming in contact with the starboard bow of the Pavonia.

The distance the two boats were apart at the time the Weehawken first signaled to the Pavonia caflnot be reliably determined. It is very clear that the period of time intervening between that signal and the time of the collision was very short. Assuming that the Wee-hawken had made 750 feet from her slip when the boats came together, about 50 seconds intervened. But the proximity of the boats at,the time of the first signal was probably considerably nearer than it would seem to. be from calculations based on the time occupied by [109]*109the Weehawken in getting from her slip to the point of collision. The testimony of the Weehawken’s pilot is that his signals were given with great rapidity. Ho thinks that not more than three seconds intervened between ills first and second signals, and not more than two seconds between his second signal and his alarm signal, and that the alarm whistle was given within two seconds after giving his second signal. Of course accuracy is not to be predicated of such testimony, but his testimony shows very satisfactorily that but an extremely short interval could have elapsed between the time of the first signal and the collision. It is probable his first signal was not given until liis boat had got out from 100 to 200 feet beyond the end of her slip and had got straightened on her southerly course up the river, and that less than half a minute elapsed between the time of this signal and tire time of the collision. As the collision took place about 200 feet off the southerly end of the Pavonia’s slip, it would seem that the Pavonia had commenced to swing sharply for her slip and was not more than three times her length from it when the first signal was given by the Weehawken.

The pilot of the Weehawken says he saw the red light in the Pa-vonia when he gave his first signal. The probability is that lie saw this light as his boat was starting out of her slip, and, assuming the Pavonia to be far enough away for him to go inside, did not give his signal as soon as he thinks he did, and did not give it, in fact, until his boat was straightened on her course up'the river. He probably was within two boat’s length of the place of collision at the time. Under the circumstances the Weehawken was plainly in fault in departing from the established practice between the boats by which the Pavonia was entitled to the right of way to her slip, and in attempting to pass across the bows of the Pavonia just as she was swinging into her slip. The fault was aggravated by proceeding after having-signaled the Pavonia and got no response. She had no right to assume, without an assenting signal from the Pavonia, that the Pavonia consented to abandon her usual right of way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. 106, 23 Blatchf. 403, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoboken-land-imp-co-v-the-pavonia-circtsdny-1885.