Hoffman v. . Union F. Co. of Brooklyn

47 N.Y. 176, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 5
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 47 N.Y. 176 (Hoffman v. . Union F. Co. of Brooklyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. . Union F. Co. of Brooklyn, 47 N.Y. 176, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 5 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Allen, J.

The evidence, on the part of the plaintiffs, which was held insufficient to maintain the action, and at the close of which the judge at circuit ordered the complaint to be dismissed, if credited, would have warranted the jury in finding. 1st. That at the time the steamer Ontario with the plaintiffs’ boat in tow left the wharf to make the passage from Jersey city to the wharf of the towing steamer in East river, the weather was clear, without fog, or anything to obstruct the view or interfere with the safe navigation of the river and harbor; and that it was not negligent or imprudent to attempt the passage at that time. 2d. That when the harbor became •enveloped in fog, which arose before the boats reached their destination, rendering the navigation of the river difficult and hazardous, the steamer, with the plaintiffs’ boat in tow, was navigated with great care and caution, her progress being very slow, with repeated signals to warn other vessels of her presence. 3d. That when the defendant’s ferry-boat was heard approaching, the engines of the Ontario were stopped; and when the hull of the ferry-boat came in sight, and the *181 direction in which she was moving became apparent, they were reversed, and the steamer backed with a view to avoid a collision, and that all was done that could have been done by those in charge of the tow after the danger became apparent to avoid it. 4th. That those in charge of the ferry-boat knew the density of the fog, the difficulties of the navigation, and the necessity of watchfulness and care; and that when within 350 to 400 yards of the tow, they did, or might have seen it, if they had a proper lookout; and that there was then ample time and space to have reversed the engines, got sternway on the boat and avoided a collision. That instead of doing so no effort was made in that direction until almost the very instant at which the boats came in contact, and too late to prevent the injury.

A verdict finding these facts would have been sustained by the testimony, and could not have been set aside as against evidence; and these facts specially found, without other exculpatory facts, would have authorized a general verdict for the plaintiff!, on the ground that the damages sustained by the plaintiffs resulted solely from the negligence and want of care of the agents and servants of the defendant in the management and navigation of its ferry-boat, and without fault on the part of the plaintiffs, or their servants and agents, or those in charge of the steamer having their boat in tow. Tt is not proposed to consider the question, whether the negligence or want of care and skill, on the part of those in charge of the towing steamer contributing to the injury, would defeat the action if the defendant, by its servants and agents, was also guilty of negligence contributing to the injury. The plaintiffs were helpless; they had no duty to perform or power to act, and the question may arise whether, if the injury resulted from the concurrent negligence of the two steamers, the plaintiffs might not, as the innocent sufferers from the concurrent wrongful acts of the two, have an action against the owners of both or either. But assuming, for the purposes of this appeal, as was assumed by the court below, that the acts and omissions of the managers of the towing *182 steamer were the acts and omissions of the plaintiffs, and that negligence or want of- care and skill on the part of those managing the tow contributing to the injury would defeat the action, the question is whether the wrongful or negligent acts of those in charge of the Ontario contributed to the injury. The claim is that the steamer was navigating the waters of the bay and harbor of Hew York, without the particular lights required by the act of congress for vessels of that character, and employed in the towing of other boats and vessels. She had lights forward and aft, and a red light on the pilot house, and the witnesses stated they were the usual lights for tug-boats, but they did not conform to the acts of congress.

As the lights usually carried by vessels having boats in tow or used for towing boats in the harbor of Hew York, they were notice to the defendant’s master and pilot that the vessel carrying and exhibiting them was used as a tug-boat, and was' liable to have boats in tow; and the fact that- they were not the lights prescribed by law did not excuse the defendant from the exercise of proper care in approaching or passing her. The omission to carry the regulation lights did not place the Ontario and her tow without the pale of the law, or subject them to the perils of being run down recklessly or negligently. The customary and usual signals of the service, especially if generally known and recognized as such, were sufficient to put the managers of other crafts upon their guard. When the question is one of negligence, such signals may, under some circumstances, supply the want of those prescribed by law, or even do better service, as better calculated to give actual notice of the character, course and position of a vessel, than signals less frequently or never used, although established by act of congress as the proper signals in such cases. It would have been a proper question in this case for the jury, whether the lights • carried by the Ontario were not, for all practical purposes, and as they were usually carried by tug-boats, employed in the harbor of Hew York, the equivalent of the legally prescribed signals, *183 and did not, in fact, give to those in charge of the defendant’s boat actual knowledge of her presence, and the character of the service in which she was engaged, so that they might and should have avoided both the Ontario and the boat of the plaintiff in tow. But aside from the signals actually carried by the Ontario, or the want of those prescribed by law, the evidence uncontradicted and unexplained, warrants the conclusion that the plaintiffs’ boat could have been, and was seen by the master, and pilot on the lookout on the defendant’s boat, at a distance of 850 to 400 yards, and that within that limit the ferry-boat could have been stopped, and the direction of her movement reversed, and the collision avoided.

If the witnesses were credible and spoke the truth, the hull of each of the steamers was visible from the other, at a distance of about 400 yards, and the bow of the plaintiff’s boat was only twenty-five feet, a little more than eight yards astern of the bow of the tug, and there is nothing to show that she was not visible at the same distance from the ferryboat as was the steamer.

If the Ontario had been without signals of any kind, and had negligently, or even recklessly undertaken to navigate the harbor in a dense fog, and under circumstances in which she should have come to anchor, still it was the duty of the master or other person in charge of the ferry-boat, upon discovering her situation, and the danger of a collision, to use all the usual and proper means to avert the danger; and among those means, and which the evidence shows was practicable, and would probably have been successful, was the reversal of the engines, and the giving a retrograde motion to the boat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.Y. 176, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-union-f-co-of-brooklyn-ny-1872.