In re Grand Manan

208 F. 583, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1252
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1913
DocketNos. 215, 244, 245, 248
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 F. 583 (In re Grand Manan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Grand Manan, 208 F. 583, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1252 (D. Me. 1913).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

On the evening of June 26, 1912, the steamer Grand Manan, owned by the Grand Manan Steamboat Company, a New Brunswick corporation, came into collision with the steam dredge ’known as No. 4; while moored in the St. Croix River, between the state of Maine and the .province of New Brunswick. The dredge is owned by the Bay State Dredging Company. In No. 215 the owner of the dredge seeks to recover for her damage sustained by reason of said collision. The libel in 244 presents the case of the crew of the dredge, who seek to recover for loss of personal effects. In 245 Daniel F. Warren, administrator, seeks to recover, under the Maine statute, for the loss of life of Capt. James H. Carey, the engineer and mate of the dredge. No. 248 is the cross-libel of the Grand Manan Steamboat Company against the Bay State Dredging Company, to recover damages sustained by the steamer in consequence of the collision.

The steamer Grand Manan is a wooden, screw, steam vessel, of about 180 tons burden net, drawing 10 feet aft, and 7- feet forward; carrying a crew of 10 men all told. She had fore and aft compound engines, giving her a speed of 10 knots.

The dredge is a wooden vessel, 80 feet long', about 33 feet wide, drawing about 5 feet forward, and 4 feet aft; 8% feet high, measuring from the bottom to the top of her hull.

On the evening in question, the steamer Grand Manan was carrying an excursion party for a moonlight sail down the St. Croix river to St. Andrews, and return. On her return trip upriver, at about 20 minutes past H, she collided with the dredge, striking nearly head on, about eight feet from the starboard corner of the dredge, cutting in for a distance of about eight feet on deck, and through five 'or six streaks below the water line. The dredge sank within a few moments, holding the stem of the steamer in or near the breach caused by the impact; her A frame, or boom, caught in the bow of the steamer. The Grand Manan came clear of the dredge about 3J4 hours later, when the tide had reached low water. The scows were not damaged. At the time of the collision, the wind was light, from the north, blowing downriver; the tide between 2% and 3y2 hours ebb, running about three knots an hour, several points across the fore and aft line of the dredge, toward the American shore. The atmosphere was clear; the sky bright, starlight and moonlight.

The libelant contends that, as the collision took place when the dredge was properly anchored where she had a right to be, on a clear, bright night, when objects were visible at a long distance, the presumption is in her favor, and against the steamer, that, under the provisions of law, it was the steamer’s duty to keep clear of an am chored vessel, and that a moving vessel colliding with a dredge at anchor must exonerate herself by showing that it was not in her power to prevent the collision by any practicable precautions.

[585]*585The claimant contends that the dredge was at fault, in that she was anchored in a narrow portion of the channel of the St. Croix river, in such a manner as to prevent and obstruct the passage of other vessels in the navigable channel; that her fault in anchoring, and remaining at anchor in the night in the locality selected by her without compelling necessity for such selection, was a violation, not only of the general maritime law, but also of the statute law of the United States, as contained in the provisions of section 15 of Act of Congress of March 3, 1899, c. 425 (30 Stat. 1152 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3543]); that the dredge was therefore at anchor in an unlawful situation, and the burden of proof is upon her to show that the collision did not occur by reason of her exposed and unlawful situation, but did occur by reason of the negligent conduct of the steamer. The claimant also charges the dredge with other faults; especially with placing a hawser in the waters of the St. Croix river, or permitting it to escape into the water, and to be in the vicinity of the lower anchor buoy of the dredge, that, while in the vicinity of the lower anchor buoy, the hawser in question fouled the propeller of the Grand Manan while she was proceeding upriver, making the steamer unmanageable, and that the collision was caused solely by the fault of the dredge.

In the consideration of the case, it is evident that much depends upon the court’s finding on the question whether, at the time of the collision, the dredge and scows were at fault in lying anchored in a narrow channel, as alleged by the claimant, thus preventing and obstructing the passage of the steamer and other vessels. This question should receive the first attention of the court; as certain other questions may be affected by this finding.

I. (a) What, then, was the position of the 'dredge upon the evening in question? Was she at fault in that she was anchored in the narrow channel of the St. Croix river?

The St. Croix river is a tidal stream. The bottom is of a shifting character, quite largely of sawdust formation. The tides rise and fall about 21 feet; their velocity, as well as the direction of their set, varies at different stages. At high water the river is navigable for deep draft vessels. On the evening of June 26, 1912, the libelant was operating the dredge under a contract with the United States government for the improvement of the river. The contract under which the work was carried on contained, among other things, the usual provisions that the contractor assumes responsibility for the safety of his employes, plant, and materials, and for damage done to or by them from any source; that the contractor shall keep proper lights each night between sunset and sunrise on all the floating plant connected with the work; upon the ranges and stakes in connection with it when necessary; upon all buoys large enough, and so situated as to endanger or to obstruct navigation, and shall be responsible for damages resulting from neglect in this matter; that the contractor shall be required to conduct the work in such a manner as to obstruct navigation as little as possible, and at the completion of the work shall remove his plant, including ranges, buoys, and piles placed [586]*586by him in navigable waters; that in case the dredge is so placed by the. contractor as to obstruct the channel and impede the passage of vessels, it shall promptly be moved so as to afford a practicable passage.

It appears to have been the intention of the government to excavate a channel about 200 feet in width, through that part of the river which was then used for navigation. Upon this work the dredge had been employed since May 16, and was held in position by the use of four spuds, one at each corner, each spud about 16 inches square and about 72 feet long. In addition to the spuds, the dredge had also as a bow mooring an anchor of about 950 pounds weight, to which she .was connected by a three-quarter inch steel cable, running downstream a distance of about 325 feet, and a similar anchor at the stern, also connected by a steel cable, running upstream about 600 feet. The location of each anchor was indicated on the surface by an anchor buojr about 27 feet long, and 18 inches in diameter. These buoys floated flat upon the water, were without lights, and were connected with the anchors by wire ropes. The dredge was equipped with the usual clam-shell buckets, with which the material forming the bottom of the river was raised, and thus deposited into scows made fast alongside of the dredge. These scows, when loaded,' were towed to a dumping ground near the mouth of the river.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 F. 583, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grand-manan-med-1913.