James McWilliams Blue Line, Inc. v. Card Towing Line, Inc.
This text of 168 F.2d 720 (James McWilliams Blue Line, Inc. v. Card Towing Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
L. HAND, Circuit Judge.
The Card Towing Line, Inc., as claimant of the tug, “Edward Card,” appeals from a decree in the admiralty, holding the tug solely liable for a collision in the Hudson River opposite Sixty-Eighth Street, Manhattan, on the night of January 18, 1943. The facts as found by the District Court — which we accept — were as follows: While the libellant’s tug, “Feeney,” with a dump scow on her starboard side, was bound north, on a course about 800 feet off the Jersey pier ends, she made ou't the down-bound tug, “Card,” about 1500 feet directly ahead of her, with a large coast-wise barge, the “Armistead,” alongside on her starboard hand. Anchored in the river about 1000 feet or more from the Jersey peir ends was an ocean-going vessel 400 feet long, which was still headed upstream as a result of the ebb tide which had just yielded to slack water. When abreast of her and about 1000 feet from the “Card,” the “Feeney” blew one blast, [721]*721calling for a port-to-port passing; the “Card” did not answer, and the “Feeney” went on for about 200 feet, when she blew a second single blast. Again she received no answer, except that the “Card” then blew a short toot apparently to rouse the lookout on the “Armistead;” and half a minute later the “Feeney” blew an alarm and put her rudder hard right, keeping her engines full speed ahead. Thereupon the “Card” blew an alarm and backed, throwing her own barge to port. The vessels collided 200 feet above the anchored steamer ; the port bow of the “Armistead” striking the “Feeney’s” port quarter about fifteen feet forward of her stern. On this appeal the claimant concedes that the “Card” was at fault, but among other faults it charges the “Feeney” with “continuing ahead at undiminished speed without change of course and without alarm signals in a head-on situation until about thirty seconds before collision.”
The faults of the two vessels were unequal, and we cannot but be tempted to follow the judge and hold the “Card” alone at fault. Not only had she made up her tow, most negligently, but she must have been grossly inattentive not to answer the first signal of the “Feeney.” Nevertheless, we have not been able to find a way to exonerate the “Feeney.” We have several times held that neither one of two vessels meeting head and head may put her rudder right until she gets an answer to her invitation to a port-to-port passing,1 and it was therefore right for the “Feeney” to keep on until she got a response; and of course it was right to allow a reasonable interval for that purpose. That interval her master said was “about a minute” during which the court found that she; had traveled 200 feet; and, whatever its actual length, we shall assume that she did not wait too long. However, when the time for a response was up, she blew a second single blast and still kept on at full speed for at least half a minute; and yet, in spite of this delay she nearly escaped, although the “Card’s” backing had thrown the “Armistead” across her course. The failure to blow the alarm at the time when she blew the second single blast was a statutory fault; and it is apparent, not only that the “Feeney” has not proved that it could not have caused the collision; but there is the strongest probability that but for the delay there would have been no collision; for, had she, when she blew her second single blast, at once blown an alarm and put her rudder hard right, she would almost certainly have gone clear. Being already abreast of the bow of the anchored ship, she had nothing to fear in doing so; it was slack water and she was making three miles an hour over the ground.
Rule III of Article 18 of the Inland Rules
Decree modified; damages divided.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
168 F.2d 720, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-mcwilliams-blue-line-inc-v-card-towing-line-inc-ca2-1948.