Kelley Island Lime & Transport Co. v. City of Cleveland

144 F. 207, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 954, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 245
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 6, 1906
DocketNo. 2,321
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 F. 207 (Kelley Island Lime & Transport Co. v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley Island Lime & Transport Co. v. City of Cleveland, 144 F. 207, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 954, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 245 (N.D. Ohio 1906).

Opinion

TAYLER, District Judge.

About 3 o’clock on the afternoon of June 25, 1901, the steam scow Ohio, loaded with sand, was passing up the Cuyahoga river, and, in going through the starboard draw of the middle Seneca street bridge, in the city of Cleveland, came into collision with submerged timbers forming a part of the sheathing surrounding the central pier of the draw; and, after proceeding 200 or 300 feet, sank. Her owners filed this libel against the city of Cleveland, charging negligence in respect to the submerged timbers and the condition of the central pier of the bridge, and against the Great Lakes Towing Company, owner of the tugs Goulder and Lutz, charging them with violation of the law in the omission to give signals of their desire to pass the Ohio in the neighborhood of this draw/ in consequence of which the Lutz, passing the Ohio on her starboard side, produced a current which caused the Ohio to sheer and run upon the submerged timbers, with the result as stated.

The Goulder was so far distant from the Ohio when the accident occurred that no serious claim is now made that she was responsible in any way for the accident; and there is no testimony which would indicate that she ought to be in any way held on account of it. The question of her responsibility will, therefore, be no further discussed.

The Ohio was a fiat-bottomed steam barge, 131 feet long, 29 feet wide, and about 8 feet deep, with straight sides and a V-shaped bow, the turn of the bow commencing about 12 feet abaft her stem. On the occasion of the accident, she was loaded so that her deck was about 8 inches above the'water, and she drew 7 or 7yí feet. Her engine room and pilot house were aft, extending about 30 feet forward from her stern; the pilot housé being about 12 feet wide and 7 feet high, so located that the front of the pilot house set back 30 inches from the forward end of the engine room roof, leaving a strip of standing room the width of the engine room and 30 inches wide, fore and aft, in front of, and on the level of, the pilot house floor. This spácc was used by the Ohio’s master as the “bridge,” when commanding the vessel. . The Ohio'had two engines, and twin-screw propellers, and was capable of a speed, loaded and in deep water, of about 7y2 miles per hour.

The tug Lutz was 84 feet long, 21 feet wide, drew from 7 to 8 feet of water forward and 11 to 11J4 feet aft, and was capable of a speed of about 14 miles per hour. She was what would be called, in these waters,.a large and very powerful tug.

The middle Seneca Street Bridge, at which this accident occurred, was a drawbridge, owned and operated by the- city of Cleveland. Having arranged to construct a new bridge at this point, without any middle pier, it had, a short time before, employed a contractor to remove the central pier. In the progress of this work, the continuous line of protection piling which surrounded the pier, as well as the area covered by the bridge when the draw was open, was removed, and was in that condition when the accident happened. This protection piling ran outside of the stonework of the pier a distance of from five to six feet. The substructure of the stone pier was octagonal in form, and surrounded by heavy timbers, [209]*209bolted together, which, being mortised into each other, projected, with overlapping ends, at the several angles of the octagon. It was upon one of these submerged projections that the Ohio probably struck. There was no mark, or cautionary signal, placed in the river to show that the protection piling had been removed, and to indicate the line beyond which it would not be safe to navigate a vessel. The master and crew of the Ohio testified that they knew that the protection piling was out, and that it was necessary to keep well away from the pier in running their vessel through the draw. In order to carry on the work of removing the center pier, and perform the work of construction, the port draw — going up stream — had been closed with a line of piling, so that the only way by which vessels could pass up through the bridge was by way of the starboard draw, the width of which was 60 feet. One hundred and eighty feet below the draw, on the starboard side of the stream, passing up, is a bend in the river, called “Collision Bend,” or “the Knuckle,” the angle of which is about 70 degrees; so that a vessel passing from below up the river, and intending to go through the starboard draw of the middle Seneca Street Bridge, must necessarily make a turn to starboard of about 10 points, or 110 degrees.

On the afternoon in question, the Ohio, having passed through the lower Seneca Street Bridge, and having been passed by the tug Goulder under circumstances which seem to have had no relation to the accident, proceeded toward “the Knuckle,” a few hundred feet up the river, at a speed of about three miles an hour; and then, going forward with her port propeller and backing with her starboard propeller, and porting her wheel, undertook to make the turn around “the Knuckle.” Her distance out from the starboard bank, or dock, at this point was from 60 to 100 feet. While she was making this turn, and when her bow was at a somewhat uncertain distance from the open draw of the middle Seneca Street Bridge, but which could not have been more than from 100 to 150 feet, the tug Lutz came up oil her starboard side, having given no signal of her desire to pass the Ohio, and with no knowledge on the part of the navigator of the Ohio of the fact that she was coming, until she came into view at a point between the Ohio and the dock immediately abreast of the pilot house, in front of which the captain stood. At this time the Ohio was proceeding at a rale of from one to three miles an hour; the libelant claiming that her speed was something like three miles an hour, and the respondents claiming that her speed was about one mile per hour. The Lutz had drifted — so her crew claimed — part of the way up, after passing through the lower Seneca Street Bridge, and, iust as she came alongside the Ohio on the starboard side, the engineer of the Lutz received a signal to go ahead, which she at once did, passing the Ohio at a speed of not less than five miles an hour, and, according to some of the witnesses, at a higher rate of speed.

Exactly where the two vessels were when the Lutz’s stern passed the Ohio’s bow it is impossible to say, in consequence of the irreconcilable conflict of testimony. We are relegated, in order to arrive at an answer sufficiently satisfactory to determine the merits of this [210]*210case, to the surrounding circumstances, which are reasonably free from doubt. ' It is apparent that when the Lutz was some distance down the river, and near the lower Seneca Street Bridge, some 400 or 500 feet from the Ohio, the Ohio was undertaking to negotiate the turn. While so doing her bow could not have been more than 200 feet away from the draw. The Lutz came up slowly, and it is fair to presume that she did not proceed with any considerable speed until she had squared herself for the channel of the draw. At the time when she put on speed, it seems to be clear that she was alongside the stern of the Ohio, and, with the Ohio proceeding at sufficient speed to give her steering headway, her bow must have been close to the draw, if not within the draw channel, when the stern of the Lutz passed her. This seems to be the necessary inference from all of the conditions that surrounded the situation, and from such of the testimony as seems to be credible and consistent with the actually existing facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 F. 207, 15 Ohio F. Dec. 954, 1906 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-island-lime-transport-co-v-city-of-cleveland-ohnd-1906.