Kineon v. New Mary Houston

69 F. 362, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 10, 1895
DocketNo. 1,723
StatusPublished

This text of 69 F. 362 (Kineon v. New Mary Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kineon v. New Mary Houston, 69 F. 362, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36 (S.D. Ohio 1895).

Opinion

SAGE, District Judge.

This is a libel for damages by collision which occurred about 2 o’clock in the morning of Saturday, January 16, 1892, on the Ohio river, at Cincinnati. The New Mary Houston was plying regularly between Cincinnati and New Orleans. She came up the river on the evening of Thursday, January 14th, and moored at the wharfboat of the Southern Wharfboat Company, her usual landing place at the Cincinnati public wharf between Broadway and'Sycamore streets. After she was fastened to the wharf-boat the fires were extinguished, the “wrist” from the “doctor” (an essential pari; of her operating machinery when in motion) was taken out for repairs, and she began to discharge her inbound cargo and to receive her outbound cargo. About 2 o’clock on Saturday morning the wharfboat broke loose from its moorings, and, together with the steamboat, drifted down stream. At the foot of Elm street, about half a mile -below where the wharfboat was moored, a collision occurred with the coal fleet of the Pittsburgh Coal Com[363]*363pany, resulting in the breaking loose of the barge C. Jutte No. 22, owned by the interveners C. Jutte & Co., and the loss of its cargo, consisting of 12,850 bushels of Youghiogheny lump coal, owned by the interveners, the Pittsburgh Coal Company. Whether this loss resulted from the collision of the barge with the steamboat, or with the wharfboat, is in dispute, upon the evidence; the interveners claiming that it was by collision with the steamboat, while the claimants of the steamboat contend that it was from collision with the wharfboat. Another collision, which occurred about half a mile down the river, at the foot of Smith street, between the wharfboat and the coal fleet of the libelant, Kineon, caused the loss of the Walton Barge No. 539, with its cargo of 13,461 bushels of coal, and the Advance Barge No. 35, with its cargo of 12,964 bushels of coal. The Walton barge was owned by the interveners Walton & Co.; the Advance barge, by the interveners the Advance Coal Company; the cargoes, by the libelant, Sol P. Kineon. Each coal fleet was moored securely to the shore of the river. The fleet of the Pittsburgh Coal Company consisted of eight barges, in tiers of four abreast. The outside barge of the upper tier was struck. Each barge was 25 feet wide by 120 feet in length. Between the barges and the shore were floats 20 feet wide. The distance between the water’s edge and the outside of this fleet was about 125 feét. The barges of Kineon’s fleet were in three tiers. The upper tier was five barges abreast; the middle tier, four barges abreast,—the outside barge being on a line with the outside barge of the upper tier; and the third tier consisted of but a single barge, which was strung behind the .outside barges of the other tiers. The barges were 25 feet wide. Between them and the water’s edge were floats 26 feet wide, and these were sparred out from the shore about 15 feet. The outer line of the barges was about 170 feet from the water’s edge. The outside barge of the middle tier, and the sole one of the lower'tier, were struck. Tire libel sets forth, among other things, that on the morning of the 16th of January, 1892, and for some little time prior thereto, the water in the Ohio river was, and had been, rapidly rising. The testimony is that when the Mary Houston was tied to the wharf there was considerable ice and drift in the river, and that it was rising fast. According to the statement of the superintendent of the waterworks, taken from the waterworks gauge, the river reached the following stages at the dates and hours named: January 15th, 6 a. m., 20 ft. 1 in.; 11 a. m., 23 ft. 7 in.; 5 p. m., 28 ft. January 16th, 6 a. m., 33 ft. 6 in.; 11 a. m., 35 ft. 4 in.; 5 p. m., 37 ft.

The libelants aver that, by reason of the rapid rising of the riv.er, it became necessary, in the exercise of prudent and careful seamanship, for those in charge of the steamboat and wharfboat to use great care in fastening the wharfboat to the shore, and the steamboat to the wharfboat and the shore, and to other fixed and sta.tionary objects, to prevent the steamboat and the wharfboat, or either of them, from breaking loose from their fastenings, or floating-down stream.

They further aver that it was necessary, in the exercise of prudent seamanship, for those having the management of the steamboat to [364]*364keep up steam, so that if tbe steamboat should break loose from its fastenings its motion could be controlled and directed; also, that after the steamboat was moored to the wharfboat those in charge suffered the steam to go down, and the fires under the boilers of the steamboat to go out, and that the persons in charge of the wharf-boat failed to use proper care in the fastening of the wharfboat to the shore, and the persons in charge of the steamboat failed to use proper care in fastening the steamboat to the wharfboat and to the shore, and to other fixed and stationary objects.

The libel then .sets forth the breaking loose of the steamboat and wharfboat from their fastenings, their drifting, and the collision above referred to. It is charged that the collisions were occasioned by the negligence, inattention, and want of proper care and skill on part of the steamboat, her master and crew, and on the part of the wharfboat, her master and crew, and not from any fault, omission, or neglect on the part of the barges injured, or of any of the persons having charge or care thereof, or of either of them. The claims for damages are then set forth.

As to the stage of the river, and its rising, there is no conflict in the evidence. Nor is there any question that, when the steamboat and the wharfboat broke from their fastenings and went adrift, the steamboat was held by her fastenings to the wharfboat until they were parted by the shock of the collision with the Elm street fleet. This fact is sufficient evidence that the steamboat was securely moored to the wharfboat, especially as the testimony is that due care was exercised, and that all precautions usual and customary in such stage and condition of the river as is shown by the evidence were taken. The testimony is that it was customary and necessary to clean out the boilers on each trip, and for that purpose the fires were suffered to go down. The wrist of the doctor was at the same time taken out for repairs. It was proper to do this, in the exercise of due care of the machinery of the boat. There was nothing extraordinary in the stage of the river, nor in the rate of its rising. Under such conditions, driftwood, and, at that time of the year, floating ice, might have been expected. The evidence does not indicate that the ice was in such quantities as to endanger the safety of vessels, or to require that steam should be kept up.

Counsel for libelant relies upon the fact that the cables of the steamboat were not bent to the anchors. Counsel for the claimants objects that there is no averment in the libel of the fact, and cites The Marpesia, L. B. 4 P. C. 212, 213, etc. The court there held:

“If a plaintiff in a collision suit intends to rely upon a particular act of negligence by tbe defendant, he is bound specifically to allege that act in his pleadings; and it is not sufficient that the act may be included generally in an allegation in the pleadings which does not clearly state such particular act, as it is likely to mislead the defendant, and xn'event his being prepared to meet that particular'case.”

That case was decided, and such was the rule, before the enactment of the judicature acts. The Ann, Lush. 55; The North American, Swab. 358; The Haswell, Browning & L. 247. See, also, The Hochung and The Lapwing, 7 App. Cas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 F. 362, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kineon-v-new-mary-houston-ohsd-1895.