Memphis & C. Packet Co. v. Overman Carriage Co.

93 F. 246, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2866
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedMarch 9, 1899
DocketNo. 1,754
StatusPublished

This text of 93 F. 246 (Memphis & C. Packet Co. v. Overman Carriage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis & C. Packet Co. v. Overman Carriage Co., 93 F. 246, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2866 (circtsdoh 1899).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

About half past 6 o’clock on the morning of the 8th of March, 1895, the steamboat Longfellow, owned by the libelant, left the port at Cinciunati, Ohio, on a voyage to the port of New Orleans, La., and return. There was no fog. The morning was clear. The chimneys were lowered to enable the boat to pass under the bridges which cross the Ohio river at the port of Cincinnati, and extended horizontally aft. As she was passing under the Suspension bridge, the smoke from the chimneys filled the pilot house, and hid from the pilot’s view the piers of the next bridge below,- — the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad bridge, — so that he was not able to observe and direct the course of the boat, safely, between the piers. The river being at flood stage, and the boat under full headway, she soon ran upon one of the piers of the railroad bridge; striking the pier with her starboard side, near the boilers, with such force as to cause her to careen upon her side, break in two, sink, and become a total wreck, — causing thereby the death of a number of persons, and the loss of her cargo. On the 23d of May, 1895, this [248]*248libel was filed against the respondents named therein, and all others who might intéryene, setting forth the loss of the boat and its cargo,, and the loss of life caused thereby, and alleging that the boat, when she started on the voyage, was “staunch and seaworthy, fully equipped with all the necessary machinery, tackle, and appliances” required by law, and “manned by a full corps of efficient and duly-licensed pilots, engineers, etc., and in charge of a competent and duly-licensed master,” and that the disaster occurred “without any fault or negligence” on the part of the libelant, “or of any of the officers or crew” of the boat, and without the privity or knowledge of the libelant, and further alleging that the libel was filed for the purpose of contesting all claims of the respondents and interveners for losses and damages arising from the sinking and destruction of the boat. The libelant prays that if, upon final hearing, it be determined that libelant is not liable for the loss and damages occasioned by the disaster, it be so decreed, or if it be found that the libelant is liable therefor, in a sum greater than the value of the vessel and her freight pending at the time of the disaster, then that it be decreed that the libelant be discharged from all other and further liability upon payment of the value of the boat and her freight into court, and that meantime the respondents and all interveners be enjoined from prosecuting suits against libelant for said losses and damages. To this libel John J. Clayton, as administrator of the estate of Mary Elizabeth Aull, deceased, who lost her life by the sinking of the boat, intervening; files an answer and cross libel, and denies that said boat, on the 8th day of March, 1895, was staunch and seaworthy, or fully equipped, or in charge of a competent master, or that the libelant is entitled to exemption from, or to limitation of liability for, damages for causing the death of Mary Elizabeth Aull, and by way of cross libel alleges that said vessel was sunk, and the death of Mary Elizabeth Aull was caused, by the failure of the officers of the boat to comply with title 52 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, by their failure to warn the passengers of the boat of the danger they" were in', by the refusal of the master to stop the boat, although admonished by the pilot that by reason of the smoke further navigation was unsafe, and by reason of gross negligence in the navigation of the vessel, and therefore the libelant is not entitled to exemption from liability for the death of the said Mary Elizabeth Aull, nor to have such liability limited to the value of the boat and its pending freight; that the disaster occurred within the boundaries of the state of Kentucky; and that under the statutes of Kentucky the cross libelant is entitled to recover damages for the wrongful act of the libelant in causing the death of Mary Elizabeth Aull, and that the amount claimed is $20,000. Other cross libels have been filed by the representatives of the other persons who lost their lives, and many answers and cross libels have been filed, setting up claims for the loss of baggage, goods, etc. Issue is joined upon these answers and cross libels by reply. It is claimed by the respondents and interveners that the boat was lost by reason of negligence of the officers, and her unseaworthiness, and the questions, presented are: (1) Was the destruction of the boat, and the consequent loss of life and property, due to negligence and unsea[249]*249worthiness? (2) If so, was such negligence and unseaworthiness without the privity or knowledge of the libelant?

First, was the destruction of the boat due to negligence and unseaworthiness? If not, then libelant is not liable to answer in damages to any of the respondents; but, if it was, then it is liable in the amounts found by the master, unless it appear that the losses and injuries complained of were without the privity or knowledge of the libelant, in which case the liability would be limited to the value of the vessel and the freight pending at the time of the disaster.

Was she seaworthy? It is said that she was an old boat lengthened by cutting her in two and adding 30 feet in the center, making her about 300 feet long, and leaving her structurally weak; that she was unwieldy, and slow in answering her helm; that she was rotten, because the pier cut into her without a jar; that she had been injured a month before by colliding with the same pier on which she sunk; that she was injured by grounding near Paducah, Kv., a few days before she sunk; that she was unruly in hacking; that she was overloaded; and therefore for these reasons was not seaworthv. On the other hand, there is evidence that the injuries which she received were slight, and had been repaired, and that she was staunch and seaworthy. Upon all the evidence, I would not be inclined to find that she was unseaivorthy; but, in the view I take of the case, it is not necessary to nicely weigh the evidence in order to determine whether she was up to the mark in all points of seaworthiness. As I see the case, it is not shown that the disaster was due to unseaworthiness. No witness states that she was unseaworthy. No witness states that the disaster was due to unseaworthiness. No one offers an opinion or draws an inference upon any knowledge of her, or of her action at the time of the disaster to that effect, except the witness Wood, who expresses the opinion that she was rotten, because the pier seemed to crash into her without a jar. That, however, may have been due to the manner in which she struck the pier. But let that be as it may; the weight of the evidence is opposed to the opinion expressed by Mr. Wood. The suddenness of the destruction of the boat may be accounted for by the great force with which she struck the pier, and the pressure of the current on the ends, which broke her in two, and carried the parts on either side of the pier. The water was high, the current rapid, .and she was under a full head of steam; and, as Capt. McKay says, the current caught her on the port guard, and tripped her up, and gradually rolled her over. Counsel, in argument, ask the court to •draw inferences of unseaworthiness upon facts which may or may not justify them, and then found upon these inferences a finding that the collision and its consequences were due to unseaworthiness. But such a finding ought not to he based upon doubtful inferences. If overloading rendered her unmanageable, and forced her upon the pier, that could have been shown.

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93 F. 246, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-c-packet-co-v-overman-carriage-co-circtsdoh-1899.