Philadelphia & R. R. v. The Allie & Evie

24 F. 745, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 2, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 24 F. 745 (Philadelphia & R. R. v. The Allie & Evie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia & R. R. v. The Allie & Evie, 24 F. 745, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113 (S.D.N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This libel was filed to recover about $4,800 for the loss of two coal-barges, with their cargoes, on the night of December 14, 3883, which were cut adrift during a squall in the lower bay while the boats were in tow of the tug Allie & Evie, on a trip from South Am. boy to Bed Bank, on the Shrewsbury river. The barges belonged to the libelants, and bad taken on board cargoes of coal at Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania, consigned to Miles Boss, Bed Bank, New Jersey, for which bills of lading were given “excepting the dangers of navigation.” Arriving at South Amboy, tbe boats were taken in charge by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, which had a towing line making regular trips to Bed Bank, which is some five or six miles up the Shrewsbury river. This river is narrow and shallow, and can only [746]*746be navigated with such barges at or near high water, and only light-draught tugs can be used in such service. The distance from South Amboy to the mouth of the Shrewsbury is about IS miles, and the course lies across the lower bay, where a high wind soon raises a- sea that is dangerous to any but ocean-going vessels. The tug-boat Allie & Evie had been constructed for this line the spring previous, and had made some 13 trips before the present. She usually took two boats along, one on each side, and the weight of evidence is that she was competent to handle such a tow, except in a high sea. Around South Amboy she could manage four or five such boats, and since this loss in 1883 she has continued in the same service without accident.

Upon this trip the Allie & Evie left South Amboy, as customary, at high water, which, on that night, was at 8 :30 p. m. The libelants’ boats were lashed one upon each side, as usual. A larger steam-tug, the Harry, of the same line, having no employment, was directed to accompany and assist the Allie & Evie a part of the way. She did so for nearly two-thirds of the distance to the mouth of the Shrews-bury river, when she cast off and returned to South Amboy. One of the libelants’ witnesses says that when the Harry left there was a drizzling rain, but that the sea was calm and smooth. Several other witnesses say that it was then clear above, with the stars shining, and that there were no indications of the approach of bad weather. About half an hour after, and a little before 11 p. m., black clouds gathered suddenly in the west, the wind increased rapidly to a gale from the north-west, the sea rose, and the two barges, whose bows projected far beyond the tug, soon began to pound the tug, and became so displaced through the breaking of some lines as also to strike each other’s bows. It then became apparent that the barges must be cut loose. The persons aboard of them came on board the tug, and the barges were cut adrift and lost. Before casting them off, some conference was had between the pilot of the tug and the captain of one of the barges, the only person aboard of that boat, about dropping the boats astern upon a hawser; but the captain refused to remain on board the barge if dropped astern, for fear of being washed overboard. The other captain was, in the mean time, getting his family aboard the tug. On the trial both the captains testified that they would not have consented to stay aboard; they assisted in cutting their boats adrift, and they both, with other experts of the libelants, as well as the respondents’ witnesses, agreed that it would have been of no use to drop the barges astern on a hawser without men aboard to steer them. The Schuylkill boats are not easily managed on a hawser, and they steer badly.

Unless the testimony of all the boatmen is discredited, the squall was a very violent one; the sea dangerous; and the tug in peril, even after the barges were cut adrift. The two captains did not expect to reach the shore alive. The pilot was alarmed for his safety. The waves washed over the pilot-house, the bulwarks of the tug were cut [747]*747away to ease her and let the water out, and when she got under the lee of Staten island she had three feet of water in her, reaching nearly to her fires.

It is not claimed that the respondents were insurers; bat upon the rule laid clown by the supreme court in the case of The Margaret, 94 U. S. 494, 496, that “the tug is the dominant mind and will in the adventure;” that “she is bound to bring to the performance of the duly she has assumed reasonable care and skill, and to exercise them in everything relating to the work until it is accomplished” — it is urged that the respondents are liable for this loss, (1) because the Allio & Evie was not a fit and proper tug for the work that she undertook; (2) because the barometer and cautionary signals displayed in New York indicated dangerous weather for some considerable time before she started out, and that the tug was not justified in starting; and (3) because the tug Harry returned sooner than she ought, and because, had she kept by, each tug, as it is claimed, might have saved one boat.

In regard to the last point, notwithstanding'some reluctance to give full credit to the testimony that it was impossible to save either barge if dropped astern on a hawser unless there were a man aboard to steer her, the weight of evidence is so strong on both sides upon that point that I am not at liberty to disregard it. If that be so, even if the Harry was not justified in returning when she did, I do not perceive how remaining by could have made any difference in the result, as it is clear that neither of the captains was willing to remain aboard his barge to steer her. The early departure of the Harry, therefore, must be held to be immaterial as respects this loss, because there was no service that she could have rendered, except to take one boat astern on a hawser without any helmsman aboard, and that, according to the evidence, would have been ineffectual. But the weight of evidence is that there were no indications of bad weather when the Harry left the other tug some seven miles distant from the Shrewsbury river; and, considering that the use of two tugs was not customary, I cannot hold it negligence, or want of reasonable care, for her to return under, such circumstances, without holding these trips, though made in the customary manner, to be wholly unjustifiable.

Even if the pilot of the Allie & Evie might have thought that the men could safely stay aboard, though he evidently did not think so, he had no lawful command or arbitrary power over the captains of the barges, — such as the captain of a vessel has over the seamen under him, — and he is not responsible for the conduct of the captains any further than they choose to comply with his requests or directions. Sturgis v. Boyer, 24 How. 110; The Express, 3 Cliff. 462; The James P. Donaldson, 19 Fed. Rep. 264. Here the pilot proposed to drop the barges astern, the captains refused to remain aboard, and that seems to have been taken as settling the question that the barges must be cut adrift; and upon the evidence I must find it rightly so determined.

[748]*748It is argued that the barges should have been dropped astern on the first signs of the squall. This might possibly have been done with the men still on board. But their testimony on the trial was that in their judgment they would, in that case, have been certainly washed overboard and all lost.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Milmine Bodman & Co. v. Empire Canal Corp.
52 F.2d 41 (Second Circuit, 1931)
Standard Transp. Co. v. Great Lakes Towing Co.
260 F. 327 (W.D. New York, 1919)
Gilchrist Transp. Co. v. Great Lakes Towing Co.
237 F. 432 (D. New Jersey, 1916)
Baker-Whiteley Coal Co. v. American Towing & Lightering Co.
3 Balt. C. Rep. 157 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1911)
The Covington
128 F. 788 (S.D. New York, 1904)
The E. Luckenback
109 F. 487 (S.D. New York, 1901)
Pederson v. John D. Spreckles & Bros.
87 F. 938 (Ninth Circuit, 1898)
The Vandercook
65 F. 251 (S.D. New York, 1895)
Mosle v. The Sintram
64 F. 884 (S.D. New York, 1894)
American Steel Barge Co. v. The Battler
62 F. 612 (S.D. New York, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. 745, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-r-r-v-the-allie-evie-nysd-1885.