S. C. Hart

132 F. 536, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 7, 1904
DocketNo. 1,520
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 F. 536 (S. C. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. C. Hart, 132 F. 536, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139 (D. Mass. 1904).

Opinion

BO WEBB, District Judge.

This is a libel against the tug S. C. Hart to recover for the loss of the lighter Eva, wrecked on Horse-neck Beach, near Westport Harbor, November 9, 1903. Within the "small landlocked harbor there is a shoal styled on the chart the “Eion’s Tongue,” a part of which is known locally as the “Bar.” In the “Eist of Beacons, Buoys, and Daymarks” it is called the “Middle Ground.” Outside the harbor is a sand .reef or shoal between red buoy No. 4 (Half Mile Shoal Buoy) and Half Mile Rock. This is often locally called the “Shoal.” It appears to be one of those shoals, generally known as bars, which are formed by the current just outside a sandy harbor. The black buoy marks Dogfish Eedge, and not this bar. It is about 1,000 feet outside the latter. Westport Point is a mile or two up the Westport or Acoakset river, a salt creek which flows through Westport Harbor into Buzzard’s Bay.

The lighter was at New Bedford. Taylor, its owner, wished to use it in the construction of a bridge over Westport river between West-port Point and Horseneck Beach. He applied for towage to the New Bedford Towboat Company, the owner of the Hart, and was told by Capt. Sherman, the company’s manager, that the tug would not carry the lighter over the bar. There is conflict of testimony if Sherman added that he would leave the lighter between or just outside the red and black buoys. On his direct examination he said that he told Taylor that the tug would anchor the lighter just outside the red and black buoys. On cross-examination he carefully repeated the conversation without reference to the buoys. Taylor said there was no mention of the buoys, and I am inclined, on the whole, to believe him, notwithstanding the testimony of Pierce and Athearn, which may well re[537]*537produce what Sherman told Pierce, the master of the Hart. Sherman would hardly have made specific mention of two out of many buoys in a place he had visited but twice, without referring to a chart, and he says he did not refer to a chart while talking to Taylor. Taylor testified that Sherman said the tug would give the lighter a push over the bar. This was not contradicted very specifically, and I rather think the promise was made either by Sherman or by Pierce. Taylor had little knowledge of the sea, and knew nothing of Westport Harbor, except what he had seen in one or two visits to the place overland. To one unfamiliar with the sea, a view of it from the land tells almost nothing; but in one of these visits Taylor unfortunately had heard of the bar first above mentioned, hereinafter called the “Inner Bar,” and had this in his mind while talking to Sherman. On the other hand, Sherman, a mariner of long experience, who had been into Westport Harbor but twice in his life, intended to speak of the second bar above mentioned, hereinafter called the “Outer Bar,” having no knowledge of the peculiar local nomenclature. The names “Outer Bar” and “Inner Bar” are used in the United States Coast Pilot. Thus there arose a serious misunderstanding, quite honest on the part of both men. Taylor asked Sherman if he wanted a pilot. Sherman said he did not, having in mind the Outer Bar. Sherman asked Taylor if he had good ground tackle, and Taylor answered that he had, supposing that he was to be left in a landlocked harbor. Under this supposition he urged a speedy departure, but Pierce told him that the start from New Bedford must be made in the morning, so as to have daylight to enter the harbor;

On November 9th, at about 6 o’clock in the morning, the tug started with the lighter in tow. The weather was pleasant, and the wind light. Taylor went to Westport overland. The lighter’s crew consisted of an engineer, who had general charge, though he knew nothing of the sea, two landsmen, if possible more ignorant than the engineer, and two seamen, Anderson and Mooney; the former having followed the sea for 25 years. In answer to the question, "You knew as an actual fact that you didn’t know anything about the sea, anything about how a vessel ought to be anchored?” the engineer replied, “About as much as a lot of old females would.” The engineer had accompanied Taylor on one of his visits to Westport. The others knew nothing of the place. The tug arrived off the mouth of the harbor between 11 and 11:20 a. m., anchored the lighter, and then proceeded to another job.

The precise place at which the tug left the lighter is in dispute. The libelant’s witnesses placed it on a line between the blade buoy above mentioned, and Two Mile Rock, nearer the latter. Capt. Pierce, of the Hart, said it was about 150 feet outside the black buoy. Capt. Macomber, an excellent witness, put the position about midway between the ledge and the rock. The inference to be drawn from the attempts made to warp the lighter is not clear, though it does not support the libelant’s extreme position. The heaviest anchor left the ground but once (according to Mooney) or twice (according to Anderson). The smallest anchor used for warping must have been carried out nearly to windward, inasmuch as the lighter’s engine took in on both hawsers at the same time, and the heavy anchor could have been [538]*538lifted only when the lighter was over it. It should seem that the resultant direction of the lighter’s warping and drifting must have been nearly to leeward, though the changing tide and other conditions leave this inference rather weak. On the whole, and while it-is not possible' to be exact, I am satisfied that the tug left the lighter some distance south of a line drawn from the black to the red buoy, and still further to the south of the outer bar, which extends from the red buoy to Half Mile Rock. Having done this, Capt. Pierce deemed that he had performed his contract, and he went away without much notion how the lighter was to get into the harbor. This is made plain by his ignorance whether the tide was running out or in. The lighter could warp in only during flood tide. In fact, the tide was high about noon.

At the time the lighter was anchored there had arisen a strong southwesterly breeze, which increased irregularly through the afternoon into the evening It was hardly a gale, but outside the harbor there is no protection from the Atlantic, and there are many rocks on which the sea was then breaking. The entrance to the harbor is narrow and unusually obscure, close to Horseneck Beach, the lee shore. It was probably quite hidden from the lighter’s anchorage, and those on board did not know'precisely in what direction it lay; a confusion which will not seem unnatural to one familiar with the place. In answer to the engineer’s question, Capt. Pierce waved his hand toward the north just before steaming out to sea. He had looked at the chart before he left New Bedford, and he said that he saw the opening between “the bluff” and Horseneck Beach; but this he could not have seen from the black buoy, or from any point within 150 feet of it. Moreover, Half Mile Rock appears most embarrassingly in the way. See testimony of Mooney.

In the time remaining before high water, less than an hour, I think the lighter could not have been brought into the harbor, even by the most experienced men. The distance to be warped was half to three-quarters of a mile. There was a choppy sea, not very heavy, indeed, but enough to embarrass the handling of a 200-pound anchor in a 12 or 14 foot skiff. A 40-foot derrick stood át one end of the lighter, adding to its roll and pitch. Precisely what was done on the lighter, and in what order, does not plainly appear from the testimony of those on board. Sometimes the anchors held; sometimes they did not. Sometimes an attempt to warp succeeded in part; sometimes ground was lost in the attempt.

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132 F. 536, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-c-hart-mad-1904.