Sawyer v. Oakman

21 F. Cas. 569, 7 Blatchf. 290, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1661
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJune 11, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 569 (Sawyer v. Oakman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Oakman, 21 F. Cas. 569, 7 Blatchf. 290, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1661 (circtsdny 1870).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

A decree in favor of the libellants having been made in the district court of the United States for the district of Massachusetts, the respondents appealed to the circuit court, claiming that, upon the whole case, they are not liable for the damages awarded to the libellants, and that, if liable at all, the commissioner by whom the amount of such damage was ascertained and reported, erred in allowing certain items which he included therein. The libellants, having, in the district court, taken certain exceptions to the report of the commissioner, by reason of the disallowance of certain items claimed as damages, which exceptions were overruled in the district court, also appealed to the circuit court. It appearing that the Honorable Nathan Clifford, the associate justice of the supreme court of the United States assigned to the first circuit, is so related to one of the parties as to render it, in his opinion, improper for him to sit on the trial of the case on appeal, it was in May, 1868, ordered, that this fact be entered of record, and that a copy of such order, with the proceedings in the said suit, be certified to this court, at a term thereof therein mentioned, to be held at the city of New York, and the same were so certified in pursuance of the act of congress in that behalf. Act Feb. 28, 1839, § 8 (5 Stat 322). The suit was accordingly brought to trial in this court.

The schooner Bowdoin, of Portland, in the state of Maine, whereof the libellants are owners, on a voyage from Philadelphia to Boston, and having on board a cargo of coal consigned to Messrs. Crane & Fassett, but deliverable at the wharf of the respondents, arrived on or about Monday, the 22d of October, 1866. On reporting her arrival, her master was required by the respondents to await the discharge of two other vessels, and she was accordingly laid at the outer end of the wharf, and there remained until Saturday, the 27th. The dock was of such depth of water that vessels could enter only at high tide; and when, on the afternoon of Saturday, the second of the two vessels thus preferred was hauled out, the Bowdoin made an effort to enter, but, the tide having begun to ebb. the current was such that she did not succeed, and she was requested by the foreman of the wharf, or person superintending the discharge of vessels, to be in the berth thus vacated in such season that the discharge might be commenced early on Monday morning. Shortly before high water in the afternoon of Sunday, she was hauled into the dock by her master and crew.

The wharf of the respondents was about three hundred feet in length, and was wider at the head, or next the shore, than at the outer end. The change in the width on the easterly side thereof was at a distance of one hundred and twenty-five feet from the head, and, at that point, the falling off in width was by a rectangular “jog” about five feet in depth, to which jog the wharf was built of stone, and thence outward it was extended, of the narrower width, by and upon piles. At the head of the dock, and for a considerable distance outward, the bottom was bare at low water, so that vessels lying at or near the inner portion of the wharf took ground as the water receded. At the outer portion of the dock, the water was of sufficient depth to float vessels alongside of the wharf, even at [570]*570low water. The Bowdoin was directed to take the inner berth, and did so; but it is claimed by the respondents that she was not hauled in so near to the head of the dock as, under the directions given, she ought to have been. Of course, at low water she grounded and, after she took ground on Sunday night her master retired to his berth, from which hi was called on Monday morning with notici that his vessel was in danger. It then ap peared, that, through some cause, the vessel had, in the night, become badly strained, that her timbers were broken at or near the main hatch, forward of the mainmast, and at the foot of the mainmast itself,: that the floor and ceiling of the cabin were rounded up, that the deck was drawn away from the main hatch, that there were other injuries showing' strain and breakage at about that point, and that the stem of the vessel -was off and settled, so that, in the language of the witnesses, she was “hogged” and also twisted, so that her masts were not in range. For this injury to the vessel the present suit was brought against the owners of the wharf, who, it appears, are also owners of the wharf upon the other side of the dock.

The libellants aver and claim that the injury was caused by the presence of a considerable body of coal which had fallen into the dock from the wharf at a point directly opposite the place of the principal injury to the vessel, forming an elevation upon which, at that point, the vessel rested when the water receded; that, as she was not supported aft that place, the weight of her cargo caused her to strain and settle away; and that the pile of coal being highest on the side nearest the wharf, she was thrown partially over, especially towards her stem, and twisted.

On the part of the respondents it is alleged and claimed, in their answer, that the dock is constructed with a view to the two berths, so that the upper one is upon a shelf extending from the head of the dock to the jog in the wharf,.upon which vessels there discharging will lie safely aground; that, from the jog outward, there is an abrupt descent or slope of the bottom to the deep water of the lower berth, wherein vessels are intended to float at all times; and that the cause of injury was the neglect of those in charge of the Bowdoin to haul her to the place where they were directed to place her, so that, instead thereof, they left her partly in one berth and partly in the other. They have given proof showing that, when hauled in on Sunday, her stern extended outwardly about twenty feet beyond the jog in the wharf.

On the trial, the respondents attempted to show, and, on the argument, their counsel insisted, departing somewhat from the specific statement of the cause of injury set up in the answer, and apparently for the purpose of explaining why the immediate place of the strain, injury and bulging upward was so far forward, that the hogging of the vessel was caused by the manner in which she was laid alongside of the wharf, namely, that she was-not laid parallel with the wharf, so as to ■bring her keel over the keel track, but that her stem was at such distance from the wharf that her keel lay obliquely across the keel track, and so, when she settled, rested on the bank on its easterly side, (formed by the frequent pressure of vessels into the mud, by which pressure a keel track or bed for vessels was formed,) and that this was the elevation near the centre of the vessel which prevented her from settling evenly to and into the bottom of the dock. They deny that the coal in the dock was of such quantity, or in such place, as could have caused the injury. They also insist, that if the Bowdoin had been hauled in and laid parallel with the wharf and farther inward, so that her bow would have been near the head of the dock, no injury would have been sustained. They further insist, in their answer, and on the trial, that the hauling in of the Bowdoin was a violation of the statute law of Massachusetts, providing, that “whoever keeps open his shop, warehouse, or workhouse, or does any manner of labor, business or work (except works of necessity or charity) on the Lord’s day, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding ten dollars for every offence;” and that, for this reason, the libellants are not entitled to a decree.

The testimony on both sides is very voluminous and greatly conflicting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 569, 7 Blatchf. 290, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-oakman-circtsdny-1870.