Scully v. Atlantic Coast Transp. Co.

273 F. 263, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1256
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 27, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 273 F. 263 (Scully v. Atlantic Coast Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scully v. Atlantic Coast Transp. Co., 273 F. 263, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1256 (E.D.N.Y. 1921).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

On the 30th day of January, 1920, the steam tug North America and the steam tug W. S. Taylor were bringing down through the channel from Hog Island to Wing’s Neck the Ampere, a large steel coal barge, bound for New York. The North America and the Taylor had, during the day immediately preceding, come from New Bedford, with the Ampere in tow of the North America and other barges in tow of the Taylor. At the Cape Cod Canal, and in the channel in Buzzard’s Bay up to the entrance to the canal, so much ice had been encountered that it was necessary to bring the barges through one at a time and for both tugs to assist in the operation. A stop had fceen made at the mooring dolphins near Hog Island on the forenoon of the 30th, and the North America, when the trip was resumed, went ahead, breaking the ice where necessary, particularly as they approached the bend in the channel at Buoy No. 15. When the North America was not engaged in breaking the ice, she went back and assisted the Taylor in towing the Ampere, by extending a hawser to the Taylor, which in turn had the Ampere on a short hawser to a bitt directly over the stem of the Ampere.

From Hog Island to a point a short distance below, the view of the channel down to Wing’s Neele is obstructed by Mashnee Island. As the North America came out from behind this island, shortly after going back and giving the hawser to the Taylor, she observed the tug Scully coming up the channel toward the Cape Code Canal, with two barges, the Congressman Scully and the Francis Scully, in tow, and with the tug Mercury close up behind the second barge to assist in holding the tow straight, or to push the vessels through the ice where that aid was necessary. The tug Scully had the first barge upon a single hawser, extending over the bow to the center bitt. A canal pilot was also on the Scully; but, owing to some discussion as to the advisability of towing with a single hawser, this pilot seems to have taken but a fitful or intermittent part in the actual handling of the boat.

The channel from Hog Island to Buoy No. 15 was broken out to a sufficient width so that the tows could pass with safety. Below Buoy No. 15, the lane through the ice was also broken to a sufficient width so that the boats could easily pass, but immediately around Buoy No. [265]*26515, and particularly at the turn opposite that buoy, which is on the west side of the channel, the ice was packed so solidly and the lane through the water was so narrow that the captain of the North America realized that the tows would have difficulty in passing each other, and as the event proved there was not room just at the turn for the boats to squeeze by without breaking further ice on one. side or the other.

The captain of the North America and the captain of the Taylor both testify that their tow, including the Ampere, had completely passed around the turn, and were proceeding to starboard close to the unbroken edge of ice in a straight course, with the Ampere then in line behind the Taylor. One of the witnesses from the tug Scully testifies that the Ampere had made the bend at the corner. The captain of the Scully and the captain of the Mercury, on the other hand, testify that the Ampere was either just making the turn at Buoy No. 15, or had not sufficiently rounded the turn so as to be following in a straight course behind the Taylor. In this they are corroborated by the mate of the North America, and from the whole testimony it appears that, when the North America and the Taylor found they could not warp the Ampere around the corner against the heavy packed ice, the Ampere had not proceeded far enough to reach a point where she could pass, in' the lane below the bend, the Scully tow, without being in physical contact with the side of the Scully barges.

When the North America stopped, the Taylor immediately stopped her engines, and the Ampere remained fixed in the ice, protruding across the channel in such a position that the tug Scully was barely able to pass between her bow and the solid ice upon the opposite side. The Scully and the Mercury had already made two trips through the chanrel with the barges of the Scully’s tow, and were now bringing up the Mercury’s barges from a position in the ice where they had spent the preceding night, near Wing’s Neck. After the Scully passed the North America and saw the position of the Ampere, she blew three whistles to the Mercury, to hold back the tow. Prior to this no navigation signal had been given by either boat, as they were each in plain sight, and each on her own side of the channel.

According to the testimony the tide was flood at this point — that is, running toward the Cape Cod Canal — although it was nearing the turn. The captain of the North America had been counting upon having the benefit of the flood tide, which would pull the ice out of the jam at Buoy No. 15, until the turn was reached, and after making the turn he expected to have an ebb tide, which would carry the ice away from Buoy No. 15 into the wider waters of Buzzard’s Bay. But at the time of collision the flood tide was still running with the Scully and against the North America.

The Scully, with her single tow line and her square bow, yawed when in contact with the ice, unless held back by the Mercury at the tail of the tow. Until the Mercury reversed, the barge Scully was moving from side to side to some extent; but at the three-whistle signal from the tug Scully, not only did the Mercury stop the headway of the tow, but the tug Scully shifted her towing line from the center bitt to the [266]*266port forward bitt of the barge Scully, and pulled the barge close over against the ice on the starboard side of the channel. Then the tug Scully went ahead, passing the Taylor at a distance of less than 25 feet, evidently going much closer to the bow of the Ampere, and, with the tide, proceeding at a fairly rapid rate in spite of the holding back of the Mercury.

Examination of the chart, together with the testimony that the Scully tow was following closely the starboard side of the channel, makes it apparent that as the tug Scully moved around the turn, directly opposite the Ampere, she must have drawn her tow to port, even though the barges were following directly behind the Scully. The ice was packed so tightly that observation of the edge of the lane must have been difficult until the turn was made, and the bow of the Congressman Scully brought up against the stem of the Ampere just as the tug Scully came opposite the stern of the Ampere, while the tug Mercury was then nearly alongside the tug Taylor.

The witnesses are not in agreement as to the exact point where the Ampere and the Scully touched. One of the witnesses testifies definitely that the anchor on the port side of the Ampere caught the port bow of the barge Scully. Another of the witnesses testifies that the corner of the Scully bumped into the bluff of the bow of the Ampere, while several of the witnesses testify that the stem of the Ampere brought up against the bow of the barge Scully a little inside of the port corner. Whether this blow was delivered by the stem of the Ampere or by the fluke of the anchor is comparatively unimportant. The testimony shows that two of the bow planks were broken some 3 or 4 feet from the port corner of the Scully.

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Bluebook (online)
273 F. 263, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scully-v-atlantic-coast-transp-co-nyed-1921.