Tanker Hygrade No. 10, Inc. v. Fidelity

43 F. Supp. 180, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3170
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 F. Supp. 180 (Tanker Hygrade No. 10, Inc. v. Fidelity) 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
Tanker Hygrade No. 10, Inc. v. Fidelity, 43 F. Supp. 180, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3170 (S.D.N.Y. 1942).

Opinion

RIFKIND, District Judge.

Between midnight and dawn of November 29, 1938, the Tanker Hygrade, in tow of the tug Crow, stranded alongside buoy No. N-76 on the east side of the Hudson River, near Van Wies Point. For the damage caused to the tanker the libellant seeks to impose liability on the tug Fidelity. It is charged that the Fidelity crowded the Crow and the Hygrade out of the channel. The libellant places the time of the stranding at 5:30 A.M. The claimant asserts that at 5:30 A.M. the Fidelity was many miles below buoy No. N-76 and that it could not, therefore, have been guilty of the misconduct alleged.

There is ample evidence, well corroborated, that the stranding did occur at 5 :30 A.M. The evidence is equally persuasive that the Fidelity had passed the point of the stranding more than three hours earlier. But the normal inference of mistaken [182]*182identity becomes exceedingly speculative in the light of testimony by disinterested witnesses called by claimant that the Fidelity did pass the Crow and Hygrade at buoy No. N-76 but that the passage occurred at 2 A.M. and that it was entirely uneventful. To fit this testimony into the pattern of events we would have to assume the highly improbable pair of coincidences that at 2 A.M. when the Fidelity was at buoy No. N-76 it passed a tug and tanker which resembled the Crow and Hygrade combination in all respects and that at 5 :30 when the Crow and Hygrade were at N-76 they passed a flotilla which resembled the Fidelity and its eight barge tow in all respects. The mind is repelled from the acceptance of such a multiplicity of coincidences. The Fidelity’s tow was composed of eight barges, four laden, four light. The Hygrade was being towed by the tugboat Crow, push-boat fashion. The Crow was northbound, the Fidelity southbound. The duplication of all these conditions at the same point of the river but three hours apart puts too great a strain on the imagination. The Valley of the Hudson has long been known as the favorite abode of spirits and phantoms and apparently on the night in question the denizens of the world of fancy were out in full force. It would be easier to accept these coincidences if one shared Samuel Coleridge’s faith that “With never a whisper in the Sea Oft darts the Specter-Ship”.

Nor is there anything in the testimony which would make libellant’s story any more credible than the claimant’s. Both are well corroborated at least as to the time when the respective critical events occurred. Both are surrounded by circumstantial data which lend credence to the version. Whatever mystery may lie beneath these fantastic occurrences it seems clear that the libellant who has the burden of proof has failed to sustain it. Where the mind remains mystified it is not persuaded and the loss must lie where it falls. Commercial Molasses Corp. v. New York Tank Barge Corp. November 17, 1941, 62 S.Ct. 156, 86 L.Ed -.

The libellant, however, contends that this does not dispose of the issues in the case. He asserts that the claimant is precluded from challenging the allegation that the Crow and the Fidelity did pass each other at the time of the stranding of the Hygrade because it is admitted in the pleadings. The alleged admission occurs not in the answer to the libel but in the claimant’s petition impleading the Crow. That petition contains the following allegation:

“Fourth. That on or "about the 29th day of November, 1938, the Tug Fidelity with a hawser tow of eight barges, two abreast, was navigating the Hudson River bound from Albany to New York. When in the vicinity of Van Wies Point, New York, the Tug Fidelity observed the Diesel Tug Crow with the loaded Tank Barge Hygrade No. 10 bound north. While said tugs passed port to port, the Tug Crow maneuvered in such a. fashion that it caused its tow, Tanker Hygrade No. 10, to swing to starboard and in so swinging to the right, grounded on the east side of the river.”

It is urged by claimant that this is not an admission since the petition is not a pleading as between the libellant and the claimant but is designed to bring in a third party; citing, The Milwaukee Bridge, D.C. S.D.N.Y. 1922, 291 F. 711.

That seems to me to be too narrow a view and is not supported by the authority cited. It is also urged by claimant that the language of Article Fourth should be construed thus:

“We deny that we passed you, but we were in the river on that day and if we did pass you, we didn’t do what you said we did, but the tug Crow caused the damage”.

The answer to this contention is. that no such subjunctives were used in the-petition. Cf. The Milwaukee Bridge, supra. Nor is this a case where the pleadings may be deemed conformed to the proof. That relief may be granted where no prejudice results therefrom. O’Connor, Harrison & Co. v. Klingel, 9 Cir., 1926, 16 F.2d 460.

Here, however, it is very clear that, libellant had every reason to expect that the fact of the meeting of the two flotillas, at or about the time of stranding would, not be put in issue. The surprise was manifest. Injury to libellant likewise cannot be-doubted in view of the lapse of time.

For these reasons, however inconsistent the fact may be with the oral testimony, I treat it as admitted for purposes of this, trial that the Fidelity and the Crow did meet and pass in the vicinity of Van Wies. Point at or about the time of the grounding-of the Hygrade. We must, therefore, proceed to the consideration of the evidence.on the question of fault.

[183]*183The chief fault assigned by the libellant to the Fidelity is that she violated the narrow channel rule and did not keep to the right of mid-channel, 33 U.S.C.A. § 210. If we accept the wider of the two dimensions given for the channel, it is 400 feet. The mate of the Crow testified that at the point of passage the Hygrade was 75 feet from the east line of the channel and 75 feet from the Fidelity. The Hygrade itself was 40 feet in beam making the total distance from the Fidelity to the east end of the channel 190 feet or 10 feet inside the wrong half of the channel. On cross examination he stated that the Fidelity “was in the middle of the channel at the time when I started passing her”. Anna Kiernan, a disinterested witness who had good opportunity to observe, testified that the two flotillas passed at a distance of 100 feet. That would put the Fidelity in the proper side of the channel. Furthermore, we must take into consideration that these measurements are estimates made during the dark of night. I find that the claimant did not violate the narrow channel rule. The Clevelander, 2 Cir., 1936, 83 F. 2d 947.

It is clear that when the Hygrade passed the Fidelity there was a safe interval between them and there was ample water on the Hygrade’s starboard, in the judgment of the Crow’s navigator, since no signals were given by him indicating apprehension on his part of any danger. It is claimed, however, that after the Fidelity passed, its tow started to swing over toward the Hygrade so that despite the Crow’s maneuver to starboard only 6 feet separated the Hygrade and the last tier of barges. This would indicate a degree of speed in the swinging tow which is inherently incredible.

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43 F. Supp. 180, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanker-hygrade-no-10-inc-v-fidelity-nysd-1942.