The Anthracite

162 F. 384, 1908 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 341
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 F. 384 (The Anthracite) 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
The Anthracite, 162 F. 384, 1908 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 341 (S.D.N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

This action was brought by William K. Hammond and others, the owners of the barge Sylvia, and cargo of brick laden on board, against the tugs Anthracite and William E. Cleary to recover the damages, said to amount to about $4,000, caused by the barge striking Mill Rock, while proceeding in tow, on a hawser, of said tugs from the North River to 139th Street, Harlem River, on the 27th of July, 1907. The Sylvia was the starboard boat in the last tier. The tide was flood and when in the vicinity of Mill Rock, the tugs turned toward New York to land one of the boats there and in doing so swung the Sylvia against Mill Rock, causing the damages complained of.

The answers of the tugs pleaded that there was no fault on their part but that the accident was due to another tow forcing this one toward the rock. No reliance, however, was placed upon such contention on the trial, and indeed there was no ground for it, as the other tow had passed when the swing was made.

The Anthracite does not attempt to escape liability but frankly concedes her fault. The Cleary, however, urges that the Anthracite was [385]*385the directing mind and the Cleary merely a helper without responsibility and therefore not in fault.

It appears that the Anthracite was in charge of the tow. Up to the vicinity of Newtown Creek the Cleary had been engaged in talcing boats out of the tow and delivering them at their destinations. There she placed herself alongside of the Anthracite and made fast to her abaft of the latter’s pilot house, so as not to interfere in any way with the view of the master at the wheel. The steering was done by the Anthracite, whose master directed the proceedings on the part of the Cleary. When the vicinity of the rock was reached, the latter ivas directed to hook up and doubtless the Anthracite also did so, but the efforts were without avail, and the collision took place. The master of the Cleary testified to the foregoing facts and that the master of the Anthracite had charge of the navigation of his tug and the Cleary, both tugs being engaged in pulling. The Cleary urges that as she was acting as a mere helper to the Anthracite, which was conducting the navigation, she cannot be held, citing The Connecticut, 103 U. S. 710, 26 L. Ed. 467, and The W. G. Mason, 142 Fed. 913, 74 C. C. A. 83.

In the former case, the Connecticut was towing a large fleet of boats, assisted by the tug Stevens, and brought one of the boats of her tow in collision with the steamer Othello. One of the questions presented on appeal was should the Stevens have been held as well as the Connecticut and the Othello. In delivering the opinion of the court, Mr. Chief Justice Waite said (page 712 of 103 U. S. [26 L. Ed. 467]):

“Tlie tug ‘Stevens’ was a mere helper, and subject to the orders of the ‘Connecticut.’ The owners of the ‘Sam. Morgan’ sued all three of the vessels for the loss, and upon the facts as above stated the Circuit Court gave judgment dismissing the libel as to the ‘Stevens,’ but holding both the Connecticut’ and ‘Othello’ responsible, and dividing the loss between them. The ‘Connecticut’ was held in fault for not giving her signal at or before the time she changed her course, and the ‘Olhello’ for not heeding the signal when it was given, or taking the necessary precautions against a collision before. All parties have appealed; the libellants because the ‘Stevens’ was acquitted, and the ‘Connecticut’ and the ‘Othello’ each because they were respectively charged with any portion of the loss.
So far as the ‘Stevens’ is concerned, she was clearly not to blame. She was the mere servant of the ‘Connecticut,’ and could exercise no will of her own. She was bound to obey orders from the ‘Connecticut,’ and no part of the responsibility of the navigation, so far as the approaching vessel was concerned, was on her. It was not her duty to signal the movements of the ‘Connecticut,’ under whose exclusive control she was. The ‘Connecticut’ is alone responsible for the consequences of her own faults.”

That was a case where the collision happened by reason of the absence of proper signals and in that respect is unlike this case.

In The Mason, two tugs, the Mason and the Babcock, were towing the steamer Gratwick and the latter stranded through the negligence, as was found by the district court, of both tugs. The Mason" was the leading tug and the dominant mind in the venture; the Babcock was guiding the steamer from astern. Judge Hazel thought that the Babcock was liable as well as the Mason, because the authorities seemed to so hold, particularly The Bordentown (D. C.) 40 Fed. 683; The Columbia, 73 Fed. 226, 19 C. C. A. 436. On appeal, however, the Bab[386]*386cock was exonerated, the Court of Appeals in an opinion by Wallace, J., stating (page 915 of 142 Fed., page 85 of 74 C. C. A.):

“As the proof did show that the Babcock properly performed her part of the service, the responsibility for the disaster must rest on the Mason alone.”

And further (pages 916, 917, 918, of 142 Fed., pages 86, 87, of 74 C. C. A.):

“The, authorities cited in the opinion of the court below, and upon the argument at bar, are, The Arturo (D. C.) 6 Fed. 308; The Bordentown (D. C.) 40 Fed. 683; The Columbia, 73 Fed. 226, 19 C. C. A. 436; and Van Eyken v. Erie R. Co. (D. C.) 117 Fed. 717.
The Arturo was a case in which two tugs, belonging to different owners, while performing a towage service, stranded the tow upon a shoal; both tugs being in command of the master of one of the tugs. The decision was that both were liable because both were in fault. Judge Lowell in his opinion, after stating that, if one tug was wholly in fault, she alone would be responsible, says:
‘But for their joint action, so. far as it conduced to the loss, I hold them to be jointly responsible.’
The Bordentown was a case in which Judge Brown held both the Borden-town and the Winnie, tugs engaged in a towage service, liable for the fault of the master of the Bordentown. Both tugs were owned by the same owner, and the master of the Bordentown was in'command of both. Judge Brown said:
‘At the time when the master’s fault arose the Winnie was as much a part of the moving power as the Bordentown, and was equally under the same direction. She belonged to the same owners, and from the beginning to the end she was engaged, in the owner’s behalf, in the work of towing the other boats, precisely as the Bordentown was engaged. It was immaterial on board which tug the master for the time being was, or from which boat his orders were given. Both as related to the owners of the tugs, and as related to the owners of the boats in tow, the Bordentown and the Winnie, in taking the tow through the Kills, were in effect one vessel.’
In The Columbia it was held that, where the owner of a barge which had no motive power had undertaken to transport freight upon the barge, such barge and a tug, belonging to the same owner, by which the motive power was supplied, became one vessel for the purposes of the voyage, and that the owner was not entitled to limit his liability for damages caused by the negligence of the crew of either craft, without surrendering both.
Van Eyken v. Erie R. Co.

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Bluebook (online)
162 F. 384, 1908 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-anthracite-nysd-1908.