The Argus

1 F. Cas. 1107
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 15, 1846
StatusPublished

This text of 1 F. Cas. 1107 (The Argus) 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 Argus, 1 F. Cas. 1107 (S.D.N.Y. 1846).

Opinion

BETTS. District Judge.

This is a case of collision between two sloops on the North river, and the extent of damage incurred renders it one of serious importance to the respective parties. It has been litigated at great expense, and through protracted and tedious inquires into the facts. The law and facts bearing upon the case have been thoroughly discussed; orally before the court, and by able and well-digested written arguments submitted by the counsel. The statements of the transaction by the witnesses do not strictly coincide with the representations of the parties in their pleadings, but the variances are, perhaps, deserving no special regard, other than in respect to the effect they may have upon the credit of some of the witnesses, whose testimony is called in question. The libellants charge that the sloop Bucktail, owned by them, being on a voyage down the river to the city of New York, and about opposite the end of the long dock at Rhinebeck, and nearly in the middle of the river, making a tack to the westward, the wind ahead, blowing straight up the river, the sloop Argus was seen coming in the opposite direction before the wind, and standing directly for the Buck-tail; and as soon as within call, she was hailed by the Bucktail to bear up or to luff; that no attention was paid to the direction; on the contrary, she continued her course, heading for the Bucktail, until her stem struck the larboard bow of the Bucktail, cutting it down to the water’s edge, from which injury she afterwards sunk and was totally lost.

The claimant answers, that the night was very dark, and the atmosphere thick and hazy, so that objects could be distinguished but a short distance; that the wind was blowing heavily from the southeast; the Argus was on her course up the river, from New-York to Hudson, bearing about northeast; when she was opposite the long dock at Rhinebeck, and near the west shore of the river, the Bucktail was discerned from her a very short distance ahead, obliquely to the eastward, beating .down the river, on a tack from the eastern to the western bank of the river, with the wind so favorable as to be able to hold her course nearly with that of the river. That it was judged advisable to keep' the Argus away to avoid a collision, and she was steered in a proper angle towards the westerly bank of the river, so that she could have safely passed the Bucktail on her lee side without danger of collision, if thatvessel had kept her course as she was bound to do; but that after the direction of the Argus had been so altered, the Bucktail deviated from her proper . course, and ran directly across the bows of the Argus, thus producing the collision complained of. The other parts of the pleadings need not now be rehearsed, as the gist of the controversy is involved in these allegations. Before adverting to the proofs adduced by the parties, it is proper to. observe, that the estimate or judgment of witnesses, as to the bearings, distances or relative positions of objects on the water looked at in the night-time, and particularly when the witnesses are placed on vessels in motion, cannot be considered entitled to confidence as facts. They are [1108]*1108little more than conjectures, formed in a state of mind and position disabling the witnesses from speaking with any reliable certainty;

The course of the river, at the place of the casualty, is assumed by the witnesses to be north and south, and the direction of the wind, and the track of the two vessels, are probably estimated with reference to that assumption; and as the true range of the river is a point or more east from the one supposed, the relations of the other particulars would have to be taken with corresponding allowances. Indeed, both the proofs and the arguments concede, that a variance of several points from any of the supposed courses might be reasonably expected and accounted for, without impeaching the veracity or intelligence of the witnesses. These considerations must lead to great caution in adopting diagrams or charts framed upon the courses assigned the two vessels by the respective witnesses, as affording any just criterion by which the facts in controversy may be adjusted. A few prominent particulars in the case, not essentially in dispute, appear to me to settle the question between the parties as to the wrong or negligence of the claimants’ vessel, and the right of the libellants to damages. The Buck-tail was sailing against the wind, be its exact direction at whatever point may be assumed, and her longest stretch or tack was from the east to the west. She was loaded below, and had bundles of hay on deck so piled up as to require the boom to be raised by a reef in the mainsail, and this trim would somewhat impede and embarrass her management. It was night, but not dark enough to prevent the two vessels being seen by persons on each, at a distance of half a mile to a mile apart. The Argus was light, and running free before the wind, about in the middle of the river, which, at the place in question, was a mile wide, with the channel from shore to shore. The Bucktail came around on her larboard tack a quarter of a mile above the long dock at Rhinebeck, and was supposed by her pilot to range off about a south southwest course, and by those observing her from the Argus, to head southwest. The defence is placed essentially upon the position that she was able on that wind to hold her course, which, if adhered to, would have carried her far east of the track the Argus was running; and, also, on the proposition of law, that the Bucktail was bound to pursue the course she had taken, whilst the Argus was only required to use measures for avoiding her, on her continuing to hold that course as close to the wind as she could be laid until her tack was run out.

The counsel for the claimant submits various diagrams to substantiate the conclusions he draws from these considerations. Whatever nautical theories may be raised in respect to the relative bearing, ability and duty, of the two vessels, I am satisfied, upon the proofs, that up to the point of time at which a collision became apparent and imminent on board both vessels, the Bucktail was managed by her crew with ordinary skill and precaution. There is nothing in the evidence necessarily conflicting with the statements of those on board the Bucktail, that she was kept steadily on her course as near to the wind as her build and trim would permit. She took her direction towards Kingston Point, intending to run out her tack in that vicinity; and upon the evidence, this would bring her scarcely half a mile below a right line across the river from the place of her departure on the tack. The actual course she was making across the water could not correspond with any of the hypotheses of the witnesses on either side, for though it was undoubtedly, by the compass, south of west, yet the notions that it was southwest or south southwest, were only conjectures, and of slight moment in the case, it being satisfactorily proved that she was kept close-hauled to the wind, with a view to Kingston Point on the west shore as the terminus of her tack.

The libellants’ witnesses testified in consonance with the libel, that the collision took place near the middle of the river, opposite Rhinebeck dock, which, as appears from the surveys, was about eighty rods below rhe beginning of her tack. The Bucktail would accordingly have made southing a quarter of a mile, and reached nearly half the distance across the river towards Kingston Point.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-argus-nysd-1846.