The Bailey Gatzert

179 F. 44, 102 C.C.A. 612, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1910
DocketNo. 1,746
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 179 F. 44 (The Bailey Gatzert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Bailey Gatzert, 179 F. 44, 102 C.C.A. 612, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605 (9th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

This suit was commenced by the filing of a libel by the port of Portland, a municipal corporation, owner of the hydraulic dredge Portland, against the steamboat Bailey Gatzert, to recover damages for injuries to the dredge Portland, caused by a collision between the Bailey Gatzert and the dredge on the morning of 'November 6, 1907, in the channel of the Willamette river, at a point about nine miles below the city of Portland. The damage claimed by the libelant for the injuries to the dredge was $25,000. In a cross-libel filed by the Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navigation Company, owner of the steamboat Bailey Gatzert, it was charged that the collision was the fault of the dredge, and for injuries received by the Bailey Gatzert in the collision damages were claimed in the sum of $2,500. The libel alleged that the dredge was without motive power; and that on the morning of November 6, 1907, was engaged in dredging the channel of the Willamette river at a point nearly abreast of Willamette slough, and was at that time affixed to the bed of the Willamette river by means of a spud and anchors attached to cables on board the dredge; that the morning of November 6th was foggy, and fog bells were rung on hoard the dredge in accordance with law and regulations of the United States inspectors of steam vessels. It was •charged, notwithstanding the fact that said morning was foggy, the Bailey Gatzert, while being navigated on a voyage down the Willamette river from Portland to The Dalles, was up to the instant of collision navigated by her master at full speed, and although the bell of the Portland was being rung at intervals as required by law the master of the Bailey Gatzert failed and neglected to observe the bell o f the Port[46]*46land, and himself navigated the Bailey Gatzert at such a high and dangerous rate of speed in said fog that when the Portland came into view of the Bailey Gatzert he failed to check the headway of the Bailey Gatzert, and collided with the dredge, causing the dredge to sink within a few minutes.

It was charged in the cross-bill and answer that, notwithstanding the fact that the morning was foggy, the dredge Portland was lying at anchor in the channel and fairway of the Willamette river at the point mentioned, and in such position that the Bailey Gatzert, following the usual and customary course of steamboats down the river, would necessarily collide with the dredge if not forewarned of her position in the channel; that the libelant so negligently and carelessly conducted itself and so misbehaved in the management of the dredge that fog bells were not rung on board of said dredge in accordance with the law or regulations of the United States inspectors of steam vessels for inland waters of the Pacific Coast, requiring vessels at anchor to ring a fog bell rapidly for about five seconds at intervals of not more than one minute. The District Court found the Bailey Gatzert to have been at fault in running at such a high rate of speed that after the dredge could be seen through the fog the Bailey Gatzert could not by reversing her engines come to a standstill and avoid a collision with the dredge. The court also found that the bell on the dredge was rung at appropriate intervals while the Bailey Gatzert was approaching; and that the fault resulting in the collision was entirely that of the Bailey Gatzert. The court accordingly dismissed the cross-bill, and awarded a decree in favor of the libelant, which, upon the testimony relating to the damages sustained by the dredge, was fixed at $18,058.28.

The Bailey Gatzert is a- steam stern-wh^el vessel. Her gross tonnage is 642; her net tonnage is 536. She is 194.3 feet in length, and 32.8 feet in width, with a depth of 8 feet. She was at the time of the collision engaged in the passenger and freight service between Portland on the Willamette river and The Dalles on the Columbia river.

The dredge Portland was a hydraulic river dredge; scow shape. She was 130 feet in length, and 36 feet in width, with a depth of hull of 11 feet, and a normal draught of 5 feet. She had two spud wells on each side of the stern of the dredge. Each of these wells carried a spud, which, projecting through the hull of the dredge, was driven into the bed of the river to such a distance that it held the dredge securely in place. Only one spud was dropped at a time when the dredge was at work, and on these two spuds working alternately the dredge would swing from side to side as on a pivot or trunnion, dredging over an area having a radius of 150 feet. Attached to the forward end of the dredge was the dredging mechanism, consisting of a revolving cutter, supported by a suitable and substantial framework. The revolving cutter cut up the material in the bottom of the river which is pumped up through a pipe, and then carried through a line of pipe supported on pontoons to a distance for deposit. In dredging navigable rivers this material is usually deposited in such places as may be designated by the engineer in charge so that it may not be .carried back into the river. In the present case the discharge was through a pipe 20 inches [47]*47in diameter'and more than 400 feet in length, supported on pontoons leading from the starboard side of the dredge nearly to the eastern shore of the Willamette river. At the time of the collision the dredge was at work dredging the channel of the river on the range between two points on the river designated as the “Linnton and Upper Post Office Lights,” the line of range following approximately the channel of the river. The distance between these two points is 9,150 feet. The distance from Linnton Light down the river to the dredge was 5,650 feet, and the distance from the dredge down the river to the Post Office Light was 3,500 feet. The dredge had been placed at this point on Monday morning, November 4th, and had commenced the work of dredging the channel on Tuesday morning, November 5th, about 2:30 o’clock. The work had the approval of the United States engineers. Its purpose was to improve the channel at this place which at this point had 25 feet of water at zero.

On the morning of November 6, 1907, the Bailey Gatzert was bound down the river on her regular voyage from Portland to The Dalles. The master of the vessel, Capt. F. H. Sherman, was at the wheel. The vessel was running in a fog. She passed the Linnton Light five minutes past 8, and at nine minutes past 8, or a few seconds thereafter, the captain sighted the dredge straight ahead of him, and he says at a distance between 100 and 150 feet. Pie gave the engineer bells for stopping and backing, and placed his wheel hard aport, but failed to avoid a collision. The Bailey Gatzert was going at such a high rate of speed that she drove her bow into the dredge from 12 to 14 feet, crushing timbers averaging in size from 12 by 12 to 14 by 14 inches. The dredger sunk at once.

Was the Bailey Gatzert in fault? The master testified that the vessel was running at half speed, which on that morning was probably about nine miles per hour. The engineer testified that the vessel was under a full-speed bell, but had only been under that bell for a minute and a half or two minutes; that under a full-speed bell the vessel would have gone through the water at about 15 miles per hour. The testimony of the master that they passed Linnton Light five minutes past 8, and that it was nine minutes past 8 a few seconds before the collision, establishes the fact that the vessel had gone a distance of over a mile in four minutes, or at a speed of 15 miles per hour. This was full speed for the four minutes preceding the collision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 F. 44, 102 C.C.A. 612, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-bailey-gatzert-ca9-1910.