The Bermuda

11 F. 913, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 13, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 F. 913 (The Bermuda) 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
The Bermuda, 11 F. 913, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624 (E.D.N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

In tiiis case I find tlie following facts;

The steamer Bermuda and the steam-lighter A. T. Nichols came into collision in the North river at a point about 300 feet out from and a little below pier 1, on the seventh of December, 1877, in the afternoon, In daylight. The Bermuda was a,n ocean screw steam-ship, of 746 tons, British register. Her length was about 240 feet, and she was loaded at the time of the collision so that she drew about 10 feet of water. Her deck at the stem was about 16 feet from the water, and at the stern about eight feet from tlie water. The top of the rail was four feet above the deck. The bridge ran athwartsliips about midway between the stem and tlie stern, and was six feet above [914]*914the decks. The Bermuda had two masts, brig rigged. The masts were about 90 feet in height from the deck. She carried a full and sufficient crew at the time of the collision, and was under the immediate control, as to her navigation, of her master and a Hell-Gate pilot. The A. T. Nichols had formerly been a canal-boat, but at the time of the collision was fitted with steam-power and a screw, by means of which she was propelled. Her length was about 90 feet. She had no masts, but had a derrick for the handling of cargo. She was carrying a cargo of hemp in bales. Her crew consisted of a master, an engineer, and two men. The master alone has been produced as a witness in this case. At the time of the collision the Bermuda was bound on a voyage from St. Johns, Newfoundland, to New York. She came through Long Island sound and Hell Gate, and down the East river. - She had rounded the Battery, and was proceeding up the North river to her berth at pier 10, on the New York side. The pilot, on boarding her off Stratford, in Long Island sound, had taken his position on the bridge with the master, who had been on duty since 9 o’clock in the morning. On reaching Whitestone, about two and a half hours before the collision, the first mate had gone upon the lookout. He was stationed on a grating at the stem of the vessel. This grating was triangular in shape, with its apex forward right in the bow, and it ran thence about three feet fore and aft, and was about six or seven feet broad at its base. It was raised two feet and more above the deck. Erom the time of taking his station as lookout the mate had remained continuously upon the grating. He had no other duties than those of a lookout. Immediately after passing Hell Gate the engines of the Bermuda were worked at half speed only, and she proceeded down the East river with the engines working at half speed, and rounded the Battery and headed up the North river. With her engines working at half speed they were making from 30 to 35 revolutions per minute. At full speed they would have made 65 or 66 revolutions per minute. With her engines at half speed, the Bermuda, loaded as she was, could make about six miles an hour through the water, but on turning into the North river she encountered a strong ebb tide and a north-west wind, which reduced her speed to less than four miles an hour by the land. She went around the Battery on a port helm, and headed up the North river to go to her pier, which was on the east side of the river. As she did so she discovered a large steam-boat putting out from a pier on the east shore, and heading down the river. She exchanged signals with the steam-boat, which after-wards passed down in safety on the starboard hand of the Bermuda. She also discovered a large double-decked barge, in tow of a tug, a little on her port bow. Before passing the barge the mate had seen the A. T. Nichols further off than the barge, and beyond her, but he did not report the A. T. Nichols at that time. She, too, was on the port bow of the Bermuda. The master and the pilot of the Bermuda did not see the A. T. Nichols until, she emerged from behind the barge, as hereafter mentioned. Both the barge and the A. T. Nichols were proceeding down the North river, but neither of them was approaching the Bermuda on a course involving risk of collision, Nevertheless, the Bermuda gave a signal of one blast of her steam-whistle to the barge, to which the barge assented, and she afterwards passed down in safety on the port side of the Bermuda. The barge had double decks and a house, [915]*915and stood higher out of water than the hull of the Bermuda. The A. x. Nichols was very low in tho water. As the barge and the A. T. Nichols proceeded down the river, and the Bermuda proceeded up tho river, the vessels came into such positions that the barge was between the A. T. Nichols and the Bermuda, and shut out from tho lookout and the officers of the Bermuda, for a short time, their view of the A. T. Nichols. When the A. T. Nichols so disappeared she was on a course not involving risk of collision with the Bermuda, but afterwards, as tho vessels continued to advance, the A. T. Nichols was disclosed to tho Bermuda at the distance of about 500 feet, and bearing about three points on tho port bow of the Bermuda, heading almost directly for her, or close under her stern, which indicated to those on board of the Bermuda that the A. T. Nichols had, under the influence of a starboard holm, swung from the course which she had been following. The lookout then promptly reported the A. T. Nichols to tho master and the pilot of the Bermuda on her bridge, who discovered her at tho same time. The failure of the lookout to sooner report the A. T. Nichols did not contribute to the collision, nor did the failure of the master and the pilot of the Bermuda to see the A. T. Nichols sooner than they did see her. The master of the Bermuda at once, on seeing the A. T. Nichols, and having her reported, signaled her, by a single blast of the Bermuda’s steam-whistle, to pass down on tho port side of the Bermuda, no signal from the A. T. Nichols having been heard by any one on the Bermuda. The A. T. Nichols did not reply to the signal given by the Bermuda, but continued to swing as though under a starboard helm, taking a course crossing the bows of tho Bermuda, and, when nearly in front of the Bermuda, and distant from 200 to 300 feet, the A. T. Nichols commenced to reverse her engine. Before this time those in charge of the navigation-of the Bermuda had caused her engines to work at full speed astern from half speed ahead, and afterwards, and to further overcome the headway of the Bermuda, it being impossible to get sternway on her in so short a distance, and unsafe to attempt it, as sailing vessels were lying at anchor astern of the Bermuda, her port anchor was dropped. The engines of the Bermuda, up to the time they were so stopped and reversed, had been worked continuously at half speed ahead. The A. T. Nichols, still under the influence of her starboard helm, and her headway not being fully overcome, came down with the tide upon the Bermuda, striking her starboard side against the stem of the Bermuda, and then fell along-side and down the port side of the Bermuda, inflicting damage upon both vessels. At the time the A. T. Nichols was first seen from on board of the Bermuda, the Bermuda had already rounded the Battery, and had taken a direct course up the river, not exactly parallel with the line of the piers, but drawing to the eastward, heading for about pier 10. That course she held unchanged up to the collision. Iler helm was not altered, but when Jier engines were reversed, the reverse revolutions of her screw tended to throw her stern a little to port and her head to starboard. This tendency existed both before and after sternway was acquired, and until sternway was acquired her helm had no effect in guiding her movements. The port anchor of the Bermuda was carried out-board and was dropped by the handling of a lever in a very short time.

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Related

The Bermuda
3 F. Cas. 269 (E.D. New York, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 913, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-bermuda-nyed-1881.