The Brittania

196 F. 553, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 F. 553 (The Brittania) 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 Brittania, 196 F. 553, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573 (E.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

CHATEIELD, District Judge.

The barge Johnnie Doherty was in the service of the Knickerbocker Ice Company on the 29th day of May, 1911. She had on board some 300 tons of ice, which was to be taken to the workhouse upon Blackwell’s Island. This boat is 106 feet long, 26 feet wide, and has sides 12 feet in height. She has a capacity of 650 tons, and draws when loaded 91/i> feet. Her captain estimates that upon the afternoon in question she drew some 7 feet of water, and was in reasonably good condition. The upper tiers of ice had been taken out at East Fifth street. New York, and the tug Brittania, owned by the Knickerbocker Towing Company, was ordered by the president of that company, at about 9 o’clock in the evening, to lake the barge to the pier on the east side of Blackwell’s Island at the workhouse. The tide was then flood, and the boat started immediately, arriving at Blackwell’s Island at 11:55 p. m. It was. dark, and the Brittania started to berth the Doherty alongside a dock some -100 or 500 feel: above the workhouse upon the east side of the Island. But, upon arriving off the workhouse, she attracted the attention of some men called watchmen, said to be in uniform, who came out of one of the buildings at the workhouse. The captain asked these men where the cargo of ice was wanted, and was told by them “right here at the dock.’- These words referred to a small dock just south of the workhouse proper, and upon the east side of the Island.

It appears that this dock had then been built some three years, and was but 34 feet in length along its face. Beyond each end at a distance o£ 12 feet from the dock, a dolphin or group of piles some 4 feet in diameter was located. The captain of the barge remonstrated with the captain of the tug, because, as he says, he did not like the looks of this dock, and because of the swift tide at this point. But the captain of the tug informed him that this was where he was to dis[554]*554charge his cargo, and that he had orders to take the boat there. The captain made no further protest, but, according to the captain of the Brittania, replied that he was all right, and was left moored to the dock. The captain of the Doherty took soundings with a short pike pole, and just under his stern found the water but little deeper than the draft of the boat. At other points he did not find bottom, andl he then turned in, being aroused somewhat later, when he found 5 feet of water in his pipe hole and the stern hard aground on the rocks. As the tide went down, the boat rested upon the rocks for her entire length, on the port side, while the starboard bow was also.held tip and the boat given a twist, which increased as the tide went down. The bottom planks weré cracked, and as the tide rose again some 10 feet of water filled the boat. The next day being Decoration Day, the captain did not succeed in reaching the owners of the boat, nor did he attempt to telephone to the Knickerbocker Ice Company. But by the morning of May 31st he did send a message to the Baxter Wrecking Company, with whom he had had previous dealings, and also on that day communicated with the' owners. In the meantime the Ice Company had learned from the Island that the barge was sunk. At about 12 o’clock noon on May 31-st, the tug Fuller, which was equipped with -a large pump and belongs to the Baxter Wrecking Company, and the schooner Fly, which also has a pump of 6,000 gallons capacity, got to the wreck. The Fly was moored on the outer or starboard side of the barge and began pumping, although at that time the tide was going down, having turned a little before noon.

The ice in the barge had melted to a considerable extent, and between 3 and 4 o’clock in the afternoon the barge was substantially pumped out and appeared to be afloat. Her lines were cast off at the bow, and the ebb tide swung her around against the Fly and the Fuller. The captain of the Fuller, considering that the barge was nearly afloat and could be hauled off, summoned the assistance of a tug, the Ticeland, which was passing. The tugs then tried to haul the barge off bow first, with the Fly still moored alongside and pumping. Nothing was accomplished by this pulling, as the stern of the boat was hard aground. But, as the barge swung around under the effect of the tugs and of the ebb tide, the Fly and the barge herself were placed in a situation of danger from the rocky shore below. The Fuller, therefore, kept at work holding the barge up against the tide until she could be placed back alongside of the dock, where she was left until the tide was flood, the Fly in the meanwhile remaining alongside and continuing to keep out the water. The wreclcmaster of the Baxter Company, seeing that the Fly could keep the boat from sinking, and that as the tide came in she could be handled by the Fuller, left at about supper time or in the neighborhood of 5 o’clock. The captain of the Fuller, when the tide had risen sufficiently to float the boat clear, took her in tow and proceeded with her, stern first, away, from the dock andl down the river to Ninth street, Manhattan, where the balance of her ice was unloaded.

A survey was had, and it was found that several of the bottom ■planks were injured at the stern, a hole broken in the bottom near the [555]*555starboard bow, some of the deck beams cracked, and the knees supporting these beams broken, while the hatches were displaced and considerable minor work made necessary. No question arises as to the extent of the injuries, nor is there any doubt that they were received while the boat was at the dock at Blackwell’s Island.

The most difficult question of fact in the case arises from the testimony of one Weidner, the representative of the Ice Company upon the survey, who had also gone to the scene of the accident on the 31st day of May, just after flood tide, in a small launch, and with a boat equipped with a large pump. This man had the double purpose of intending to save as much ice as possible from melting, and also to render whatever assistance might be necessary to the boat, but he did not go aboard the boat, giving as a reason therefor that the tide was falling, and that he thought it best to wait for the flood tide. At about the same time or soon after his arrival in the neighborhood, the Fuller and the Fly began their operations as has been stated, and the representative of the Ice Company retired with his boats to the east side of the channel, where he apparently waited and watched for developments. He testifies that at about 3 o’clock, or just before the Ticeland was procured to assist in hauling off the barge, the water had been pumped out of the barge sufficiently so that she floated, except at the stern; that the ebb tide swung her around until she was resting over what he describes and has since located as a ledge of rocks, extending out from the place where the stern of the barge was caught, and having but some 5 feet of water at low tide, at a distance 30 feet from shore. This witness testifies that, in order to avoid injury to the Fly, the Fuller was compelled to remain where she was, holding the barge and the Fly from swinging around under the effect of the ebb tide, and that for this reason the Ticeland was called in to haul the boats off, but that the stern was fast aground, and that nothing was accomplished. He then went over on the barge, but soon left, and returned at 5 o’clock. While on the barge at that time he states that he heard a sudden or loud cracking, and that two of the deck beams were forced! up at the point where the barge was resting over the reef just referred to, and that the knees then broke and the hatches fell down on top of the cargo.

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Related

C. F. Harms Co. v. Upper Hudson Stone Co.
225 F. 630 (E.D. New York, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 F. 553, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-brittania-nyed-1912.