The Calvin Austin

275 F. 836, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1106
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 275 F. 836 (The Calvin Austin) 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 Calvin Austin, 275 F. 836, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1106 (E.D.N.Y. 1921).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

On the 28th day of June, 1919, passage through Hell Gate was restricted by a dredge and a drill working on the Long Island side of the channel across from and to the south of Negro Point. At about 8:30 a. m. the steamer Calvin Austin, which has a length of 298 feet and is used upon the route between Boston and New York, was coming through the Sound bound for New York. When reaching the turn at Pott Cove, she headed toward Man O’War Rock, with the intention of passing it on the southerly or Long Island [837]*837side. The tide had been running flood for about an hour and was particularly strong that morning. Flood tide, as it passes up the East River, divides at Man O’War Rock, one part running into the Harlem River for some distance until it meets the tide from the Hudson, while the greater body of water goes on through Hell Gate to the Sound. A part of the stream running into the Harlem sweeps around to the north of Man O’War Rock and joins the stream running to the Sound, thus causing an eddy close to Man O’War Rock along its northeastern shore.

When the Austin attempted, under a. hard astarboard helm, to make the turn to the south at Man O’War Rock, the strong tide, running more than 5 '/2 miles an hour and striking the port bow of the steamer at this turn, carried the bow towards Ward’s Island, compelling the steamer to go to the northeastward of Man O’War Rock in order to avoid striking the rock. As the bow of the steamer reached the eddy behind the rock, her stern swung over towards Ward’s Island, until the steamer was in such a position that she could not proceed ahead around Man O’War Rock into the Harlem River, so as to pass down through the westward channel.

It appears from the testimony that the Austin could with safety have, navigated the channel to the north and west of Man O’War Rock, if her captain had undertaken the passage in time, but after she reached the position where her bow was forced in close to the rock, it was impossible for her to obtain steerageway and to get away from the rock without stopping, backing, and withdrawing into either one channel or the other. By careful maneuvering, both backing and going ahead upon her engines, she reached a position where she could draw back away from the upper end of. the rock, and then passed within a dista nee estimated as 50 feet from the corner of the rock, down through Hell Gate in the direction of her original course. In the meantime a tow, in charge of the tug Helen B. Moran, was coining out through Hell Gate, and, when off the upper end of Blackwell’s Island, near Eighty-Sixth street, or opposite Horn’s Hook, observed the Austin passing across and apparently proceeding through the. channel to the west, of Man O’War Rock. The tow of the Moran consisted of the Weiant upon her port hawser, the St. Cyr upon her starboard hawser, and the Hastings No. 2 behind the St. Cyr in the second tier. The scows were loaded with rubbish, and were upon a hawser estimated at 150 feet in length.

The Austin gave no signal to the Moran before corning out from behind Man O’War Rock. The male of the Austin saw the Moran tow after passing the dredge and drill. The captain of the Austin did not see the Moran nor her tow, but was paying undivided attention to the navigation of his own vessel until after the Austin had resumed her course to pass Man O’War Rock upon the south side.

It is the custom for a Sound steamer, passing down through the Hook against the flood tide, not only to blow a long whistle before entering the Gate, but also to wait in the neighborhood of Pott Cove, or further back toward the Sound, if a tow is met directly in the Gate. It is also the custom for a tug passing up around Negro Point to haul over toward Negro Point, in order to keep its tows away from the steep [838]*838or scaly rocks on the Long Island side of the river at that point. Thus the Sound steamers lie back far enough to pass the tows port to port to the eastward of Negro Point, pass them starboard to starboard by proceeding into Pott Cove, or pass port to port between Negro Point and Man O’War Rock. It is the custom, also, for the tows, after leaving Horn’s Hook, to haul over to the port side of the channel and within some 300 or 400 feet of Man O’War Rock; in other words, to follow the stream of the tide past Man O’War Rock until the corner is reached, where the turn of the tide itself takes them straight down past Hog’s Back and Negro Point.

The presence of the dredge and drill made it much more difficult for a steamer to run in toward Pott Cove or under tire shore of Halléts Point, and thus to pass a boat starboard to starboard in the fashion indicated. But on the occasion in question no such maneuver was necessary, for the Austin would plainly, if she had obeyed her helm and proceeded at regular speed upon her course, pass well below Man O’War Rock before meeting the Moran and her tow. It was not negligence, therefore, for the Austin to fail to blow a whistle to the Moran before running behind Man O’War Rock. The long whistle, to indicate that the Austin was coming through the Gate, had been blown some time previous to reaching the point in question. The Moran also had blown a whistle when off Horn’s Hook, which was not noticed by the Austin, but which would have had no bearing upon the Austin’s movements under the circumstances.

The Austin apparently reached a point where she was approximately parallel to the general longitudinal dimension of Man O’War Rock, and where her bow was some 250 or 300 feet away from the western or lower extrémity of the rock, while her stern reached up to the broader or central portion of the rock and was some 75 feet out in the river therefrom. Her officers had been so apprehensive of striking Man O’War Rock, when so close to its dangerous shpre, up to this point, that they had been proceeding at slow speed, barely holding their own against the tide, and moving at a rate of not more than 6 miles through the water. They thus had mere steerageway, but with little possibility of changing the position-of their vessel unless the speed was quickly increased.

Under these circumstances the captain of the Austin observed the Moran dnd her tow, which had approached until it was nearly opposite Man O’War Rock and on a course some 300 feet out from its western or lower end. It appears from the testimony that the Moran could not approach closer to Man O’War Rock without putting the tow in a position where it might be carried by the tide into the Harlem River, yet the captain of the Moran was compelled to get as far as was safe over toward Man O’War Rock, in order to have plenty of room to avoid the dredge and the drill after turning the corner.

As the Moran and the Austin saw each other in these respective positions, each blew a one-whistle signal, followed by alarm whistles on the part of the Moran. The captain of the Austin testifies that the alarm whistles preceded the one-whistle signal; but this is evidently a mistake. The Moran pulled over slightly under a port helm, in or[839]*839der to hold her tows from swinging against the Austin; but, as the boats were passing each other, the Moran reached a point where the set of the tide rapidly swung her scows closer to- the Austin, with the result that the port side of the Austin, about 60 feet from her stem, came in contact with the port side of the Wciant, about 20 feet from the after corner. The Weiant was forced by the blow away from the side of the Austin, which passed on as the scows continued their course, and struck also the Hastings No.

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275 F. 836, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-calvin-austin-nyed-1921.