The Catawissa
This text of 213 F. 14 (The Catawissa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Concededly the width of the Cheektowaga and the barges, as they lay at anchor, including their clear[16]*16anees, was 130 feet. The distance of the Cheektowaga from the shore is variously estimated at from 100 to 180 feet. The chart shows that to eastward and to westward of Negro Point Bluff the shore recedes somewhat. The amount of navigable channel left for the Catawissa, which after she had rounded Negro Point on that tide would have to go on, depends on the location of the Cheektowaga’s flotilla. Two or three hundred feet to eastward or westward would malee the open water greater or less.
We find nothing wrong in the make-up of either tow; no negligence attributable to the Cheektowaga in the parting of the hawser, nor in her maneuvers to break the consequent sheer, nor in anchoring two of her barges, nor in the fouling of anchor and chain.
It is undisputéd'that the Catawissa could not see the disabled flotilla till she actually rounded Negro Point; also that when she had rounded Negro Point on this'tide, she had to go On. She came up on the New York side of Blackwell’s Island, and had two' bends to make, before, reaching the point of collision. We are satisfied that she blew both [17]*17bend signals, one at Eighty-Sixth street for the turn to southward, the other opposite Hallet’s Point, for the Negro Point turn to the eastward. It is the regular thing to do; there was no reason why she should not sound them, and her witnesses say she did. That the master of the Mabel did not hear them—or to be more accurate, did not, when testifying, remember that he heard them—is not persuasive. The position of the two vessels at the time was such that any signals of the Catawissa were of no interest to the Mabel; they might well be heard without being heeded or remembered.
The exchange of bend signals as we have often held is a matter of importance. The vessel who first blows them says, “I, whom you cannot see, am about to round this point in front of you.” If the response be a single whistle, it means, “I, whom you are about to meet, am navigating to pass you as usual, port to port.” If the response be two blasts it means, “My position is such that we can pass better starboard to starboard.” If the response be an alarm it means, “I am in trouble and cannot navigate to help you; if you come around you take the risk.” The importance of a prompt response to a bend signal whistle is manifest—especially so because the vessels exchanging signals are frequently invisible to each other and their exact relative positions unknown.
Neither of the Catawissa’s bend whistles were heard on the Cheektowaga. The master was busy rectifying the disturbance occasioned by the parting of the hawser, and was, it may be, excusable for not personally hearing them; but we think that when he gave his undivided attention to straightening out the sheering tow, he should, knowing it was the hour for east-bound tows to come along, have stationed some one to watch out for bend signals and report them at once so that he could answer with an alarm, thus advising any east-bound tow before she rounded Negro Point that there was trouble of some sort ahead of her.
This was a fault and we are not satisfied on the proof that it did not contribute to the collision. It has been repeatedly held that the burden of proving that any particular violation of the official rules of navigation did not so contribute rests on the vessel which has violated such rule. The master of the Catawissa testifies, and there is nothing in the record to. contradict him, that if he had received an alarm in response to his first bend signal, blown at Eighty-Sixth street, he could have gone in the Harlem river between Ward’s Island and Mill Rock, rounded to and anchored. Also that, if he had received an alarm in response to his second bend whistle, blown opposite Hallet’s Point, he could have rounded to into Pot Cove, where the Mabel was hanging on, and held his tow until the Cheektowaga came along, or he found that the channel was clear. When he heard no response at all, he was entitled to proceed around Negro Point, assuming the channel was clear; and, once he had rounded it on that tide, there was nothing to do but go on and make the best he could of the situation.
We think both vessels were in fault, and modify the decree so as to divide damages, without costs of this appeal.
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213 F. 14, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-catawissa-ca2-1914.