The Cherokee

15 F. 119, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 30, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F. 119 (The Cherokee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Cherokee, 15 F. 119, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1 (S.D. Ohio 1883).

Opinion

Hammond, J.,

(sitting by designation.) Notwithstanding the voluminous testimony in this case the essential facts lie within a small compass. There is opposite Rising Sun, on the Ohio river, a very narrow channel, caused by the encroachment of a bar, making out from the Kentucky shore, and at the stage of water existing at the time of the collision sued for, navigation at the place was difficult. It is conceded that this place comes within the application of the following rulo, prescribed for the government of pilots:

“ Rule 3. Where two boats are about to enter a narrow channel at the same time, the ascending boat shall be stopped below such channel until the descending boat shall have passed through it; but should two boats unavoidably meet in such channel, then it shall be the duty of the pilot of the descending boat to make the proper signals, and, when answered, the ascend[120]*120irig boat shall lie as close as possible to the side of the channel the exchange of signals may have determined, as allowed by rule 1, and either stop the engines or move them so as only to give the boat steerage way, and the pilot of the descending boat shall cause his boat to be worked slowly until he has-passed the ascending boat.”

The tow-boat Lane, while descending the river with barges in tow, four heavily laden, and one, a fuel'supply barge, was endeavoring to enter this narrow channel, and when about the head of it one of the barges in the lead grounded on the edge of the bar. -She at first attempted to force the tow forward, but not succeeding began to swing with the barges still afloat down stream, but out of the channel and over the bar, loosening the lashings of the three rear barges, until she and they became detached from the other two. Fearing that -the force of the current would tear out the head-pieces of the other two barges, the captain of the Lane directed the ratchets, fastening the grounded barge and its companion leader to the starboard, to be knocked off, supposing that the lashings of the cable would hold it fast, but. give sufficient play .to prevent the tearing out of the head-pieces. These cable lashings parted—according to the testimony of the people on the Lane—by force of, the strain of the current, and the starboard leader bargé left the grounded barge and started down this narrow channel, coming in collision with the steam-boat Cherokee, by which it and its cargo of coal became a tota] loss, for which loss this suit is brought by the owners respectively of the barge and coal against the Cherokee. The negligence imputed by the libel is a violation of the above-quoted pilot rule, and the customs of navigation, by being in the channel at all, and a want of proper care in avoiding the collision after the barge was adrift.

The proof establishes, in my judgment, in regard to the movements, of the Cherokee, these facts: The Cherokee, ascending the river, was at the foot of the channel about the time the barge of the Lane grounded, and, observing the Lane, blew one whistle, as the rule' then required, to know of the Lane by her answering signal on which side of the channel she would come out, to which signal there was no response. She also stopped, except for steerage way, close in under the bar and at the foot of the channel, as required by the above-mentioned rule, for a space of about five minutes. Hearing no response to her signal, and observing that the Lane made no progress, the conclusion was that she was aground; and it appearing that there. was room to pass through the channel the Cherokee proceeded up the river, had passed the stern of the Lane, and was about mid-[121]*121ship of that vessel, when she carao in violent collision with the barge that was adrift as before mentioned. There'was in fact room between the shore and the grounded barge, and would have been room between the shore and both the grounded barge and its mate, if the latter had remained fastened to the grounded barge, for the Cherokee to pass them, narrow as the channel was at that place. There is a good deal of conflict as to the distance, and the capacity of the Cherokee to have avoided the barge adrift by retreating; but taking the situation of the witnesses, and their means of observation into consideration, it must be determined, I think, that the Cherokee acted as promptly as she could in that respect; she was going slowly and cautiously, and all agree she had reversed her engines, and her wheel was moving back at the moment of the collision. The libelant’s witnesses think she did not move back soon enough, and had not conquered her headway when the ■collision occurred, nor made more than one or two revolutions backward, while her own people say she had not only stopped her headway, but was actually moving back when the collision occurred. Her ■own officers were in the best position to know this fact, and, other things being equal, their testimony is to prevail over that of observers from the shore or on the Lane and her barges. The Milwaukee, Brown, Adm. 813. Besides, the burden of proof is on the libelant, and when there is a reasonable doubt of any blame the loss must be sustained where it has fallen. The Grace Girdler, 7 Wall. 196; The City of London, Swab. 300, 302.

It does not seem to me that the proof makes out any negligence on the part of the Cherokee as far as relates to her efforts to avoid a collision after the barge was adrift. The difference between the witnesses on this point arose out of a divergence of estimates of time and distance, and, I think, all things considered, the very decided preponderance of the known facts is in favor of the shortest time and the shortest distance between the breaking loose of the barge and the collision; and this fact, also, makes it clear to my mind that the Cherokee was proceeding very slowly and cautiously, for if she had not been, she could not have checked her speed and reversed her engines, as even the libelant’s witnesses describe, in so short a time as there must have been between the breaking loose of the barge and the actual contact with the steam-boat.

Was the Cherokee negligent, and is she to be blamed for being in the channel ? I think not. I do not see how she can be benefited by the circumstance that there was no response to her signal, except that it may have confirmed, however unreasonably, her pilot’s judg[122]*122ment that the Lane was aground. If the Lane had not been aground, as a fact, a want of response would not'have justified the Cherokee in proceeding, bec'ause rule 2 clearly required her to give several short, quick sounds of the whistle, lest her other signal had not been heard or had been misunderstood, and if the Lane had been coming down and this collision occurred with her or her barges attached, I do not see how the Cherokee could be released from blame. But no matter upon what erroneous inferences the pilot of the Cherokee acted in coming to a conclusion thát the Lane was aground, she was aground, as a fact, or one of her barges was, and she engaged in the business of overcoming that difficulty, which is the same thing, and there was apparently roorp for the Cherokee to pass through the channel.' Indeed, it was not obstructed, for the Lane and her other barges were over the bar, and quite, if not entirely, out of the channel, while the grounded barge and its mate were lying on the extreme edge of the channel,—one on the bar and the other not obstructing the channel, if in it at all. Under these circumstances I cannot think the Cherokee was compelled to lie by at the foot of the channel until the Lane could gather up her tow and pass down the channel.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 119, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cherokee-ohsd-1883.