The Ciudad De Reus

185 F. 391, 107 C.C.A. 447, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3998
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 1911
DocketNos. 136, 137
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 185 F. 391 (The Ciudad De Reus) 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.

Bluebook
The Ciudad De Reus, 185 F. 391, 107 C.C.A. 447, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3998 (2d Cir. 1911).

Opinion

WARD, Circuit Judge.

These are cross-appeals. The cause is upon a libel and cross-libel filed by the owners of the steamers Ciudad de Reus and Maraval respectively, which were lying at anchor somewhere opposite Stapleton and came into collision in the early morning of January 5, 1908. The Reus had been lying safely at her anchorage through several tides since the morning of January 3d. On January 5th at 1:50 a. m. the Maraval dropped her anchor and brought up on it within a few minutes afterwards. Subsequently the starboard side of the Reus amidships came into contact with the bluff of the port bow of the Maraval; each vessel sustaining considerable injury. The Reus then swung around and lay alongside with her starboard bow about amidships and projecting half her length aft of the Maraval. In this position the vessels lay for hours. At daylight the Maraval found it impossible to -raise her anchor 'until the Reus slipped her chain, and then the Maraval brought up both anchors foul of each other. The anchor of each vessel was adequate.

The time of the collision is disputed; the single watchman on the deck of the Reus saying first it was half an hour and afterwards 22 to 24 minutes, and the quartermaster on the deck of the Maraval saying that it occurred about 10 minutes, after the Maraval anchored. We think this a mistake. ’The weight of the testimony, confirmed -by the scrap log of the Maraval’s engine room, is clearfy that it occurred about 45 minutes afterwards.

The pleadings of the Reus are on the theory that thé Maraval an- . chored too near her, making a foul berth, and then swinging around under the force of the ebb tide to the southwest struck the Reus amid- . ships with her bow. ,

The pleadings of the Maraval, on the other hand, are on the theory that she' anchored to the south and east of the Reus in a safe berth which vessel under the force of the northwest wind dragged her anchor in a southeasterly direction and so came foul of the Maraval.

It is agreed upon both sides that the wind was blowing from the northwest. The United States Weather Record taken on the roof of 100 Broadway shows an hourly wind movement between 12 and 1 a. m. of 17 miles west and between 1 and 2 a. m. of 24 miles northwest with no squalls, at least which lasted five minutes; no maximum velocities (i. e., over 29 miles) of less duration being ever included in such reports. It seems to us quite impossible that such a wind as is described in the report could have caused either vessel .to drag her anchor.

Low water occurred at Sandy Hook at 2:15 a. m., but the current continued to run down for more than two hours after that period; its average strength being 1.5 knots an hour. See Judge Addison Brown’s interesting note to the case of the Ludwig Holberg, (D. C.) 36 Fed. 917. We cannot believe that such a current would cause either vessel to drag- her anchor.'

There is no accurate testimony as to the set of the ebb current, nor do. we know of any record of it in the Upper Bay. Observations have been published of the set of the current in the Lower Bay in connection with the work on Ambrose Channel. The report of the Metropolitan Sewerage Commission dated April 30, 1910, contains a record of interesting experiments with floats, but not helpful on this point. [393]*393Robinson, master of one of The New York & Cuba steamers, says the ebb has a S. S. W. tendency opposite Stapleton and then favors the beach to the Yarrows, and Second Officer Kuhlman and Chief Officer Smith of the Alaraval testify similarly. Many other witnesses say it runs north and south. The District Judge found the current to be S. W. The configuration of the river and bay seems to indicate that the ebb tide would naturally set towards the Staten Island shore; hut we cannot believe it sets so far west as southwest.

We lay out of consideration tlie contention of the Reus that the ATaraval dropjjed her anchor on or near the anchor of the Reus and then swung around to the S. W. by the force of the tide against the Reus. It is in the highest degree improbable that any pilot would anchor so close to another vessel, or, if he did, that the watch on the Reus would not have appreciated the clanger and immediately have called up an officer. Putting tlie Alaraval when she brought up on her anchor 60 fathoms off the starboard side of the Reus, as tlie watchman oil the Reus testified, the Alaraval, if controlled by an ebb current of 1.5 knots, would have swung into collision with the Reus in about two minutes, and the pilot, officers, and -whole watch of the Alaraval ■would have been witnesses of it, and the second officer of the Royal Prince could hardly have failed to see it. Moreover, she would have swung alongside, and, being 321 feet long, would have projected less one-lialf the length of the Reus, viz., nearly 200 feet astern of her, which she did not do.

Both parties agree that the Alaraval anchored east of the Reus, and the real dis2tute is whether to the north and east or to the south and east, and whether she, under the force of the ebb tide, dragged S. W.. or the Reus, under the force of the N. W. wind, dragged S. E.

The District Judge very truly stated that the testimony creates a situation of inextricable confusion. He did not attempt to reconcile the testimony of the many witnesses and the diagrams they made and the points they marked on the charts as to the original anchorage of the vessels and their location afterwards at different times on the same day. We shall follow his example in this res{)ect. He apparently found that the Alaraval anchored N. and E. of the Reus, relying principálly upon the testimony of Foster, first officer, and Ramsay, second officer, of the Ro3-al Prince, which lay at anchor some distance lower down the ba3'. He attached importance to their depositions because they were disinterested -witnesses, and because, though examined on behalf of the Alaraval, their depositions were offered in evidence by the Reus. Foster’s watch was from 4 to. 8 a. m., and we discover nothing significant in his deposition. Ramsay’s watch was from 12 to 4 a. m., and, though his testimony is not very positive and does not indicate accurate observation, it favors the Reus as far as it goes. He says:

“When you went on watch at 32 o’clock, did you see any vessels anchored above you? A. Yes, sir; títere was one vessel ahead of us.
“Q. How far ahead do you think she was? A. About a mile.
“Q. Was she towards the Staten Island shore? A. ¡She was closer In. ■ '
“Q. Could you see any other vessel anchored near there at 32 o’clock? A. No, sir.
[394]*394"Q. At any time from 12 to 4 did you see more than one vessel anchored above you within a mile? A. No, sir.
“Q. Did you see any vessel come in between the hours of 12 and 4 and go by you. A. Yes, sir; there was one vessel passed very close to us.
“Q. Do you know what vessel she was? A. No, sir; I couldn’t see. It was dark.
“Q. Do you know where she anchored? A. No, sir; I couldn’t say
“Q. Have you any idea? A. No, sir.
“Q. Do you know whether that vessel anchored above or below the vessel that you saw anchored about a mile above you ? A. It must have been above.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. 391, 107 C.C.A. 447, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ciudad-de-reus-ca2-1911.