The E. A. Packer

8 F. Cas. 245, 10 Ben. 520
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 15, 1879
DocketCase No. 4,241
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 245 (The E. A. Packer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.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 E. A. Packer, 8 F. Cas. 245, 10 Ben. 520 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a suit to recover damages caused by a collision between the schooner N. H. Hall and the barge John Neilson, on the evening' of the 24th of September, 1S78. The schooner had arrived in the North river, off 30th street, in the afternoon of the 23d of September, with a cargo of paving, stones from St. George, in the state of Maine, and at about four o’clock on that day she came to anchor, to await her turn to discharge at the pier at the foot of 30th street. She anchored about 180 feet out into the river from the end of that pier and about the same distance down the stream from the pier. The collision took plnce between seven and eight o’clock in the evening of the next day after she came to anchor. The tide was flood, and she was heading down the river, ft was after dark, and she had a proper anchor-light set in her fore-rigging. She was laden with about four hundred tons of stone. The evening had been rainy, but it was clearing away, and some stars were visible, and lights of vessels could be seen without difficulty. The steam-tug E. A. Packer took in tow the barge John Neilson at pier 4, East river, at about six o’clock, to be towed round to a pier just below 33d street, North river. This pier was a short pier between the two long piers at 30th and 33d streets. The barge had been a side-wheel steamer. She was 175 feet long and 2S feet wide, sharp forward under water, having a main deck, and over that a roof or upper-deck some twelve feet above the main deck, and on top of that forward a pilot-house or wheelhouse in which was the wheel by which she was steered. From the rail to the roof or upper-deck were curtains on both sides, so that she offered a large surface to the wind. Her crew on this occasion consisted of two men, one her captain, who was not a licensed pilot, and was stationed in the wheelhouse, and the other a deck hand. She was towed by a hawser forty or fifty fathoms in length. As the tug with the barge in tow came up the North river she ran along on the New York side, and when she reached the vicinity of 23d street ferry slip, they were about three hundred feet out from that ferry slip and heading directly up the river. In order to put the barge into her berth, the captain of-the tug concluded to take her alongside instead of keeping her on the hawser, not feeling sure that those in charge of her could bring her safely and properly up to her berth, if brought up by the hawser. He desired to take the barge on his port side as the tide then was, in order to put her at the dock. For the purpose of making this change, when the tug was opposite 23d street ferry slip, and then heading with her tow directly up the river, and a little to the westward of the schooner, the tug slowed, sheered off a little to port, and gave a signal to the barge to throw off the hawser, and those on the tug immediately commenced hauling in on the hawser. The barge with the momentum which she had, prior to the slowing of the tug, kept on up the river, passing the tug on the tug's starboard side and very close to her, the tug meanwhile reversing her engine, intending to go under the stern of the barge and come up on her starboard side when the barge had got by, and there make, fast to her starboard quarter. The captain of the barge testifies that the hawser was thrown off only a short distance below 3Gili street; but he is evidently mistaken, and the overwhelming weight of the testimony from both vessels is chat this manoeuvre was commenced-as low down as 23d street, and that the barge came up to and passed the tug about off 25th street. As the barge passed the tug the captain of the tug called out to the captain of the barge to look out for the barge till he got round on the other side, and the captain of the barge replied, saying in substance that he would look out for the barge. The tug then came up on the starboard quarter of the barge and they were in the act of making the lines fast between the barge and the tug when the barge came into collision with the schooner. The starboard bow of the barge struck the starboard bow of the schooner, knocking a hole in her so that she sank in about five minutes, and her crew took to their boat, losing all their effects. Shortly before the barge struck the schooner, the captain of the tug, which was then lapping the starboard quarter of the barge, and just passing her lines to the barge, saw the danger and called to the captain of' the barge to starboard his wheel. The testimony tends to show that he called to him twice to this effect. The captain of the barge testifies that he did starboard his wheel, as [247]*247soon as be saw the schooner, and had it hard a-starboard at the time of the collision. Although this witness is very seriously contradicted on other points, I think there is not sufficient ground to reject his testimony on this point; but it is obvious enough that if his statement is true, he did not starboard soon enough to steer clear of the schooner, with such steerage way as the barge then had.

The light of the schooner had been seen on the tug before she signalled to the barge to throw off the hawser, as well as the lights of quite a number of other, vessels at anchor, lying to the westward and northward of *tlie schooner. The space between the schooner’s light and the next westerly light observed by those on the tug, seemed to them to be about a hundred yards, and the testimony shows that this judgment was about right. The captain of the tug judged that the space between these two lights was sufficient for him to go through in safety, though he was not certain whether the light on the schooner was a vessel’s light or a light on the end of the pier at the foot of 30th street. The distance from him of the schooner, and the nearest of these other lights, when he slowed and gave the signal, was about a third of a mile. These lights, including the schooner’s light, were also seen by the deck-hand on the barge, when she was about off 24th street, before she passed the tug, and he observed that the barge then headed a little to the westward of the schooner’s light. But so far as appears, he did not report the light to the captain, who acted as wheelsman, and also as lookout, so far as there was a lookout on the barge. The captain of the barge says that the tug obstructed his view of the light till he got within about a barge and a half’s length from the schooner, and that then, the tug getting out of his way, he saw the light, and immediately starboarded to clear it. But as, on the other point above referred to, his testimony as to the time and place when and where the tug got out of the way of the barge, is clearly overborne by all the other evidence, and he is on this point also evidently mistaken, and if he did not see the schooner’s light from a point off 24th street, or thereabouts, it was because he was negligent in his observation and kept no good lookout. It may well be that he did starboard when he saw that he was running into her.

It is evident enough that the collision was caused by the negligence of the tug, or of the barge, or. of both of them. The libel charges that it was caused by the “negligence and unskilfulness of those in charge of said tug and barge, in that said barge was brought by said tug into such close proximity to said schooner, and said barge was improperly navigated by those in command of her, and was without any lookout or light, and that no sufficient lookout was kept upon said tug-boat, nor was the speed of said barge and tug slackened in due time, and in allowing said barge to collide with a vessel at anchor.” No point is now made that the barge had not proper lights.

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Related

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37 F. 888 (S.D. New York, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 245, 10 Ben. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-e-a-packer-nysd-1879.