The Excelsior

12 F. 195, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 25, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. 195 (The Excelsior) 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 Excelsior, 12 F. 195, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100 (S.D.N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Brown, D. J.

This is an action for damages for the loss of the schooner Warren Gates through a collision with the steam-tug Atlas and barge Excelsior, about 11 o’clock on'the night of September 26, 1878, on the Hudson river, at a point about two miles north of Yonkers, whereby the schooner was immediately sunk.

The Warren Gates was a small schooner of about 73 tons measurement, 68 feet in length, and 24 feet beam. She was deeply laden with a cargo of about 425 tons of coal, having 25 tons on deck, on a voyage from Rondout, New York, to Niantic, Connecticut. She was coming down about the middle of the river, the wind a strong breeze from N. N. W., on her starboard quarter, with foresail and mainsail well out, both jibs set, and making from six to seven miles an hour. The tide was the last of. the flood.

The Atlas, a steam-tug of 68 feet in length and 17 feet beam, was'going up about the middle of the river, with the barge Excelsior in tow, [197]*197on a hawser 55 fathoms in length. The barge was 143 feet long by 23 feet wide, and was about half loaded, drawing four feet of water. All the vessels had the regulation lights properly set and burning. The tug passed the schooner to the right, but, as the libellants claim, struck her a somewhat severe glancing blow upon the port bow of the schooner, though this is denied by those on board the tug. The main-boom of the schooner, about 50 feet long, raked across the tug, carried away the top of her pilot house, broke the steam-whistle, bent the smoke-stack, and, it is said, became somewhat entangled in her upper works. She soon cleared, however, and shortly after the barge struck the port bow of the schooner nearly head on, in consequence of which the schooner sank in about three minutes. Her captain was carried down with her, but was rescued by the tug. The cook was drowned. The mate and one seaman, who were the only other persons on board the schooner, were afterwards rescued by another vessel.

The night was dark but clear. Each claims to have seen the lights of the other from one and a half to two miles distant. Shortly before the collision the wheel of the schooner was put first nearly to starboard, and then hard a-port, when, as alleged in the libel, a collision seemed unavoidable from a sudden change of course in the steam-tug; and there is no doubt that as the tug passed her the schooner bore somewhat to westward; for, when raised a few days afterwards, she was found heading one or two points to the west of the line of the river. But, as to all the time prior to this change of the schooner’s wheel, the testimony of the parties, both as to the situation of the two vessels and their respective courses, is in irreconcilable conflict.

Upon the schooner the mate was at the wheel, and there was no other lookout than the captain, who had charge of the navigation. He remained abaft the wheel, claiming that on account of the spray from the bows it was a better situation for a lookout that night. He testified that he first saw the vertical white lights of the Atlas when two milos off, as he stood by the rail on the starboard quarter, and that these white lights were then seen between the two masts beneath the fore boom on his port side. Shortly after, he says, he went to the rail on the port quarter, and presently saw the red light of the Atlas about on a line with the port rail of the schooner; that it was three or four minutes after having seen the white lights that he first saw the red light of the Atlas about a point on his port bow, and that he kept watching it from that time on; that a short tilno after —two minutes, more or less — he saw the green light still on his port [198]*198bow; that he then apprehended a collision, and ordered the wheel pnt hard a-starboard, but that before there was time to starboard the wheel the steamer’s red light came again suddenly in view, when he ordered hard a-port, and took hold of the wheel to help, and that he had hardly time to give the order hard a-port before the collision. On his cross-examination he says that he first saw the colored light when he was standing on the lee side, and saw the red light parallel with the lee rail, and that when he saw the green light he was in the same place, and saw it in the same direction; that up to the time of seeing the green light his course was not changed, but that they came down the middle of the river as straight as the schooner could be steered.

The mate, who was at the wheel, testified that he first saw the white lights on his port bow twelve or fifteen minutes before the collision; that three or four minutes afterwards he saw the steamer’s red light about one point off his port bow, which remained in sight may be seven or eight minutes; that up to that time he had made no change at all in the course of the vessel, but sailed straight down the middle of the river; that she would yaw about three-quarters of a point upon either side; that he next saw the green light when three or four'' lengths of the schooner (about 250 feet) distant from the steamer, and that this green light bore a little on his port bow, when he got the order hard a-starboard, and before it was hard up he got the order, “The red light in sight again; hard a-port;” that he saw the red light himself the second time; that there was no interval to speak of between the order to starboard and the order hard a-port, and between the order hard a-port and the collision was a very short time — about half a minute, or a minute at the most.

The seaman who was below, off duty, was attracted on deck by hearing the captain sing out, “A light on the lee bow.” He threw away his pipe, came on deck and went forward, and says he saw the red light from a point to a point and a quarter on the lee (port) bow ; that it remained in.view about five minutes; that he then saw both lights, and in two or three seconds saw the green light, when the tug was about five lengths of the schooner away (850 feet) and pretty near ahead; that he next saw' the tug’s red light; that the collision was so soon after that he had to “fly out of the bows;” that the tug hit the schooner on the port bow, a pretty heavy glancing blow, and that the barge struck less than half a minute afterwards, square on.

From all the surviving witnesses of the schooner, therefore, the testimony is uniform that the lights of the tug and tow were at all [199]*199times upon the scliooner’s port bow, and that the tug’s red light, and not her green light, was visible until within three or four lengths of the schooner, when, by a sudden change, the steamer’s green light was seen, threatening an immediate collision, when the schooner’s helm was changed as a maneuver in extremis to ease the blow.

The testimony of the pilot and captain of the steamer is directly to the contrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. 195, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-excelsior-nysd-1882.