The Fanita

8 F. Cas. 986, 8 Ben. 11
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1875
DocketCase No. 4,635
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 986 (The Fanita) 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 Fanita, 8 F. Cas. 986, 8 Ben. 11 (S.D.N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

This libel is filed by the owner of the schooner Samuel G. Miles, against the steamship Fan-ita, to recover for the damages sustained by the libellant through a collision which occurred between the two vessels in the East river, between New York and Brooklyn, at about 9 o’clock, p. m., on the 20th of August, 1870. The schooner had come around the-Battery, and was bound to Williamsburgh. ■ with a cargo of brick. The steamship was a propeller of 434 tons burden, and was-bound down the river on a voyage to Philadelphia. The wind was north west to west north west, and the schooner was sailing up-with her booms off to starboard. The tide was ebb. The stem of the propeller struck the starboard bow of the schooner between her forechains and her stem. The wound went in as far as the forehatch of the schooner. a distance of about fourteen feet, in .a direction towards the port quarter of the-schooner, and on a line which, if continued, would have reached to a point on the port side about ten feet forward of the stem of the schooner. The schooner sank immediately, in from 40 to 45 feet of water.

The libel alleges that the. schooner- had all [987]*987■her regulation lights set and burning bright- ’ .ly, and a competent man on the lookout, who 'was carefully attending to his duty, and a. competent and careful man* at the wheel; •that she had reached a point in the East river . to the westward of pier 10; that the lights of • the propeller were made off the starboard bow of the schooner and ahead, and in such a position and course, that, had she kept it, she would have passed on the starboard side . of the schooner, the schooner then being .-about 150 yards from the end of the piers, ■and sailing steadily along upon her course; : that both vessels kept on their respective courses • until they had neared one another; . that, when about abreast of pier 10, the propeller suddenly changed her course .by port- .' ing, and came rapidly upon the course of the ■ schooner, and upon the schooner; and that • the.collision was the fault of those navigating the propeller, in not having a competent •and' careful outlook, attending to his duty, :and not keeping in the middle of the river as required by law to do, in running so close • to the docks, in not keeping her course, and ■ . not keeping upon a course which would have ■ carried her clear of the schooner, and in ■changing her course and.running upon the schooner.

- The answer alleges, that, some distance be-.fore the propeller reached pier 10, those in charge .of her observed the red light of the •schooner very nearly ahead, bearing abouthalf: • a point on the starboard bow of the propeller; that thereupon the wheel of the propeller : was ported, so as to enable her to pass the' schooner to the right; that the course of the. . propeller was changed sufficiently to enable ■ her to safely pass the schooner, and she was • then steadied on her course; that she contin- ■ ued -on such course until shortly before the collision, the schooner bearing on the port • bow of the propeller, when the course of the • schooner was changed, so as to bring her di-, recüy across the bow of the propeller; that . in consequence, the schooner was struck by ■ the propeller and sunk; that no green or starboard light on the schooner could be ob- ;; served from the propeller; that the course • of the propeller was from 150 to 200 yards ■ from the ends of the piers; that, as soon as the danger of collision became apparent, the ■ propeller was slowed and stopped; and that the collision was caused by the fault of those in- charge of the schooner, in trying to •pass to the starboard instead of to the port side of the propeller and in crossing the course of the propeller.

At the time of the collision there were four hands on board of the schooner, namely: •Lancaster, the sailing master, who was at the helm; Mackey, who was forward, as a lookout; a cook, who was drowned in the sinking of the schooner; and another hand, who died in 1873. Lancaster and Mackey have been examined as witnesses for the li- .. bellant.

Lancaster had not seen the lights of the 'propeller until just as the propeller was striking the schooner, and then he saw them off his foreboom, on the starboard bow. He says that he had not heard any report of the propeller or of her light, from Mackey, until just as she was coming into the schooner, and that, when he first saw her, her stem was but a very few feet, probably ten or ■ twelve, from the schooner. He also says, that he had made no change in his helm after he came around the Battery and before the collision. But it is manifest, that, as his attention had not been directed to the propeller, he had no especial reason to keep his • helm steady, or to keep his course with ref- • erence to the propeller as an approaching vessel. The propeller, as the evidence shows, . had seen the schooner and was taking measures to avoid her, .relying on the fact that she would keep her course; but Lancaster, the man at the helm of the schooner, was igDorant of the approach of the propeller, and had no especial reason for adhering steadily to his course, and, therefore, no reason for remembering particularly whether he did or did not shift his helm.

Mackey says that he saw the propeller’s white bow-light a quarter of a mile off, to. the starboard, which was the leeward, and over the starboard bow, and that, when she was 150 yards off from the schooner, she sheered across the course of the schooner- and ran-into the schooner. ■ He can tell nothing as to any change of course in the schooner. ;

Freeman, .the master of the propeller, wqs outside of the pilot house, forward, directing the navigation of the propeller, the mate being at the . wheel. Tomlin, a Delaware river pilot,, attached to the propeller, was on the forecastle deck, acting as a lookout Freeman testifies that the propeller, after leaving her dock, pier 33, East river, went down the river ■ under one bell; that he ported to go under the stern of a ferry boat that was going out from the Fulton Ferry slip on the New Tork side; that, directly after coming out from under the stern of such ferry boat, he saw the schooner’s red light nearly directly ahead, about a half a point on his starboard bow, the lookout having reported a red light ahead; that, when-he saw such red light, he ported his wheel, so that the red light got to be a point and a half on his port bow; that he was looking at the schooner through a glass, and ran on, having hooked on to full speed, and saw the sails of the schooner, and saw her, when she-was 150 or 200 feet away, luff across his bows; that her red light went out of sight, and he saw her sails go across his bow;that she had no green light burning; and that, as soon as he saw her luff across his bow, he rang to slow, stop and back, and starboarded his wheel, but the propeller struck the schooner almost immediately.

Tomlin testifies that he saw the red light of the schooner; that, when he first saw it. it was a little, half a point, on his port bowt [988]*988that as the propeller drew ahead, suoh red ,light got to be a point on her .port bow; ¡that such red light continued to show until the vessels were 200 feet apart; that he was looking at the schooner with a glass at the time; that the red light went out of sight, «.nd the schooner went across the bow of the propeller; that he saw no green light •on the schooner; that the propeller’s bells to slow, stop and back were rung as soon as it was discovered that the schooner had starboarded; and that, if the schooner had ■not starboarded, the vessels would have passed port to port 150 feet apart

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 986, 8 Ben. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-fanita-nysd-1875.