The Favorita

8 F. Cas. 1094, 1 Ben. 30
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1866
DocketCase No. 4,693
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 1094 (The Favorita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Favorita, 8 F. Cas. 1094, 1 Ben. 30 (E.D.N.Y. 1866).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

This action is brought by the Union Ferry Co., owners of the ferry-boat Manhasset, against the steamship Favorita, to recover damages for injuries sustained by their ferry-boat in a collision with the steamship, which occurred on the afternoon of the 14th of April, 1805.

At the time of the collision the weather was clear, with a fresh breeze from the S. S. W.; and the tide was ebb. The steamship was proceeding up the East river to her berth at 12th street, New York, and the ferry-boat was on a trip from her Main St. slip on the Brooklyn side, to the Catharine St. slip on the New York side. The time of the collision was between three and four o’clock in the afternoon. The place of collision was off the Main St. slip.

The allegations of the libel filed in behalf of the ferry company are, that the ferry-boat was detached from her fastenings, and proceeded to the mouth of the slip, when the pilot and those in charge perceived the steamship proceeding up the river on a line across the front of said slip, and at about right-angles with the course of the ferry-boat, near to the Brooklyn shore, and at such a distance therefrom and from the ferry-boat, that it would not be practicable for said ferry-boat to cross the bows of the steamship, but to avoid a collision it became necessary that the ferry-boat should pass to the left of the steamship, and between her and the Brooklyn shore. That the pilot of the ferry-boat, immediately on discovering the steamship, reversed his engines, and also gave two blasts of his whistle, “to notify said steamship that said ferry-boat would so pass to the left of said steamship, and between her and the Brooklyn shore, and that said steamship should pass to the left of the Manhasset” That it thereupon became the duty of the steamship to sheer toward the New York shore; but the steamship disregarding the signal, and making no response thereto, sheered toward the Brooklyn shore, making it impossible for the ferry-boat to pass between the steamship and the Brooklyn shore; and by reason of her paying no attention to the signal, and of her being sheered toward the Brooklyn shore, she collided with the ferryboat, striking her just forward of the port wheel.

This statement of the movements of the ferry-boat challenges attention at the outset, as involving a departure on the part of the ferry-boat from the general rule which requires that when steam vessels are crossing so as to involve risk of collision, the vessel which has the other on her own starboard side shall keep out of the way of the other, and the other shall keep her course. Regulations of 1864, arts. 14-18. According to this rule, it was the duty of the ferry-boat to keep her course, and the responsibility of avoiding her devolved upon the steamship. But according to the libel, the persons in charge of the ferry-boat, immediately upon discovering the steamship, assumed to determine the method by which collision was to be avoided, and stopped and backed, with the design of passing the steamship to the left, and between her and the Brooklyn shore. Under this libel, the burden must be considered to be upon the ferry-boat to justify her action, and to show that the course she so marked out for the two vessels was the proper one, and necessary to avoid immediate danger. This burden has been assumed, and in support of the averments in the libel, the persons in charge of the ferry-boat, together with pilots from other ferry-boats in the neighborhood at the time of the collision, have been produced, who concur in expressing the opinion that the action of the ferryboat in stopping and backing was proper, and apparently necessary to avoid collision with the steamship as she was coming. It is to be noticed, however, that some of these witnesses produced by the libellants, put forth this opinion with little confidence. Thus the pilot of the ferry-boat himself says, “had we kept on, and the Favorita not changed her course, there would have been a collision the same — can’t tell whether the Favorita could have sheered enough to Brooklyn to clear me — don’t think she could at the speed she was going.” Conklin, a passenger on the ferry-boat, and who saw the movements of both vessels, is not asked on this point; while Cole, a pilot called by the libellant, who was on a ferry-boat bound to the Fulton Ferry slip, says, “Don’t hardly think the ferry-boat could have cleared her by going on.”

As against these opinions, and in favor of the allegation of the answer, that the ferryboat could have and would have passed in safety had she kept her course, the claimants produce the persons in charge of the navigation of the steamship, and also three persons who were standing on the forward part of the steamship from the time the ferryboat appeared. These three witnesses, Mr. Erastus W. Smith, Mr. T. F. Secor, and Mr. Daniel D. Westervelt, are persons acquainted with the harbor and with the capacities of vessels. They were in no way responsible for the management of the steamship, and they were watching the movements of the two vessels with care. The statements of such witnesses upon a question like this, seem to me to be entitled to great weight. All these persons concur with the master; pilot, and mate of the steamship, in a positive opinion that it was not necessary for the ferry-boat to stop to avoid danger; but on the contrary, that the steamship could have [1096]*1096passed Tinder her stem In safety had the ferry-boat kept on, and that her failure to keep on was the cause of the accident. The statement of Mr. Secor is emphatic; he says, “I say, and did say at the time, that had the ferry-boat kept on we would have gone clear under her stern — no doubt of that;” and several other of the witnesses are equally positive. The weight of opinion, therefore, of those who saw the occurrence, seems to me to be strongly against the ferry-boat upon this point.

■ This opinion is confirmed by facts proved in the cause relative to the manner in which the two vessels came together. The ferryboat, as it appears, was struck not over eighty feet from the Brooklyn end of the boat, and when struck she had stopped her headway, and was moving back. How far' she had backed is not clear from the evidence. The pilot estimates the distance as not over ten feet. Mr. Westervelt thinks she backed one or two lengths. Mr. Smith says more than half a length; but whether the distance she backed be ten or three hundred feet, it is manifest that the time necessarily occupied in stopping and backing and getting stemway, was sufficient to have enabled her, had she kept on, to have passed more than eighty feet further to west, and so to have been beyond the track of the steamship. This is still more manifest if the position of the steamship at the time the ferry-boat stopped is correctly given by the pilot of the ferry-boat He places the steamship at that time off the bulkhead next above the Fulton Ferry slip, and while the steamship, endeavoring to stop as she was, would pass from this point to the place of collision off Main St slip, the ferry-boat would certainly .have passed more than eighty feet, and beyond all possibility of contact with the steamship.

From the weight of opinion of persons competent to judge, and who were present, as well as from the position of the vessels and the manner of the blow, I conclude, therefore, that if the ferry-boat had kept on her course, the steamship would have avoided her, and. that she must be.held guilty of fault in determining to pass to the left, and in stopping and backing when she did.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 1094, 1 Ben. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-favorita-nyed-1866.