The Flying By

4 F. Supp. 884, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1377
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 3, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 4 F. Supp. 884 (The Flying By) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Flying By, 4 F. Supp. 884, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1377 (D.N.J. 1933).

Opinion

CLARK, District Judge.

Most citizens of New Jersey are familiar with the Raritan Canal link in the Atlantic Coast waterway system. This canal connects the Delaware river at Bordentown with the Raritan river and bay at New Brunswick. The canal was opened on June 27, 1834. It was once an important part of the canal system of the state and nation. Nowadays it seems to be chiefly used as an excuse for securing river and harbor appropriations and as a pathway for the numerous small boats whose owners winter in Florida. One such boat sub nomine, Flying By, came to grief on the return trip, June 2,1931, of its annual hegira. The Flying By was a 44-foot, twin screw eahin cruiser with an 11-foot beam and with a draft' of 3 feet 4 inches. The grief aforementioned was a collision with a rock or rocks in the Raritan river about 1,600' feet east (towards New York) of the outlet lock whereby boats are lowered or raised (as the case may be) between the canal and the river. At the time of the collision the Flying By was being piloted by Capt. Mills, a navigator who had been in the habit of bringing boats from Florida by this route. He testified that this was his twentieth trip (the fifth in the Flying By). As insurance against loneliness, he had with him as a passenger (we assume with the consent of the owner and present libelant, Woodworth) the lady who, he testified, has now become his wife and whose absence from the trial is, he says, due to an interesting and commendable event in his family.

Libelant does not attribute the unfortunate happening to the Flying By to inevitable accident or to his agent’s negligence, but rather ascribes it to the failure of the respondent, the dredge Empire, to use due care under the circumstances. This dredge was spending part of some government appropriation on widening the channel in the Raritan river just north of the New Brunswick lock. It was anchored in the northern half of the existing 100-foot channel with a clearance of 65 feet between the scow lashed to its starboard side and the south or starboard bank of the river. The depth of the channel ranged from 9> to 11 feet and the depth of the river outside of the channel from 2 to 3 feet. It is admitted that the rock or rocks with which the Flying By collided came into the shallow or nonehannel part of the river through the operations of the dredge Empire.

Capt. Mills’ version of the accident is substantially as follows: He was at the wheel of the Flying By as she left the lock. He was proceeding on the starboard side of the channel. He saw the dredge, but, because of the curve of the river, was of the opinion that she and her scow were very close to the right bank. Apparently because of that opinion, he determined to pass the dredge on the port side. To that end he blew two blasts or toots on the klaxon of the Flying By (coneededly the correct passing signal for an overtaking boat intending to pass with the dredge on its starboard). The dredge gave no signals of any kind, either answering or alarm. Continuing, however, with intention indicated by them, Capt. Mills changed his course to the port and shallow side of the river, and passed the Empire on that side. In doing so, he ran into a submerged rock or rocks just beyond the dredge, and was wrecked. He did not see the arrows on the Empire. He attributed this to the swinging to and fro of her bucket boom.

The only other witnesses called by the libelant were a wrecker, employed by the libelant, and the lock tender. The former claimed that the arrows on the dredge wei*e hard to distinguish because of the boom and because it was not sufficiently above the dredge’s deck house. He admitted on cross-examination that the time between swings of the allegedly obscuring boom was very short. The lock tender said that after, but not before, the accident he received orders from the United States engineer to warn eastbound boats to pass to the right of the dredge. This testimony would seem subject to the vice of “subsequent repair” evidence, and to be therefore of doubtful cogency. The lock tender also told of the safe passage to the starboard of the dredge of a large houseboat which immediately followed the Flying By. The libelant called the United States chief inspector, who was on the Empire on June 2d, who testified as to the exact position of the dredge from charts made at the time and as to the arrows.

The respondent offered two eyewitnesses, the dredge superintendent and the man who operated its launch (no longer employed by the respondent company). The former was on the shore close to the dredge, and the latter was standing at the outlet lock. Their account of the circumstances leading up to the [886]*886accident agrees, and is diametrically opposed to that of Capt. Mills. They both say that he was not at the wheel at all when the Flying By left the lock, and only returned, thereto when the boat was about 300' feet from the Empire. The launch operator said that only the port motor of the Flying By was running, and that the captain’s absence was due to his going down into the motor compartment. Both witnesses agree with Mills that the Flying By was proceeding on the starboard side of the channel for some time after leaving the lock. They say that upon his resuming the wheel she swerved sharply from this course and crossed the channel to’pass the Empire on the port side. Neither eye nor ear witness heard any whistle from the Flying By.

It is the court’s opinion that the story told by Capt. Mills represents what he now believes happened rather than anything that actually transpired. In saying this, the court does not wish to be understood as accusing the witness of conscious falsehood. If that were the court’s belief, grand jury action would have to be in order. _In this vale of tears it is impossible to eradicate the numbing influence of self-interest. Combine that with our ordinary feeble powers of observation (see Munsterberg, “On the Witness Stand”), and it results in a story which coincides with the witness’ interest rather than with his actual observation. He tells what he would like to have had happen rather than the actual occurrence.

The court realizes that the two witnesses for the respondent, the dredge superintendent and the launch operator, may also be said to have an interest averse to accurate recollection. The latter’s motive for such blindness to the truth would seem to be rather faint, he being no longer in the service of the respondent, Dunbar & Sullivan Dredging Company. We are therefore going to attempt the touchstone of inherent probability. Such a test leaves no doubt in the court’s mind.

The undisputed fact was that there were 65 feet of- clear channel between the dredge’s scow and the starboard or south banks of the Raritan river. The undisputed fact was also that Capt. Mills knew that the depth of the river in this channel was from 9 to 11 feet, and that the depth of the river outside of this channel was from 3 to 4 feet, barely more than the draft of the Flying By. The captain explains his choice of a course by the statement that the “shape of the river had presented his seeing the open water to the starboard of the Empire.” This, of course, would be so only if there was a pronounced bend or rather bulge in the river at the point where the dredge was anchored. It is not necessary to- figure elaborately any angles of incidence in order to refute this assertion. One-glance at the map (Exhibit 4, libelant’s) indicates plainly such -a gradual curve that no-angle of vision would shrink the proportion of open water.

The motive assigned for Capt. Mills’ surrendering the helm to his fair passenger was engine trouble.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The New York
175 U.S. 187 (Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 884, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-flying-by-njd-1933.