The Frederick H.

4 F. Supp. 593, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 1, 1933
DocketNo. 13447
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 593 (The Frederick H.) 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 Frederick H., 4 F. Supp. 593, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280 (E.D.N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This suit is brought by the libelant, the owner of the schooner Frederick H, against the steam tug Catawissa and the barge Mt. Airy, for damages alleged to have been caused by collision.

I find the facts as follows:

At all the times hereinafter mentioned, the libelant was the owner of the three-masted schooner Frederick H, which was a vessel of 466 tons’ gross and 396 tons’ net register, or thereabout, with its home port at Parrsboro, Nova Scotia.

At all the times hereinafter mentioned, the tug Catawissa was an American vessel engaged in the coastwise towing service, with registered dimensions of 558 tons’ gross, 352 tons’ net, length 158 feet, beam 29 feet, depth 18 feet, with Philadelphia as its home port.

At all the times hereinafter mentioned, the barge Mt. Airy was an American vessel, engaged in coastwise commercial service.

The steam tug Catawissa and barge Mt. Airy were, during the pendency of process hereunder, within the port of New York and within the jurisdiction of this court.

On January 8,1932, at about 10:30 o’clock a. m., the schooner Frederick H, loaded with a cargo of piling, left Gloucester, Mass., bound for New York.

In the afternoon of that day, the wind became very light and variable, and by midnight died out altogether. During the night and until after the happening of the collision hereinafter mentioned, the wind continued out of the north, a little to the west, to be too light to continually maintain steerage-way on the schooner, and there were flurries of snow.

The weather being unfavorable, and as it looked like heavy winds and storm at 4 o’clock p. m. on January 8, 1932, the Frederick H, then being about 14 miles from Gloucester, started back to make Gloucester harbor again.

About 5:30 o’clock a. m. on January 9, 1932, the tug Catawissa, with the barges Hutchinson, Mt. Airy, Pickering, and Ontelaunee in tow in the order named, left the Gloucester Anchorage bound for New York. After getting under way, the hawsers were let go so that the first barge was on two hawsers of about 200 fathoms each from the tug, and the succeeding barges were on hawsers of about 200 fathoms each from the barge ahead, and the tug proceeded at full speed. At the time the tug got under way at Gloucester, the wind was light from the northwest and the weather clear. At approximately 6 o’clock a. m. on January 9, 1932, just as the day was breaking and the schooner Frederick H was little more than drifting, with her regulation lights burning and with an efficient lookout forward, the lookout reported and those on board observed off to port the green light and masthead lights of an approaching vessel, which later proved to be the tug Catawissa [595]*595with four barges in tow. The lights appeared to be over a mile away.

The tug and tow appeared to be coming directly toward the schooner and continued to approach, without apparent change of course until a collision seemed imminent, when the tug sounded for the barges in its tow the warning signal, followed by a two-blast signal to starboard helm, indicating a change of course to port, and the tug and barges directed their course to port; the tug crossing the schooner’s bow very close to her and continued on its way, drawing its tow across the bow of the schooner. As the Catawissa was crossing the bow of the Frederick H, the mate of the Frederick H ordered the man at the wheel to roll his wheel down hard and ordered the outer jib to be let go.

The first barge, the Hutchinson, which was loaded, passed clear, but the second barge, the Mt. Airy, which was light, at about 6 :15 o’clock a. m., came into collision with the bow of the schooner Frederick H, carrying away and damaging its bow sprit, jibboom, and head gear, and slightly damaging the Mt. Airy.

The tug Catawissa was showing the regulation lights, as were the barges in her tow. The chief mate of the Catawissa was at the wheel until he sounded the warning signal and the two-blast signal, after which the master took charge. A man was stationed forward on the Catawissa as a lookout, but did not report the Frederick H, which was first observed by the mate and was not observed by the lookout until the mate had given the said whistle signals.

The Catawissa did not maintain an efficient lookout.

The Frederick H and the Catawissa were on crossing courses, and the Catawissa had the Frederick H on the tug’s starboard hand.

The Frederick H was not an overtaking vessel.

The Frederick H was not being overtaken by the Catawissa.

The Frederick H was a sailing vessel on the wind on the port tack close-hauled, without even auxiliary power, and the Catawissa was a steam tug.

The Hutchinson, being loaded, could not go to port as quickly as the Mt. Airy, which was light, and, to prevent the Mt. Airy from getting around the Hutchinson, the Mt. Airy after going to port was obliged to ease up to starboard, and thus was brought closer to the Frederick.H before the collision.

After the collision was called to the attention of the Catawissa, she immediately stopped her headway, and, after hauling in her hawser, proceeded back to the Mt. Airy to find out if she was damaged, and then returned the barges in her. tow to Gloucester Harbor. After returning her tow to Gloucester Harbor, the Catawissa went out to find and assist the Frederick H, and towed her to an anchorage in Gloucester Harbor alongside the Hutchinson.

The tug Catawissa crossed the bow of the Frederick H, and the testimony of those on the Catawissa was that the vessel which after-wards proved to be the Frederick H was first observed by those on the Catawissa at 6:15 o’clock a. m. abaft the beam. The lookout maintained on the Catawissa was an inefficient one and the cause of the collision.

Each of the barges in tow of the Catawissa was steered by those on board, but the Mt. Airy controlled in large part by the action of the Catawissa and by the loaded scow Hutchinson next ahead, and without getting around the Hutchinson, due to turning faster, could not have avoided contacting with the Frederick H, and, even if it could, then such navigation would have been improper.

There is a sharp conflict as to visibility at the time of the collision and whether it was snowing, but it seems to me that the failure of those on the Catawissa to observe the Frederick H was not due to poor visibility, but to the failure of the Catawissa to maintain an efficient lookout. The snow, if any there was at the time of the accident, cannot have interfered with the navigation of the Catawissa, as she was able to see the boats of her tow and had been going at full speed.

On the facts as found, the Catawissa is solely at fault.

The tug was proceeding at full speed, and the mate of the tug could see the lights of his tow, but neither the man posted as lookout nor the mate saw the Frederick H until after the Catawissa had crossed the bows of the Frederick H. This is sufficient to establish the ineompeteney of the lookout and gross negligence. The Gate City (D. C.) 90 F. 314.

While in no sense excusing the tug, the fact that both the mate and the lookout had been on duty for six and one-quarter hours, in cold, raw weather, and were about to go' to breakfast at the time of the collision, may furnish an explanation of their failure to observe the Frederick H.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 593, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-frederick-h-nyed-1933.