The Garden City

19 F. 529, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 31, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 F. 529 (The Garden City) 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 Garden City, 19 F. 529, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31 (S.D.N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for a collision between two ferry-boats—the Republic and the Garden City— about 4:30 o’clock, in the afternoon of August 17,1878, off Catharine street, in the East river. The day was fair, the wind light, the tide three-quarter ebb. The Republic belonged to the Catherine-street ferry, and was proceeding across the river towards Main street, Brooklyn. The Garden City was coming down the river from Hunter’s Point, with the tide, to her slip at James street. At the time of collision the Garden City was heading nearly down the river, but a little [530]*530toward the Brooklyn shore; the Bepublic was going nearly across the river, but heading a little downward. The starboard bow of the Garden City, which was much the larger boat, struck the port bow of the Bepublic, and her guards ran over the deck of the latter, inflicting some injury. The blow was comparatively a light one, as both boats were nearly stopped.

According to the account given by the pilot of the Bepublic, as he was about clearing his slip on the New York shore he was obliged to stop to allow the steam-boat Superior to go up the river just in front of him. As she passed him he saw the ferry-boat Alaska about 600 feet up river, off Market street, coming nearly directly down river, but heading a little to the westward, and estimated to be about 300 feet off the New York shore, and the Garden City, as the pilot estimated, about six or seven lengths—that is, about 900 feet—astern of the Alaska, and nearly in her wake, but about .half a breadth further out in the river. He testified that as the Superior passed him he gave one whistle, intended for both the Alaska and the Garden City, which, the pilot says, was replied to with one whistle by both; that he then went ahead; that the Alaska slowed and stopped, passing astern of him; that the'Garden City, instead of stopping or slowing, sheered out into the river when about five or six lengths off—i. e., about 700 feet—and blew two whistles; that he then stopped his own engines, but did not blow any whistle in reply to this signal of the Garden City; that then the Garden City stopped her engines; that he then started ahead, and blew one whistle simultaneously, being then about a length from the Garden City, and that the latter thereupon started ahead, blowing two whistles; that he then stopped and backed until the collision; that he was obliged to go ahead in order to get out of the way of the Alaska; that there was not room to swing round up river and go between the Alaska and the Garden City; and that the collision was about 300 feet off the New York shore, or at least not more tha.n one-quarter across the river.

The pilot of the Garden City testifies that he was about 100 feet further out in the river than the Alaska, and considerably astern of her; that he heard the signal of one whistle from the Bepublic and the Alaska’s reply of one whistle; that he did not understand that signal to be intended for him, and gave no whistle in answer to it, and that he did not blow one whistle at all; that when about off pier 37 or 38, and some 500 or 600 feet distant from the Bepublic, and five or six seconds after her one whistle, he gave her a signal of two whistles and immediately starboarded his helm, to which the Bepublic made no reply; that four or five seconds afterwards, and after passing about another length, and when off pier 37, he blew two whistles again, and at the same time stopped and backed, and kept backing with his helm to starboard till the collision; that the Bepublic did not, after she had signaled the Alaska, make a stop, as alleged, and then go ahead a certain time with one whistle; that he himself [531]*531did not, as alleged, go ahead after stopping and backing; that the-Republic did not whistle at all after her first whistle to the Alaska; that under his own reversed engine he got seven or eight turns backwards, and would probably have been entirely stopped by another turn; that when he blew his second two whistles and stopped and hacked off pier 37, the Alaska was about half a length out and away from the slip, and about 300 feet from him, and that the Republic was also about 300 feet from him, and nearer the New York shore, heading a little upriver; that the usual course of the Catharine-street ferry-boats at that time of tide was to come out from the slip under a starboard holm and go up the river, swinging within a space of about 300 feet.

The other witnesses called upon each side, though differing in some details, generally corroborate the account given by the respective pilots, as above stated, tlie greater number of experienced nautical men being undoubtedly on the side of the libelants. The pilot of the Alaska states that the Garden City was about 400 feet astern of him when the Republic’s one whistle was given, and about 50 to 75 feet further out in the river; that the Republic passed from 200 to 300 feet ahead of the Alaska; that she could not have swung round so as to go, as the Superior did, between the Alaska and the Garden City; and that the hitter might have avoided the collision by slowing and backing, as the Alaska did.

Without considering more minntely the differences in the accounts, given by the respective parties, nor relying much on the various estimates of distance given, it seems to me clear that the chief responsibility for this collision must rest with the Garden City, and that there are several distinct faults with which she is chargeable.

1. There were no such obstructions as to prevent the application of the ordinary rules for the navigation of the East river. The-Garden City in coming down had the Republic upon her own starboard hand; the latter was seen in sufficient time for the Garden City to avoid her, and, by the statutory rule, the Garden City was therefore bound to keep out of the way, leaving the Republic free to keep her course. The evidence, as it seems to mo, leaves no doubt that had she slowed and backed, as the Alaska ahead of her did, there would have been no difficulty. The two vessels being in the fifth situation, the ordinary course required of the Garden City by the inspectors’ rules was to pass to the right; that is, astern of the Republic. There was no controlling reason compelling her to adopt the exceptional course of going to the left and attempting to cross the bows of the Republic. This departure from the ordinary rule was clearly the primary cause of the collision; and where such departures are not called for by any controlling necessity, and are adopted upon the mere option of the vessel bound to keep out of the way, they ought to be held to be at the peril of the vessel adopting them, un[532]*532less it appears that, notwithstanding such departure, the collision was brought ’ about solely by the fault of the other vessel. The Chesapeake, 5 Blatchf. 411; The St. John, 7 Blatchf. 220. That cannot be held to be the ease here, notwithstanding the fault of the Republic in not answering the signal of two whistles, because I am satisfied that had the Republic kept her course without stopping, as she was entitled to do, whatever be considered her course, whether straight across the river as then headed, or swinging up the river as customary, the collision could not have been avoided, and that the only way of avoiding it, after the Garden City’s two whistles and starboard helm, was by the Republic’s stopping and backing, which the Garden City had no right to impose upon her.

2.

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

Related

The Williamsport
167 F. 184 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1909)
The Mesaba
111 F. 215 (S.D. New York, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. 529, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-garden-city-nysd-1884.