The Genevieve

96 F. 859, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 382
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedOctober 13, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 F. 859 (The Genevieve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.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 Genevieve, 96 F. 859, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 382 (N.D.N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

The collision occurred at 3 o’clock a. m., October 17,1897, between the steam propeller Vulcan and the tow of the steam tug Genevieve, opposite Mamajuda Island in the Detroit river. The Vulcan is 260 feet long and 38 feet beam. She was bound up the river with a load of coal and was drawing 16 feet of water. She was properly manned and equipped; she was fitted with all the modern appliances and had the full complement of officers and men. At the time of the collision her master and mate were on the pilot house, the steersman was at the wheel and there was a lookout at the bow. She was proceeding at the rate of about 9⅞- miles an hour. The Genevieve is 55 feet long, 15⅛ feet beam and was, at the time in controversy, drawing 9 feet aft and 5 feet forward. She was towing a flat-bottomed scow 127 feet long and about 30 feet beam. The scow was square-ended with a long overhang at each end. She carried a large derrick forward with a boiler and engine house 16 feet wide, 40 feet long and 10 feet high. In front of the derrick was a frame 35 feet high and 40 feet wide at the base. The scow was drawing about 4 feet of water. She was fastened to the tug by an 80-foot hawser and a bridle. There was a cross timber 47 feet from her bow projecting out beyond the sides of the scow. The night was dark but clear. Lights could be seen a long distance off. There was no wind. Both the Vulcan and the Genevieve displayed the proper lights. There was a lookout on the tug stationed just forward of the pilot house and there was a wheelsman at the wheel. These two men composed the entire deck crew of both tug and tow. No one was on the scow. The tug was proceeding down the river at the rate of about 7⅛ miles an hour. The stem of the Vulcan struck the tow a little forward of midships on the port side at the angle made by the projecting timber. The blow caused damage to both vessels but principally to the scow which was so badly injured that she sank soon afterwards.

The cause for such collisions as this must generally be sought for at a time prior to the few moments immediately preceding the impact. After the vessels are in close proximity either or both, in the stress of sudden danger, may adopt an unwise and imprudent course. The question is, who is to blame for bringing the vessels into a position where cool calculation is impossible?

In arriving at a correct answer to this question the court should take into consideration the probabilities and presumptions based [861]*861upon the skill, knowledge and ability ol! the crews of the respective vessels. Which of the two would be most likely to make a mistake? The Vulcan was engaged in a business which required her to pass up and down the Detroit river many times a year in daylight and at night, tier master and mate were experienced mariners and in the prime of life. They were perfectly familiar with the channel, the lights and the ranges. At the time of the collision both of them were on the pilot house high above the water aud thus able to get a commanding view of approaching vessels and to judge distances with accuracy. In addition to the master and mate was the lookout and steersman. The Genevieve, on the contrary, had but one man on deck and one man in the pilot house. Both were licensed pilots and sailors of long experience, but both were old men, probably over 60 years of age, and neither, of late years, had much experience in the navigation of the Detroit river. They were unfamiliar with some of ihe ranges and some parís of the channel and, being but a few feet above the water on Ihe night in question, had not the same opportunity for extended vision as the crew of the Vulcan. It certainly is a fair statement to assert that the Vulcan was much better manned and less likely to make a mistake in navigation than the Genevieve.

When the fivnt signal was given the vessels were separated by hall' a mile in distance and two minutes in time. The witnesses on the Vulcan agree substantially that the distance was less than half a mile. The two witnesses on the Genevieve are not in accord; one places it at between a quarter and a half a mile; the other at between three-quarters of a mile and a mile. It would be .against the weight of evidence to place the distance at more than a half a mile.

The sailing rule applicable to the situation is rule 24 of the act of February 8, 1895. It is as follows:

“That in all narrow channels where there is a current, and in the rivers Saint Alary, Saint Clair, Detroit, Niagara, and Saint Lawrence, when two steamers are meeting, the descending steamer shall have the right of way, and shall, before the vessels shall have arrived within the distance of one-half mile of each other, give the signal necessary to indicate which side she elects to take.”

Here, then, was a plain duty imposed upon the Genevieve. The vessels had reached the half-mile distance. Before that point was reached the Genevieve was commanded to signal the Vulcan the side she desired to take. The command was disobeyed and the duty wholly neglected. This, in the judgment of the court, was the initial fault to which all the others can be easily traced. This fault was committed deliberately and intentionally. Capt. Pratt, who was in charge of the Genevieve, says he did not blow a signal and did not intend to blow any. He thought the vessels would pass without any communication between them and he expected to take the chances and remain quiet. When the first signal was given he thinks the Vulcan was not much more than a quarter of a mile distant.

It is, of course, idle for the tug to contend after this testimony, that the half-mile point was not reached and that she might have signaled had not the Vulcan anticipated her. The evidence shows that the Vulcan waited till the last moment before indicating the course. [862]*862She did not act in this regard until it was perfectly evident that the Genevieve intended to pass without signal of any kind. The Vulcan saw the Genevieve when the vessels were a long distance apart, the former being still on the Limekiln ranges. When the, Vulcan had turned upon the Grosse Isle range and was coming up on a course a little to the westward of that range her attention was particularly directed to the Genevieve. According to the testimony on behalf of the Vulcan the tug was coming down on a course to the eastward of the course from Grassy Island to Mamajuda Island, showing both lights. After waiting for a signal until it was evident that none would be given the Vulcan blew two blasts and put her wheel to starboard as required by rule 23.

The Vulcan is criticised for starboarding before she received a reply to her signal. The answer is twofold: First, the time was so short that prompt action was imperative, there was no time for experiments; and, second, the Vulcan did precisely what the rule requires — “two blasts to mean, T am directing my course to port.-'” The rule does not say that two blasts shall mean, “I intend to direct my course to port,” or “I will direct my course to port if you agree to it.” What it does say is this, “I am now, at the moment you hear this signal,-swinging to port.”

No fault can be imputed to the Vulcan in giving the signal. Upon her own testimony such a signal was not only proper; it was absolutely necessary. Not to have given it would have been gross negligence.

But even upon the testimony of the two witnesses for the Genevieve the Vulcan was not at fault. It is asserted that if the vessels had kept their courses both remaining silent they would have passed in safety.

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. 859, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-genevieve-nynd-1899.