The Inca

130 F. 36, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 244
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 14, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 F. 36 (The Inca) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Inca, 130 F. 36, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 244 (S.D. Ga. 1904).

Opinion

SPEER, District Judge.

John Swan and others, citizens of the states of New York, Maine, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts, who were owners and proprietors of the bark Justine H. Ingersoll, have brought this libel against the steam tug Inca.

The libelants aver that on the 8th day of February, 1903, the bark, with a cargo of 373,000 feet of pine lumber, was lying at the Hilton-Dodge lumber mills on the Satilla river, in this state, and was ready to start on her voyage, via said river and St. Andrews. Sound, to her destination, the city of New York. The bark was in first-class condition and was properly manned and equipped. The Satilla is a fresh-water stream, and a navigable river at the point where the bark was lying, having an ebb and flow of tide, with a rise of about 6 feet, and with sufficient draft to float such a vessel as the Ingersoll in safety. It empties into the St. Andrews Sound on the coast of Georgia, about 30 miles below the point where the bark lay ready for her voyage. When loaded the Ingersoll drew 17 feet 3 inches aft and 16 feet 6 inches forward, and, whilst the master had been advised by “outsiders” that he had best start on a two-thirds flood, he had no knowledge of the river, its depths, or its channel. It was, therefore, essential for him to employ the assist[37]*37anee of a tug, and to rely on the judgment and direction of the master of the tug, in order to get his vessel out of the river. To obtain this assistance he telegraphed to the agents of the tug that he desired its services to take the bark to sea, and in response to this request the Inca came, and arrived where the Ingersoll was lying at u o’clock in the forenoon. The tug was employed. At the hour of her arrival the tide was still running down, and in the judgment of the master of the tug it was not expedient to take the bark down on that stage of the tide. At i o’clock in the afternoon, the tide having turned about noon* the master of the tug announced to the master, of the bark that he was ready to start, whereupon the master of the bark remonstrated, stating that he had been informed that it was not safe to take a vessel of her draft down the river on a young flood, but that the voyage should be delayed until the tide was two-thirds flood. Whereupon the master of the tug said that his informant was a fool and knew nothing about it, that he himself knew his business, and that it was entirely safe for the bark to be towed down the river at that stage of the tide. The master of the bark, having no personal knowledge of the conditions, and relying upon the assertion of the master of the tug, permitted the bark to be taken in tow, and began the voyage at i o’clock in the afternoon of that date. It is further alleged that, in towing the bark, the tug was about 200 feet ahead; there was a man at the wheel of the bark, steering as nearly as possible in the wake of the tug; and all went well until a point between half a mile and a mile from the place of starting was reached, when the bark, in thus following the tug and being thus drawn by her, was run upon sunken rocks, of which the master and crew of the bark had no knowledge, and of which the master of the tug either knew or ought to have known. The bark struck her bottom near the foot of the mizzenmast, and stuck on the rock. Whereupon the master of the tug, failing in the effort to pull the bark ahead off the rock, let her swing with the tide, and attempted to twist her off, during which process her rudder sprung up. The master of the bark then requested him to bring the tug alongside and pull her off straight, which he refused to do. He continued twisting her three times, until her rudder came up, and the bark, in coming off the rock, tore off her shoe, and was otherwise so injured that she filled in about io minutes and sank. The master of the bark endeavored to get her on the bank of the riverj. so as to avoid sinking in the channel, to this end letting go her port bow anchor and letting her stream anchor go astern, which was al'l he could do. It was alleged that the master of the Inca failed to exercise ordinary and reasonable care, caution, and maritime skill, first in towing the bark at the stage of the tide then existing, then in getting the bark aground, and in the method adopted in getting the bark off of said obstruction. By this negligence and want of skill the bark wa's wrecked and became practically a total loss to the owners. A survey was held upon the bark, after sinking, and, as repairs would have cost $10,000, it was recommended by the board of surveyors that she be sold as she lay, which sale being had, the highest price bid for her tackle, apparel, and furniture was $725, for which sum she was sold. Libelant alleges that he has been endamaged in the sum of $12,200, whereof $10,000 represents the value of the bark, her apparel, tackle* [38]*38and furniture at the time of her destruction, less the sum of $725, for which she was sold, and the sum of $2,500 represents the net freight upon the cargo being transported in the bark at the time she was sunk; and which was also lost, for all of which damages the representatives of the steam tug decline to settle with libelants.

Upon these averments, with suitable prayers, process issued, was served, and an answer was filed by the claimant of the Inca. The claimant is the South Atlantic Towing Company, a corporation of the state of Georgia.

The answer admits that the bark was lying at the spot alleged, and that she was well equipped and manned, but whether staunch or not they neither admit nor deny. They allege that the master of the bark was Christopher Edwards, a negro, and that the bark was an old vessel, about' 27 years old, and was not in condition, as respondent is informed and believes, to be insured; that the place at which she was lying was an exceedingly' dangerous one, because there was a large number of logs lying at the bottom of the river, and with said bark loaded down as deeply as she was, at low tide, her keel rested on these logs, occasioning serious danger of injury thereto and to her hull. The answer states, at the time mentioned in the libel, when she was ready to begin her voyage down the Satilla river, she had been pulled out from her dock and lay out in the stream afloat. It is admitted that the Satilla river was navigable, and had a sufficient depth to float in safety a vessel of the draft of the bark, and says the bark, according to the marks on her stern, drew 17 feet 7 inches aft and 16 feet 10 inches forward. It admits that it was necessary for the bark to employ a steam tug, and under the form of an admission avers that it was necessary for the bark to follow in the wake of the tug, and to' be herself steered properly. The answer further admits that at ix o’clock and 25 minutes the water in the river was still running down, although the tide had been rising since about 11 o’clock, and that it was not expedient, in the judgment of the master of the tug, to take the bark down the river on that stage of the tide. The respondent admits that about 1 o’clock the tug master announced to the master of the bark that he was ready to take her down the river, but denies any remonstrance on the part of the bark’s master, and any such conversation on this subject, as that alleged in the libel. The answer then sets forth that it was high tide at St. Andrews Sound on February 8, 1903, at 9 minutes past 4 o’clock p. m., which would have made it high water at the lower bluff mills, where the bark was lying, at about 5 o’clock p. m. ; that it was low water at the said mills at about 11 a.

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

Related

McWilliams Bros. v. Director General of Railroads
271 F. 931 (Second Circuit, 1921)
The Fearless
199 F. 400 (Ninth Circuit, 1912)
The Marie Palmer
191 F. 79 (S.D. Georgia, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 F. 36, 1904 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-inca-gasd-1904.