The M. M. Caleb

17 F. Cas. 549, 10 Blatchf. 467, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1674
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York
DecidedFebruary 25, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 549 (The M. M. Caleb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The M. M. Caleb, 17 F. Cas. 549, 10 Blatchf. 467, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1674 (circtedny 1873).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

The libel herein alleges aD undertaking by the master of the steamtug- M. M. Caleb, on the -22d of November, 1870, to safely tow and pilot the schooner Baltimore, (belonging to the libel-lants, and then at anchor in the harbor of New York) through Hell Gate to Riker’s Island; that the service was begun, and the tug, with the schooner on her port side and another on her starboard, had reached a place known as “Negro Point,” when it was discovered that the Baltimore was ashore on the rocks; that, after some time, she was got off, and the tug proceeded on, and had reached a point about off the sunken marsh, on Ward’s Island, when it was discovered that the Baltimore was ashore on the rocks at that point; that the master of the tug immediately threw off the lashings, saying that the tug was itself aground, and he could render no assistance; that the Baltimore settled upon the rocks, and was so broken-and damaged that she became a total wreck; that she still lies there, sunken, and her fragments will not produce the sum of five hundred dollars; that, at the time the libellants’ vessel was controlled by, and under the management of, the said tug and those navigating her; that the master of the tug. instead of safely towing and piloting the said vessel, as he undertook to do, so negligently and carelessly behaved, in the premises, ac to cause said damages; and that the said damages are, in no way, the fault of, nor were they caused by, the li-bellants, or their agents, but- “were solely the fault of, and caused by, the negligent acts [550]*550of those navigating the said tug M.- M. Caleb.” The libel also states, that the Baltimore had on board a cargo of coal, received at Philadelphia, tobe transported to Boston, for an agreed ■freight, amounting to six hundred and eighteen &0/100 dollars; that the Baltimore was of the value of six thousand five hundred dollars; and that the damages are the sum of six thousand dollars, for the vessel, besides the loss of the said freight, amounting to six thousand six hundred and eighteen 8o/100 dollars, besides interest.

The answer admits that the steamtug agreed to render her services in towing the Baltimore through Hell Gate, and took her in tow for that puipose. It alleges the commencement of a violent wind from the east, when opposite Astoria, which continually increased; that, when opposite Negro Point, the tug was unable to tow the two vessels, with the wind and tide as they then were, and her master requested both of the schooners to anchor; that those on board the starboard vessel did so, but those on the Baltimore neglected to comply with the request; that the anchor of the one schooner would not hold the tow, and they drifted towards the shore, till the Baltimore touched bottom; that the tug then separated from both, took the other vessel to a place of safety, then returned, drew off the Baltimore, and was proceeding with her towards a safe.anchorage, when the rudder chain on the port side of the ■tug parted, and the tug became thereby unmanageable, and both drifted upon the sunken marsh on Randall’s Island; that the disaster was not caused by any careless, negligent, or unseamanlike act or conduct of those on board of the tug, or any of them, or because of any weakness or unseaworthiness in her, or by any means which it was possible for those on board of her to prevent; but, that the same was caused, solely, by the negligent, improper, and unseamanlike conduct of those on board of said schooner Baltimore, in omitting to cast her anchors when requested to do so by those on board the tug, and by inevitable accident

In the district court, the libellants had a •decree for their damages [Case No. 9,681], and it appeared, on an inquiry into the amount, that the libellants sold the wreck, •on the recommendation of the port wardens, after they had made an official survey thereof, and she brought the sum of seven hundred and thirty dollars, at public auction. She was taken off the rocks by the purchasers, her coal was taken out, and she was again sold. The purchasers at this second sale repaired her. The time actually spent in her removal, and in the actual making of repairs, was ascertained to be thirty-one days. The commissioner reported, as damayes, the cost of removing her from the rocks, the cost of making the repairs, (including towage to the place of repair,) the whole amount of ■freight, above stated, and interest on these items, and, also, an allowance for the value of the use of the vessel 'during the thirty-one days actually spent in her removal and repairs, which he denominated demurrage. On exceptions to the allowance of the whole freight, and to the allowance thus called de-murrage, the district court overruled the exceptions. From tht decree thereupon this appeal is taken.

The ground upon which thedecisionproceed-ed in the court below as appears by the opinion of the district Judge, was, that the breaking of the rudder chain of the tug was the cause of the wrecking of the schooner; that the breaking of that chain was owing to a palpable defect in the chain itself, the same being worn, weak, and insufficient; that this was known to- the claimant, when he took the libellants’ ■ schooner in tow; and that it was manifest negligence to attempt to tow the li-bellants! schooner with such.a chain.

In the report of the damages, the commissioner gives a reason-for allowing to the li-bellants the full freight money, as follows: “An to demurrage, I take into account only . the time when the work of raising the vessel, and of making the repairs at Lissenden’s yard, was actually being proceeded with, namely, thirty-one .days. Some additional time would, of necessity,; have been consumed in arranging for this work, if the libellants had undertaken to raise and repair the vessel, and, to offset, I have allowed the entire freight, without any deduction for the time and expense which - would "have been incident to the completion of the voyage.”

The facts upon which the conclusion'of-.the court below" whs based are, I think, clearly established -by the evidence. Even taking the narrative .given in the answer of the claimant herein, the breaking of the'rudder chain was the immediate cause of the' disaster; and it is, also, plain, I think, that 'the wind which the tug encountered was not of such unusual or extraordinary violence, as to excuse her. It was not an exigency which ordinary care and prudence did not require her to be prepared to meet, before she assumed the duty of conducting two other vessels through :a difficult and dangerous passáge such as Hell Gate; and, moreover, there'Is great force in the argument of the libellants, that if the. gale was of so extraordinary a character as to form any excuse to her,-.then it was negligence and improper management in her not to seek shelter and safety before entering that channel, which she might easily have done. I think, also, the proof estab-. lishes that-the chain was worn, weak, and insufficient for the service; and that the master of the tug had such knowledge of its condition as makes him chargeable with .negligence in relying upon it. Besides, it was his duty to know it, when the defect was apparent on inspection, as it is proved it was. The claimant, however, insists, that, as defect in the chain was not specified in the.' libel as a cause of the disaster,- the evidence on that subject should be disregarded. The [551]*551charge of negligence is, in the libel, very general. I think, that, if the libel had been excepted to, for want of proper specifications, such exception would have been sustained, and, had it been made specific without mention of the use of an insufficient rudder chain, the case of MeKinlay v. Morrish, 21 How.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 549, 10 Blatchf. 467, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-m-m-caleb-circtedny-1873.