The Mary

123 F. 609, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 240
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedJune 10, 1903
DocketNo. 1,002
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 F. 609 (The Mary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Mary, 123 F. 609, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 240 (S.D. Ala. 1903).

Opinion

TOULMIN, District Judge.

This is a suit by the owner of a raft of pine logs to recover damages for running over and breaking up a raft by the steamboat Mary in navigating the Mobile river. The facts, as shown by the evidence, are substantially as follows: In August, 1902, the libelant had a raft of logs being floated from McIntosh Bluff, 65 miles from the city of Mobile, to said city. When near the Louisville & Nashville Railroad drawbridge, over Mobile river, the raft became unmanageable by reason of a sudden adverse wind (as testified to by the men navigating the raft), got athwart the river, and floated down broadside against the bridge; one end of the raft lodging on one bank of the river, and the other end on some driftwood near the other bank, thus completely blocking the channel and preventing the passage of vessels through the draw of the bridge. The raft had been in this position for several hours when the Mary came down the river, on her way to the city of Mobile, with a large number of passengers, a cargo aboard, and a barge in tow. In the meantime the men in charge of the raft had made some effort to get it adrift and away from the bridge, and called to their assistance a nearby tug, which fastened a line to one end of the raft and made a short and ineffectual effort to remove it. The tug then left the raft and went on its way. As the Mary approached near the raft, her master called to the men on it, saying something to them about the raft being in his way. They made no reply to him. They testified that they did not hear the call. The Mary approached the raft, touched it with her prow once or twice, and backed off a short distance, then came ahead again, and ran over it, and through the open draw span of the bridge, breaking the raft, and scattering many of the logs, some of which were subsequently rescued. The men on the raft were near its end, and not near that part of it struck by the Mary. The master of the Mary testified that, when he first came up to the raft, he thought he would “hitch onto it and pull it out of the way”; but when he called to the men on it, and received no answer, and seeing no effort being made by them to get the raft out of the way, he “got mad,” and determined to run over it and go through the bridge. The raft was estimated to be about 800 feet long, 75 feet wide at its widest part, and to contain about 1,400 logs. It was what was described and known by the mill and raft men (a number of whom testified in the case) as a “V raft.” It was constructed by placing 6 or 7 logs at each end of the raft, and fastening them together' with wooden binders and pins, which binders extended to the boom logs on the outside of the 6 or 7 logs mentioned, and were made fast to them. To these boom logs other boom logs were fastened at their ends, by lapping and securely pinning or tying [611]*611them together, and so on extending from the head to the rear of the raft. Inclosed in these boom logs were loose logs, put in fore and aft. There were several ropes fastened at different places across the raft to the boom logs on the outside. The raft widened from each end to the center. On each end was a “sweep,” in the nature of an oar, which was used for steering and managing the raft in its navigation. It was shown that rafts of this construction were rigid —not liable to spread or bulge. There were only two men on the raft, which was shown to have been an unusually large one in these waters; but it was also shown that it was constructed in the customary manner of rafts floated down the rivers to the Mobile market, and that in the then stage of the water, and under ordinary conditions, two men were sufficient to navigate and manage such a raft. There was also evidence of the construction and character of what is known as a “sack raft.” Some of the witnesses, called to testify on the subject, knew nothing about sack rafts in this section of the country. They stated that such rafts were not generally used or known here. Witnesses who formerly lived in some of the Northern or Western states of the Union testified that sack rafts were well known there. They testified to the description of such rafts, as they knew them, and pointed out material differences between them and rafts like the one involved in this case. They described sack rafts as being round, or nearly so, in shape, the outside or boom logs fastened together at their ends with chains or ropes in a loose manner, with • considerable slack. Inclosed in these boom logs are loose logs, put in without regard to position or order, with no binders of any sort, no propelling or steering power, and no arrangement or facilities for carrying men on them. They are usually towed by a steam vessel. When the tow line is made fast, and the towboat begins to pull on it, the raft becomes more or less elongated, and takes somewhat the shape of a sack or bag. If left to float with the current, they drift with a rotary motion—as described by the witness, “go around and around,” with no definite or direct course, and are dangerous to navigation.

The contention on the part of the libelant is (i) that its conduct in permitting the river to become obstructed at the bridge by its raft was not negligent or otherwise wrongful, but was accidental, and that it was a temporary, and not an unreasonable, obstruction, and was not a nuisance; and (2) if it was a nuisance, and the Mary had the right to abate or remove it in order to effect a passage through the bridge, yet in exercising that right it was her duty to use ordinary care to do no unnecessary injury to the raft, and that running upon the raft and breaking it up was intentional and unnecessary. The contention of the claimant is that libelant’s raft was an unlawful one, being what is known as a sack raft, and that it was navigated in such a manner as to obstruct navigation; that the libelant, in obstructing or impeding the Mary’s passage through the drawbridge, became a wrongdoer, and created a nuisance, which the Mary had the right to remove; and that in exercising that right it resorted to such means only as were necessary and available. The claimant also objected to the evidence as to Avhat was known as a “sack raft,” and of a description of it, and con[612]*612tended that the court took judicial notice or knowledge of what a sack raft was.

“Navigable streams are as much dedicated to the use of rafts as to the use of other vessels. Rafts are included in the general term ‘vessels.’ If the privilege of use be abused, the persons so abusing the use are liable civilly for any damages they may occasion.” The Marthison (D. C.) 58 Fed. 765; 19 Am. & Eng. Encyc. (2d Ed.) 524; 21 Am. & Eng. Encyc. (2d Ed.) 439. The occasional grounding of a vessel or raft is incidental to navigation, and, if it is driven into a position where it obstructs the channel, other navigators are bound to submit to a reasonable delay, in order that the owner may remove it, before attempting to destroy it as a nuisance. But the owner of the vessel or raft so obstructing the channel must exercise all proper skill and reasonable diligence and dispatch to remove the obstruction and cause as little inconvenience as possible to others. Gould on Waters, §§ 29, 128. It does not appear from the evidence that the raft grounded and came in contact with the railroad bridge, and thereby obstructed the channel, from any fault of the libelant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 F. 609, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-mary-alsd-1903.