The Monticello

15 F. 474, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 6, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F. 474 (The Monticello) 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 Monticello, 15 F. 474, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The libel in this case was filed to recover damages to the British steamer Jenny Otto from a collision with the ferry-boat Montioello a little outside of the Hamilton ferry slip, in the Bast river, on the Brooklyn side, on the sixteenth of January, 1879.

The- Jenny Otto was an iron steamer 275 feet long, and about 941 tons measurement. She left her dock at Columbia stores, at the foot of Atlantic avenue, Brooklyn, at 2:40 p. m., about half an hour before high water. She was proceeding out to sea, intending to go by way of Buttermilk channel. About 300 feet out from the wharf at the Columbia stores there is a sand-spit or shoal in the East river, which extends to the south-westward, and which it is unsafe for vessels such as the Jenny Otto, drawing 20 feet, to attempt to pass. The shoal recedes from the Brooklyn shore to the southward, so that in the vi[475]*475cinity of Hamilton ferry it is from 500 to 600 feet outside of the slip. About 140 feet above the upper pier of the ferry slip is a pier termed the shed pier, which extends about 40 feet further out into the stream than the piers above or below, and is covered by an elevator and a shed 22 feet high, extending to within 13 feet of its outer end.

The witnesses on the part of the Jenny Otto testify that upon leaving the Columbia stores she proceeded down the stream at least 250 feet off the end of the piers, as near as it was safe to go to the sandbar, at the rate of not over three knots; that she had got to the Union stores, about 300 feet above the Hamilton ferry slip, when, seeing a bark coming tip the Buttermilk channel, her engines wore stopped; that a few seconds afterwards the Montieello was seen coming out of the slip, when the steamer starboarded her helm so as to go astern of the ferry-boat, but struck her abaft the wheel, whereby two holes were stove in the steamer’s port bow, which detained her six days for repairs.

On the part of the steamer it is claimed that she was in full view from the pilot-house of the ferry-boat before the latter left the slip; that the ferry-boat had no proper lookout; and that the collision was solely the result of her negligence.

On the part of the ferry-boat several witnesses testify that the steamer came close to the wharves and passed the shed pier not more than 25 or 50 feet distant therefrom; and the respondent contends that the collision is, therefore, due solely to the faulty navigation of the steamer in going so close to the shore, and also in giving no whistle signaling her approach. For the steamer it is alleged that whistles were sounded.

One piece of testimony, the correctness of which I see no reason to doubt, serves to fix pretty accurately the place of collision and its distance outside of the ferry slip nearly in accordance with the other testimony for the respondents; and this goes far to resolve the other doubts in the case arising from the usual conflict of testimony. Tho Baltic, companion boat of the Montieello, had crossed from the Now York side, and was waiting about 100 feet outside of the lower end of the slip for the Montieello to come out. The pilot, in crossing, had observed the Jenny Otto coming down the stream, and says that as he lay waiting the Jenny Otto appeared to be designing to pass astern of his boat. As the Montieello came out, the Baltic proceeded ahead to enter the slip, and when about half way in the slip the force of the collision, the pilot says, carried the stem of the Monticello down the stream, so that she struck about 10 feet of the stern of [476]*476the Baltic. None of the three boats were stopped in their course, and the Jenny Otto passed down between the sterns of the two ferry-boats. The latter were each 174 feet long; and as the Baltic was half way inside of the lower slip when struck by the stern of the Monticello, it follows-that the stern óf the Monticello was about 77 feet outside of the end of the lower pier of the slip and her stem about 250 feet outside of it, and that the stem of the Jenny Otto, when she struck the steamer, could not have been more than 130 or 140 feet outside of the lower pier, and that, consequently, to reach this position she must have' passed within about 50 feet of the end of the shed pier, as an inspection of the map will show.

From this determination of the place of collision and the course of the Jenny Otto within 50 feet of the end of the shed pier next above the ferry slip, she must necessarily be held in fault, because she had no right to be navigating in that part of the stream so close to the wharves. The state statute which requires steamers to proceed in the middle of the stream, the local rules, and repeated decisions of the courts, all unite in condemning navigation so near to the slips as dangerous and unjustifiable. Th<j matter has been so repeatedly discussed, and the obligation of steamers to keep away from the ends of wharves and ferry-slips so forcibly stated, that it is wholly unnecessary to repeat it here. The Ferry-boat Relief, Olc. 104, 108-9; The Favorita, 18 Wall. 598, 601-2; 8 Blatchf. 539, 541; 1 Ben. 30, 39.

In this case there is no excuse or palliation for the Jenny Otto’s proceeding so near the wharves. She drew less than 21 feet, the tide was high, and she could have proceeded with.perfect safety at least 400 feet further out in the stream at that point. Had she been half that distance further out the collision would have been avoided. On this ground alone, therefore, she would ■■ be held chargeable with fault. She is also chargeable with fault because she did not “stop and reverse,” under rule 21, § 4233, Bev. St., when it was clearly “necessary” to avoid the collision. Her pilot testified that he saw the ferry-boat coming from the time she left her slip; that his engines were already stopped; and that he did not reverse because he considered it unsafe to do so, from the peculiarities of the steamer’s propeller. This excuse cannot possibly be accepted. There was plenty of room for the propeller to have reversed and checked her speed to some extent. She backed out of her position on starting from the Columbia, stores in a channel-way of one-third the width* and her log shows her engines repeatedly reversed. A slight checking of her speed, sufficient to have allowed the ferry-boat five or six sec[477]*477onds more time, would have avoided the collision. There was no difficulty in reversal at low speed; and for her fault in not doing so, as required by rule 21, the steamer is chargeable. If it were true that the propeller could not safely reverse at all, then her fault in proceeding along near the wharves becomes only the more gross; for, if under that disability, she should have taken the principal channel on the New York side of the sand-pit, as other vessels often do on leaving the same stores, and as she might have done, instead of proceeding down the narrower passage on the Brooklyn side.

As respects the Monticello, I think the proofs show conclusively that the approach of the Jenny Otto could have been seen from the bow of the Monticello before she started from her slip, and also by the pilot in the pilot-house, 36 feet back from the bows, in ample season to have avoided the collision, had any proper lookout or watch been maintained.

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Related

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78 F. 819 (S.D. New York, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 474, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-monticello-nysd-1883.