The New York Marine No. 10

25 F. Supp. 847, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 14, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 F. Supp. 847 (The New York Marine No. 10) 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 New York Marine No. 10, 25 F. Supp. 847, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511 (S.D.N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

These are separate limitation proceedings (1) by Lighterage Holdings, Inc., owner and debtor in possession, and Canal Operating Co., Inc., charterer, of the tug New York Marine No. 10, and (2) by William M. Murphy, owner of the tug C. F. Coughlin.

The proceedings grow out of a collision in the Erie Canal, near Tonawanda, N. Y., on Sept. 11, 1937, between the barge Raymond Tucker, the head barge in tow of the Marine No. 10, and the barge M. M. Pease, the head barge in tow of the C. F. Coughlin. As a result of the collision the barges Raymond Tucker and M. M. Pease were injured; also, the barge William Weight-man, the third barge in the Coughlin tow, sank, and a cargo of sulphur on board was damaged.

In the limitation proceeding relating to the Marine No. 10 various answers were interposed contesting the right of the petitioners to limit, but the only one of these answers pressed at the trial was by the owner of the barges William Weightman, Gertrude Weightman, and Matton No. 1, three of the four barges in the Coughlin tow, opposing the petition of Canal Operating Co., Inc. The right of Lighterage Holdings, Inc., to limit its liability was conceded.

In the proceeding with respect to the tug C. F. Coughlin, only one answer was filed contesting limitation. The right to limit was, however, conceded by this answering claimant at the trial.

The collision occurred on Sept. 11, 1937, at 5:30 A. M. Daylight Time. It was then dark and slightly overcast, but the visibility was good. The current in the canal was easterly, with a velocity variously estimated at from % of a mile to 1% miles an hour.

The tug C. F. Coughlin was bound west from Troy to Buffalo, in tow of four barges, the M. M. Pease, Matton No. 1, William Weightman and Gertrude Weight-man. The barges were loaded with sulphur, and arranged tandem, close together, in the order named, with two hawsers of about 100 feet each, leading from the head boat to the stern of the tug. They were all similar in construction, had a draft of about 10 feet, and were about 108 feet long and 22 feet wide. The wheeling was done from the Matton No. 1, the second barge in the tow.

The Marine No. 10 left Tonawanda, N. Y., at 4:15 A. M. Daylight Time, on the day of the collision, bound east for Albany. She had in tow tandem three barges, namely, the Raymond Tucker, Thomas Tucker and Mary O’Connor, made up in that order. The two head barges were harbor boxes, 116 to 120 feet long and 30 or 32 feet wide; the last barge was a Small canal boat. The were all loaded to a depth of 8% to 9 feet. The wheeling was done from the Thomas Tucker, the second boat in the tow. There was a conflict in the testimony with respect to the hawsers, some of the witnesses saying that they were 90 to 100 feet in length, while others insisted that' they were 150 to 180 feet long.

There is a bend in the canal just west of Buoy No. 339.2; for a vessel proceeding west this bend is to the left, and for a vessel proceeding east, to the right. The-bend occurs a short distance west of the westerly end of the State Park, which is, located on the southerly side of the canal. Each tug sounded the usual bend signal approaching the bend. The Coughlin was then at the easterly end of the State Park and about in midstream. A little later, the [849]*849reflection of the lights of the Marine No. 10 were seen in the bend. The engines of the Coughlin were thereupon slowed, and the tug. blew for sides. This signal was immediately answered by the Marine No. 10, whereupon the Coughlin eased over to the northerly bank and again checked her speed.

The testimony was overwhelming that at the time of the collision the entire Coughlin tow was close to the northerly bank in the straightaway stretch east of the bend. The tug itself was east of Buoy No. 339.2 and making little if any headway; the barges were directly in line behind; and the distance of the barges off from the northerly bank was variously estimated at from 20 to 25 feet. The only witness who testified at all to the contrary was Desnoyers, the mate of the Marine No. 10, who said that his tug was 40 feet west of Buoy No. 339.3 at the time of the collision; yet Desnoyers' admitted on cross-examination that the Coughlin was then slowed down well over on her own side of the channel, and that he could find no fault with her. Meehan, captain of the Raymond Tucker, the head barge in the Marine No. 10 tow, said that the collision took place on the straightaway and not in the bend. Similar testimony was given by Gooley, captain of the Mary O’Connor, the last barge in the Marine No. 10 tow.

The Marine No. 10 had been running at full speed before the bend signal was given, but when it was given the engines were slowed. There were various estimates of the speed from there on, ranging from 2 to 4 miles an hour over the ground. The Coughlin was first sighted when the sides whistles were exchanged. The Marine No. 10 was then entering the bend. Soon afterwards, the helm was changed to make the swing around the bend, and the barges were carried by the current on a wide sweep into the northerly portion of tlie canal. What subsequently transpired can better be told in the language of Meehan, the captain of the Raymond Tucker, who was at the wheel of the Thomas Tucker at the time of the collision. He testified as follows:

“Well, we were coming around the bend when Marine No. 10 got about opposite the , Coughlin. We slowed down and then when I slowed down the hawser slacked up and she made kind of a sheer to the north bank; my boat, the Raymond Tucker; and then I steered the wheel and tried to get her over to starboard and I couldn’t get her over fast enough. She was too far over going around that turn.”

Gooley, the captain of the Mary O’Con-nor, corroborated this testimony. He said that the tow was kinked at the bend, and that the wheelsman “could not get out of it”. He further testified that the tow was through the bend when the collision took place.

The Marine No. 10 passed the Coughlin with a clearance of 25 or 30 feet, and Desnoyers, the mate of the Marine No. 10, admitted that this “ought to be enough for any man”. The Raymond Tucker came in on an angle, and, after brushing along the port hawser of the Coughlin, struck the port bow of the M. M. Pease, overlapping her bow about 6 or 7 feet. The damage to the Raymond Tucker was on the port corner and one-third of the way across the bow, also on the starboard side of the stern, indicating that the tow of the Marine No. 10 was kinked slightly to starboard.

I think the Marine No. 10 was solely at fault for the collision. The Coughlin tow held back at the bend to allow the Marine No. 10 tow to pass; there was admittedly sufficient room in the straightaway for such a passing; and the great weight of the testimony points unmistakably to the conclusion that the Raymond Tucker, after making the bend, sheared directly into the M. M. Pease. There are two explanations of this sheer; one, as testified to by Meehan, that the Marine No. 10 slowed down just before the collision, causing an unexpected slacking of the hawsers; and the other, as testified to by Costello, that there was no deckhand on the tug tending the hawsers as the tow proceeded around the bend. But whatever the cause of the sheer, I am satisfied that the fault of the Marine No. 10 has been clearly shown!

It remains to consider, whether Canal Operating Co., Inc., charterer of the Marine No. 10, is entitled to limitation of liability.

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Related

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293 F. Supp. 172 (S.D. New York, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Supp. 847, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-new-york-marine-no-10-nysd-1938.