The Propeller Commerce

66 U.S. 574, 17 L. Ed. 107, 1 Black 574, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 10, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 574 (The Propeller Commerce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Propeller Commerce, 66 U.S. 574, 17 L. Ed. 107, 1 Black 574, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 514 (1862).

Opinion

*575 Mr. Justice CLIFFORD.

This was a libel in admiralty in a cause of collision, civil and maritime, and the case comes before the court on appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the southern district of New York.

Recurring to the transcript, it will be seen that the libel was in rem, against the steam propeller “Commerce,” and that the suit was instituted by the appellees, as the owners of the lake boat Isabella; but the record shows, that after the process was issued, and the vessel was taken into custody, the appellants, on motion, had leave to appear, and having waived publication of notice and entered into stipulation, with sureties, both for costs and value, the vessel was discharged by consent, the stipulators agreeing, that in case of default or contumacy of the claimants, execution might issue for the amount of the stipulation against"'their goods, chattels, and lands. Nó change, however, was made in the form of the libel, and the whole proceedings in the suit were as in rem against the vessid. Reference will only be made to such portions of the pleadings as seem'to be indispensable to a full understanding of the several questions presented for decision. Among other things, the libellants alleged, that the Isabella left the port of New York on thp nineteenth day of August, 1852, for the port of Albany, fully laden with merchandise; that she, with certain other boats' and barges, was in tow of the steam-tug Indiana during the voyage, and at the time the collision occurred; that the steam-tug was well manned, tackled, apparelled, and furnished, and in all respects competent for the business in which she was engaged; and that the craft composing the tow had on board the proper complement of officers and men for their protection and management. Two of the barges were attached to the steam-tug, one ou the larboard and the other on the starboard side; and to show that there was no fault in the arrangement of the tow, they alleged that the Isabella was securely attached to the larboard side of another barge, and that both were towed astern of the steam-tug, at the usual and proper distance, by means of a hawser; and, in respect to the immediate circumstances of the colli *576 sio'n, they alleged that the Isabella, in the evening, of the following day, while ascending the river, in tow of the steam-tug as afores¿id, and when about ten or eleven miles below the port of her destination, -was met by-the propeller, coming down the river, and bound on a voyage from the port of Albany to the port of Philadelphia; and they aver, that at the time of such meeting, the steam-tug, with all the boats and barges .in tow of her, was on the eastern side of the channel, and in the usual- and proper place for such craft when so ascending the river; but that the propeller, after she had passed the steam-tug in perfect safety, suddenly and improperly sheered to the eastward, and, through the negligence of those ' in charge of her, ran against the larboard bow of the Isabella, stove the bow from the stem, broke all the lines by which she was attached to the barge, and so damaged her that, in a few . minutes, she sunk in the river, with all her cargo on board. As alleged in the libel, her cargo consisted of groceries and other merchandise, together with a steam-engine; and the libellants alleged, that the whole amount of the loss, including the damage to the cargo, was seventeen thousand dollars. When the libel was •filed, the propeller was in the port of New York, and, as the libellants alleged, within the jurisdiction of the District Court. .Accordingly, they prayed process, in due form of law, as in cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, and it was issued and duly, served upon the vessel. On the other hand, the claimants denied the allegation that the steam-tug was well manned and equipped, or that the boats and barges in tow of her had a full complement of officers and men for their protection and management, or that the tow was properly made up, and especially that the .Isabella was at no greater distance astern of the steam-tug than was usual and proper. They admitted, however,’ that the propeller passed the steam-tug in safety, and met-the Isabella at the time alleged, but denied that the steam-tug, or the boats an d barges in tow of her, were on the eastern side of the channel, of in a proper place' for' such craft when ascending the river.

Their theory was, that the lower barge, with the boat of the libellants attached, was on the western side of the channel, *577 and they accordingly alleged that the tow was out of the usual and proper place; and they’ expressly denied that the propeller, after passing the steam-tug, sheered at all, or so moved towards the eastern side of the channel as to cause the collision. Witnesses were examinéd on both sides in the District Court, and, after a full hearing, a decree was entered dismissing the libel, and the libellants appealed to the Circuit Court. Additional testimony was taken on the appeal, and the Circuit Court reversed the decree of the District Court, and entered a decree in favor of the libellants. Whereupon the claimants appealed to this court, and now seek to reverse the last named decree.

Jt appears from the evidence that the steam-tug, when she started from New Work, had seven boats and barges in tow, but.the number, although she left one at Kingston, was increased to ten in the early part of the trip. On arriving 11 Athens, the master, as he. had been accustomed to do, rearanged the-tow, in order to make it narrower for thefresidue of the voyage. Briefly stated, the arrangement was as fo .1-lows: Two of the craft were lashed, as before, to the sides < f the steam-tug; but they had two others at their stern, whic b were connected, with them by lines put out from the stem of the boat in the rear, and attached to the stern of the boat ahead. Four of the residue, arranged abreast and lashed together, were connected with the steam-tug by a hawser about two hundred feet long, and the barge to which the boat of the libellants was attached was some three or four hundred feet astern of the whole, and was also connected with the steam-tug by a hawser. With the tow arranged in the manner described, the steam-tug proceeded slowly up the river, and-passed Mull island in perfect safety. Shortly after passing the island, the master of the steam-tug, who was standing in the wheel-house, discovered two stéamers coming down the river, and as they were not far distant, he went aft to see to the tow. They proved to be .the propeller and the steamer Oregon, and the former, in a few minutes, parsed the steam-tug some fifty or a hundred feet to the westward — so far to the west, that a schooner under mainsail and foresail, and with her main *578 boom out, was between the propeller and the steam-tug at the time the former passed the latter. Seeing the schooner coming ’ up, the Oregon stopped until' the schooner passed out of the way, but the propeller proceeded on her course, without any . abatement of her speed, and after passing the steam-tug, and .the four boats arranged abreast, sheered to the eastward, and struck the stem of the libellants’ boat, and, as the witnesses state, drove it into the cabin, and parted all' the lines which attached the boat to the barge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 574, 17 L. Ed. 107, 1 Black 574, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-propeller-commerce-scotus-1862.