The S. C. Schenk

158 F. 54, 85 C.C.A. 384, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1907
DocketNo. 1,681
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 158 F. 54 (The S. C. Schenk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The S. C. Schenk, 158 F. 54, 85 C.C.A. 384, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973 (6th Cir. 1907).

Opinion

EURTON, Circuit Judge.

This is a libel against the tug Schenk by the owners of the barge Mary N. Bourke, which was cast away upon the beach of Lake Superior near Marquette, whereby great damage was sustained by the vessel and her cargo. In substance, the libel charges, that the wreck of the Bourke was due to the negligence of the tug while towing her into the harbor of Marquette. The facts necessary to be stated are these: The steamer Schoolcraft bound down Lake Superior, having in tow the barges Nester and Bourke, in the order named, was driven by stress of weather to seek refuge from a gale in the harbor of Marquette. When about one-half mile northeast of the southerly end of the breakwater, she sounded four blasts for a tug. She also slacked her speed, and undertook to shorten 'her tow lines to better control her tów in rounding the southerly end of the [56]*56breakwater, a measure necessary to get into the harbor. In doing this the Bourke and Nester collided, the Bourke sustaining some damage about her starboard bow, whereby she lost her green light and had her starboard anchor so jammed that it was rendered temporarily useless. To add to her distress, the tow post on the Nester, to which was attached the Bourke’s tow line, gave way, and she was cast adrift within a half mile of the shore, with a gale of 75 miles per hour blowing her directly upon the beach and without any power of her own. About the time of this misadventure the steamer again blew for a tug. This was about 1 o’clock a. m. of the morning of April 26, 1902. The tug Schenk was a powerful harbor tug engaged in the business of assisting vessels into and out of Marquette harbor. Upon the night in question she was lying moored to an old ore dock well inside the harbor, with a low head of steam. She was notified by telephone from the life-saving station that there was a steamer with a tow off the harbor, and at once began to get up steam to go out. At or about the entrance to the harbor she passed the Schoolcraft, with the Nester in tow, coming into the harbor. Thinking that her help was needed by the Nester, and not hearing the orders from the deck of the Schoolcraft, she passed clear by the steamer and went to the Nester. Advised that her help was not needed, as the Nester had come around in the wake of her steamer and was entering the harbor, she went back to the Schoolcraft, then well up in the harbor. The master of the tug was then told from the deck of the steamer that her stern barge had broken adrift out in the lake, and requested that the tug go out to her assistance. This she did. The night was dark. There was snow, sleet, and rain. The green light of the Bourke having been lost in the collision with the Nester, there was great difficulty in finding her, as her red light was not visible. Neither did the Bourke use rockets or a torch to show her position. She had a high deck load of lumber, which helped to hide her cabin lights, and no masthead lights were burning. Finally the tug caught a glimpse of a cabin light, and ran in close enough to hail. Finding that the barge’s long 1,200-foot tow line was dragging to windward, and realizing the danger of catching it in her propeller, she went around the stern of the Bourke, and came up to leeward, between her and the beach. A line was caught from the barge, and a tow line drawn aboard, which was made fast to her tow posts. The Bourke was then lying in the trough of the sea headed to the wind. The tug pulled her around, and was making for the harbor entrance, when the line slipped off the tow posts and the Bourke was again adrift. The tug drew 13 feet of water, and, on account of the shallowness of the water, deemed it dangerous again to go between the Bourke and the beach to get another line, even if time would permit, and returned to the harbor. Within a very few moments the Bourke ran on the beach; the men from the Schenk saying that they heard her strike while waiting to see if it was possible to again' attempt her rescue before running for the harbor.

Two grounds have been urged for the condemnation of the Schenk: First, that the slipping of the line from the tow posts was due to a want of care and the proper degree of skill in fastening the line re.-[57]*57quired under the circumstances; and, second, that it was wrongful negligence to abandon the Bourke after the slipping of the line without another attempt to get a line from her. The libel avers that the officers and crew of the tug “were careless and negligent and unskillful in that they did not place the tow line of the Bourke around or under the cleat or cavarel which crossed from one tow post of said tug to the other, and that by reason thereof said tow line slipped off the tow post and left the barge adrift.” To support this they say that a tow line so fastened will not slip, and rely upon the fact of slipping to make a prima facie case against proper fastening. The libelant has also introduced certain admissions made by the master of the tug which tend to support this presumption — an admission made shortly after the event and upon the same night, and later repeated in evidence before the board of inspectors, that his linemen were inexperienced, and that the slipping of the Bourke’s tow line had been due to this fact. That a tow line properly secured will not slip off of the tow posts is a reasonable presumption, and evidence of damages resulting from the slipping of the tow line, unexplained, makes a prima facie case of negligence. The Quickstep, 9 Wall. 665, 19 L. Ed. 767; Cincinnati, etc., Ry. Co. v. South Fork Coal Co., 139 Fed. 528, 71 C. C. A. 316, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 533; The Olympia, 61 Fed. 120, 9 C. C. A. 393; Memphis Electric Co. v. Letson, 135 Fed. 969, 68 C. C. A. 453; The Sweepstakes, Fed. Cases, No. 13,687; The Lyndhurst (D. C.) 129 Fed. 843; Burr v. Knickerbocker Steam Towage Co., 132 Fed. 248, 65 C. C. A. 554.

This prima facie case of negligence the defendants endeavor to meet, first, by the positive testimony of the master and the two linesmen on the Schenk, that the line was fastened in the manner alleged in the libel to be the safe and proper mode; second, by evidence of very unusual conditions The master of the Schenk says that he was standing with his two linesmen on the aft side of the tow posts, between the two posts. “We passed the line between the two tow posts, one turn and a half around the port tow post. I fetched the loose end of the line on the outside of the port tow post. We then ran the line under the cavil on the port side, and turned it right back on the port side of the port tow post, and finished winding it around that tow post with a right-hand turn; the first ttirn and a half being put on with a left-hand turn. After this was done, which is the usual way, and about all that is ever done in doing towing, harbor work, we still further, for the sake of absolute safety, took a heaving line that way lying on deck and was very nearly new, and stopped the end of the tow line.” He adds, however, that he only started the operation of “stopping” the end of the tow line and gave direction to the linemen how to secure it with the heaving line, when his attention was called forward. Cater, one of the linemen, a man who had had an experience of four or five years as a seaman, testified to the same mode of fastening and both Capt. Benson, the master, and Cater, as experts, as to the mode being that usually used on tugs. It is plain that if Cater and Benson were green hands that any fault due to them, or either of them, was not as to the method, but in some want of skill or care in making the fastening in the mode used. Now, there is no [58]

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Bluebook (online)
158 F. 54, 85 C.C.A. 384, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-s-c-schenk-ca6-1907.