The Sea Breeze

21 F. Cas. 897, 2 Hask. 510
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJuly 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. Cas. 897 (The Sea Breeze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Sea Breeze, 21 F. Cas. 897, 2 Hask. 510 (D. Me. 1881).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This schooner was sunk in the Saco river, whilst in tow of the j tug, by reason of striking against the government pier on the evening of April 10th; and this libel is prosecuted for the recovery of the value of the schooner. The accident occurred about eight o’clock; the tide was nearly full with about a foot freshet; the evening was clear, the moon shining. It is not claimed by either party that the accident was inevitable; and it is manifest that one or both parties were in fault. The schooner is 142 tons burden, was loaded with coal, consigned to York Manufacturing Company, to be delivered at Island wharf, Saco. She arrived April 9th, at Wood Island, and came to anchor there about a mile distant from the bar at the mouth of the Saco river. The tug that evening attempted to take her over the j bar, but did not succeed, and the schooner j was taken to her anchorage. The next even- I ing, about six, the tug returned, and her mas- | ter, having measured, reported the schooner ¡ was drawing eleven feet and four inches; he ! again took her in tow and proceeded toward j the bar. The master of the schooner says i she in fact then drew but eleven feet two I inches; but this discrepancy is not very mate- , rial. The schooner was fastened to the tug j by a hawser or tow line of about thirty fath- i oms, and the captain of the tug informed the \ master of the schooner that, after they were over the bar, he would set a light on the flag staff of the tug for the schooner to steer by, which was done. Having crossed the bar without difficulty, they proceeded up river at the rate of about four knots per hour. The distance from the mouth of the river to Saco is seven or eight miles. The river is very circuitous and variable, sometimes quite narrow and then again, in a short distance, it doubles its width. The channel also varies very much, being sometimes on the Saco shore, and in a short distance, crossing to the Biddeford side. The main channel ordinarily is from 150 to 200 feet wide, and has at high tide a depth , | j I of twenty-five feet or more. The pier on which the schooner struck is on the Saco side, about a mile below that village, and was built by the government upon a point of rocks which projected into the river. The pier is made of logs, is about ten or twelve feet in, width at the end, and extends into the river sixty-five or seventy feet from the shore. From the end of the pier to the Biddeford shore is a little more than 400 feet Just above the pier, the river makes a quick turn to the eastward, widening to the extent of 700 feet. Nearly in the middle of the river, above the pier, is a spit which projects down river in the direction of the pier; but at the time of the accident, there was a depth of at least twelve feet of water in all directions for a distance of more than 200 feet from the pier, and there was no part of the spit over which the tug at the time could not have passed without difficulty. This pier had fallen into decay, was covered by water, with the exception of a small part of its shore end; which; as one of the witnesses described it, appeared at that time like a raft of logs. The master of the tug had, for many years, been sailing upon the river, and was well acquainted with it; none of those on board the schooner had ever before been on the Saco. Shortly after passing the stone wharf, which is on the Biddeford side down river about 1,000 feet distant from the pier, the channel makes a sharp turn across the river, close to the pier, and so continues its course up river, well into the eastern bend, setting over toward the Saco shore, between the spit and river bank. On this occasion, the tug and schooner were near to the stone wharf, and the tug then undertook to cross in the channel over by the pier. The master says he slowed down to two and one-half miles per hour after he had completed his turn from the stone wharf, and he steadied his wheel, and, as he looked behind from his wheel house, he saw the schooner, instead of following the tug, first swing to port, and soon after, on looking from the side window, he found she was swinging fast to starboard; that at this time he had passed the end of the pier, at a distance of fifty-seven feet; that, finding the schooner did not follow the tug. he cried out to those on board the schooner to starboard; but the order was not obeyed, and the schooner struck almost immediately against the pier; that he did nothing to prevent her striking, after he found the schooner was in danger, as it would have been of no avail. It is claimed that, under these circumstances, the tug was in fault in various particulars, for which she should be held chargeable for the damages.

1. It is said that the tug was too close into the pier; that knowing the pier was there submerged, and its dangerous proximity, it was the duty of the tug to have passed the pier at a greater distance, and by not so doing her master is chargeable with negligence. The master of the tug says that ordinarily he [899]*899passed about thirty feet distant from the pier, but that on this occasion he was fifty-seven feet off; and there is testimony from experts that it was customary to pass within thirty feet of the pier. It is merely matter of opinion, of the master of the tug, how far off he was when he passed the pier; he is an owner of a portion of the tug, and personally accountable for his neglect, is deeply interested in this controversy, and his judgment, therefore, must be received with great allowance, under the circumstances. He is contradicted by the master of the schooner, who says that the schooner followed the tug, which passed in safety, but could not have been 'fifty-seven feet off, for, if she had been, the schooner, although somewhat wider than the tug, would have gone thirty or forty feet outside of the pier. The result shows, I think, that the master is in error as to how far he passed from the pier, and that, in all probability, he was .not more than some twenty feet off, instead of fifty-seven, as he would have us believe. There was no occasion for the tug to pass even within fifty-seven feet of the pier; as it drew but seven or eight feet of water, it could have gone up into the upper end of the spit, if necessary, in making the turn, and could certainly have found no difficulty in giving the pier a berth of one hundred fifty feet, instead of fifty-seven, if the master had chosen so to do, • as the channel was at least twelve feet deep for over two hundred feet from the pier. The tug, therefore, was under no necessity of taking a course so near the pier as to expose the schooner to danger. It could with equal safety have gone much farther off, and thereby ensured a safe course for the tug; it not having done so, was guilty of negligence and want of care, and must, therefore, be held chargeable for the damages. resulting therefrom; having chosen a path of peril and danger when one. of safety was at hand, it must abide the consequences. It is said that, in the opinion of experts, it was safe to run within twenty or thirty feet of the pier, and that this had beén usual and customary. The answer to this suggestion is, that these parties may have reason to congratulate themselves on their good fortune in so passing without injury; but the result affords no justification for attempting a dangerous cotuse, when a safe one is equally convenient.

2.In another respect, I hold the tug was in great fault. The master of the tug admits that some short' time prior to the accident, about one-fourth of a minute as he says, he perceived that the schooner was setting over towards the pier, and gave orders to her, to starboard.

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21 F. Cas. 897, 2 Hask. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-sea-breeze-med-1881.