The Steamer New Philadelphia

66 U.S. 62, 17 L. Ed. 84, 1 Black 62, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 453
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 62 (The Steamer New Philadelphia) 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 Steamer New Philadelphia, 66 U.S. 62, 17 L. Ed. 84, 1 Black 62, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 453 (1862).

Opinion

Mr.' Justice WAYNE.

This is an appeal in. admiralty from the Circuit Court of the United States for the southern district of New York.

It has been argued with minuteness and ability by the proctors of the parties, as well in respect to the allegations of the libel and answer, as to the incidents of its trials in the Circuit and District Courts. The case has had our best consideration.

The libel sets forth that Patrick Brady was.the owner of the barge Owen Gorman, and that, on the 12th April, 1856, she left Richmond, in Pennsylvania, for Brooklyn, New York, under the- command of Patrick Campbell, with a cargo of 2Ó7 10-25 tons of coal;'that, on the 17th April; the barge and eleven other barges were towed from the Delaware and Raritan canal, at New Brunswick,' by the steamer New Philadelphia; into the waters of the Hudson or North river. There she landed one of the barges, at the foot of Washington street, Néw York, and another of them at the foot of Hámmersly street; and. then entered the East river, with several of her fleet, steering and heading for the Atlantic dock, in Brooklyn, where she was to land another of the barges. That in doing so, the steamer ran across the tide, then running a strong ebb, and steered close to the dock, in such a manner that the Owen Gorman wás swung and driven with great violence against the schooner (or sloop) Financier. That persons on board of the latter,, seeing the steamer swinging in, and that she would be struck by one of her barges, threw out a wooden fender, to ward off the impending collision, which, having been forced from their hands, was forced and crushed into the Owen Gorman on her starboard'side, just forward of midships, cut *67 ting in her planks, and making a hole, through which she was filled with water, and sunk, with her cargo.

It is alleged that the collision was caused by the negligence and want of care or skill of the master and crew of the steamer, and not from any fault of those persons who were on board of the Gorman. It is also alleged that, immediately after the sinking of the Gorman, the owners of the steamer were informed of it, and that a protest, in due form, had been served upon them.

The libellant then states the loss from the collision; that he had, at the request of the agent of the owners of the steamer, employed William J. Babcock, a wrecker, to raise her, the latter haying done, upon different occasions/work of that kind for the company. That Babcock contracted to raise and put her afloat for $450 — it being then expressly understood, between the agent and the libellant, that, if the hole which had caused the sinking of the barge should be found where the latter expected and said it was, the company were to be responsible for all damages done to the barge, and for the losses sustained from her having been sunk by the collision.

Babcock raised the barge sufficiently to have her taken to Red Hook Point, and there beached her upon the flats, so that the tide rose and fell in her,'when it was ascertained that the hole was in the starboard side of the barge, a little forward of. midships. Babcock then proceeded, without the knowledge of the libellant, to discharge the coal from the barge, had the same stored in the coal yard of the consignees of it, and then gave notice to the libellant that he had advertised the barge and the coal for sale, to pay his wrecker’s lien upon them, which he claimed to have, in virtue of the wrecker’s act of the State of New York.'

The barge and coal were sold, the first being bought by Henry J. Yroom,'for three hundred and fifty dollars; the coal was purchased by the consignees of it, at three dollars per ton. The sale was without the consent of the libellant, and when he was absent from New York. When he heard of the sale he came to New York, to protect his interest, and intending to pay Babcock for raising the barge, as the owners of the *68 steamer had refused to do so. It was finally arranged, by his paying to Babcock $450, the sum which had been agreed upon; the further sum .of $299 96 for unloading, carting, storing, and shovelling the coal; and the further sum of $236 12 to the consignees for the deterioration of it, which had been estimated by two referees, each party having chosen one of them.

The libellant then sets out, that the barge was so injured from the force and violence of the collision, and the pressure of the steamboat, and inner barge, to which she was lashed when it occurred, that it became necessary to take her to the dry dock for repairs. That it was at á time when the barge’s services were particularly valuable to- him, and that, from her having been sunk, fie had sustained damages for her repairs, Tor the loss of all her fixtures, and for the loss of time, and for the expenses of her master and crew, exceeding two thousand dollars, which the consignees of the New Philadelphia had refused to pay.

The allegations in the libel are direct, positive, leaving nothing to implication, and not exaggerated, either by inapt circumstances ■ or- col orin g.

We will now place-in juxtaposition with it the answer. Those pleadings will disclose the issues between the parties, and enable us to apply the evidence to them successively, or in the order of their aifirmation.

The claimants admit that they, are and were the owners of the New Philadelphia, when the barge Owen Q-orman and ten other boats,.were taken by her to be towed from Brunswick, New Jersey, to be left at New'York and Brooklyn, at different designated points in both; that they were ignorant then, as they are still, who were the owners of the Qorman, or of the number of tons of coal then on board, of her. They deny that she was then a tight, strong, and staunch'vessel, and charge that she was unfit for the transportation of her load for the passage she was to make. It is then averred, upon-information and belief, that the landing of the steamer at the Atlantic dock, in Brooklyn, where the injury to the barge, as is described to have happened, was in this manner:

That the-steamer, after having left six barges at their places *69 on the North river, proceeded from it into the East river with the other barges in tow, to leave them at their places of destination; that the Gorman was in the first tier of boats on the outside, on the starboard side of the steamer as she approached the Atlantic dock “from, westwardly,” and headed up the East river, when the tide was about the first of the ebb; that one of the barges on the steamer’s larboard was destined for that dock,’ and in the act of leaving her there; that the steamer came to with her fleet with her starboard side nearest the dock, and alongside of a sloop lying at the dock, which was a fit and suitable place to leave her, and that the steamer and her fleet were brought to alongside of the sloop with great care and gentleness. It is admitted that a fender had been put out by some person onboard of the sloop to fend off the barge; but whether the fender had been forced and crushed into her they were ignorant, and deny. It is admitted that the barge sunk at the Washington pier, to which she had been towed by the steamer, within an hour after the collision had occurred at the Atlantic dock.

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Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 62, 17 L. Ed. 84, 1 Black 62, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-steamer-new-philadelphia-scotus-1862.