The Ticeline

270 F. 983, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1514
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 270 F. 983 (The Ticeline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Ticeline, 270 F. 983, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1514 (E.D.N.Y. 1921).

Opinion

CI1ATFIELD, District Judge.

On the 4th of February, 1920, with the wind coming from the northeast, but with a northwesterly storm threatened, of which notice had been given by the Weather Bureau for a whole day previous, with snowy conditions prevailing, and the night setting in with a temperature slightly below freezing, with the snow turning to rain and falling in the form of sleet, the wind increased and forced from her moorings the derrick lighter Junior, at the gas com[984]*984pany dock, just southwest of the opening to the Navy Yard on the Brooklyn side of the East River. The barge Captain Sullivan, which had previously been lying outside of the Junior, was removed by her captain before the storm to a berth behind a projection of the dock. The Junior was under charter (with her captain) from the McNeill lighterage Company to the National Read Company, and had been, in turn, chartered by the McNeill Lighterage Company from her owner, L. Boyer’s Sons Company. Each of these charters was in the 'usual form of oral charter; the terms being to pay ■ for the service, to return the boat in good condition, ordinary wear and tear excepted, and to meet unusual expenses connected with the service of the boat, while the wages of the master and the use of the equipment going with the boat were furnished by the owner.

It appears that as the wind became stronger during the night, and as the tide began to run out in the neighborhood of 3 o’clock, the Junior broke from her moorings, apparently at one end, and was fofced against the bulkhead in such a manner as to do considerable damage over a stretch more than the length of the boat. Then, all of her lines having broken, she started down the river, striking first a Tice Line tug which had been lying at the Gold Street pier while the master was telephoning the owner. The pilot in charge of the tug had his attention attracted by feeling the shock, and immediately saw the Junior moving away from the Ticeline and subsequently coming in contact with a carfloat at the next pier to the west. Within a short time thereafter, the captain having returned to the boat, the Ticeline started down the river in the darkness and storm, which by that time had turned to snow, after the Junior, which it overtook several hundred feet below the Brooklyn Bridge. The Ticeline ran up under the stern of the Junior, succeeded in getting a line aboard, and maneuvered her in to Pier 7, Brooklyn, where she remained long enough to satisfy the captain that the Junior was able to stay afloat, and that substantial help in the way of pumping would be needed to remove some feet of water which was already in her hold.

Shortly afterwards he telephoned his own office, and communication was sent to the National Lead Company, and by various messages information was also given to the McNeill Lighterage Company, whereupon the Atlantic, of the National Lead Company, and the Amelia, of L. Boyer’s Sons Company, the owner of the Junior, proceeded to the Junior, and each undertook, as best it could, what appeared to be necessary. The Atlantic evidently reached the neighborhood of the Junior before the Amelia did; but, expecting at that time that the cargo might be dumped and the boat capsized, as the water was then over the port rail amidships and the boat was down at one corner, the Atlantic did not attempt to put a pump into the Junior until after the Amelia had come up on the other side and had put her pump into the boat. Subsequently both boats, with the same purpose in mind, but each ignoring the fact that the other was present, shoved the stern of the Junior across the slip, where she could rest more easily against the opposite pier. The Atlantic, meantime, had put her own pump into the Junior, and undoubtedly owing to the greater capacity of the pump was able to remove [985]*985more water than the Amelia. They succeeded in pumping out the boat to the point where the pumps sucked by 12 o’clock, and then the Atlantic left, leaving the Amelia standing by and pumping as occasion required, until the middle of the afternoon. Subsequently the Atlantic came back and looked the situation over, and the McNeill, of the Mc-Neill Towing Company, also arrived and remained for a day and a half, seeing that the boat was kept afloat and pumping as needed.

Not only was there damage to the deck cargo, which consisted of $34,-000 worth of oil cake, from water which rose over the deck, but some of the load appears to have been thrown overboard at some time during the voyage, and some damage was sustained by the rails of the Junior. It also appears that the Ticeline suffered the loss of a flagpole "and a small break in its rail, at the time the Junior came into collision.

Under these circumstances the first -claim is that of the Ticeline for salvage. It is stipulated that the value of the Junior, as damaged, was in the neighborhood of $5,500, and that the damage which she suffered had subtracted some $7,500 or more from her original value. It also appears that a substantial leak was discovered under water in the stern of the Junior, with respect to which temporary repairs were made at different times during the day, when the four tugs were standing by and pumping the boat out. The captain of the Atlantic testified that he had a conversation with the captain of the Junior, and some of the other witnesses have testified that the captain of the Junior was on board of the boat, although the captain of the McNeill has identified the man who was on board as another employe of the Boyer Company, and has testified that it was not the captain of the Junior. ■

Be that as it may, the captain of the Atlantic testified that the captain of the Junior told him that he was on his vessel at the Gas House dock and had jumped ashore in order to save his life. It further appears from the testimony that the captain of the Junior was located the following morning, both at the dock entrance of the Brooklyn Union Gas Company and in the neighborhood of the Captain Sullivan, where he had some communication with the gatekeeper and with the master of the Captain Sullivan, sufficient to indicate that he had been away and apparently did not know that his boat had gone adrift.

Whether it should be inferred, in the absence of any testimony from the captain of the Junior, that he left his vessel when she first began to pound the dock or break her lines, and remained away until morning, or whether he had left earlier the night before, there is nothing in the testimony to indicate that the captain of the Junior could have done anything tp prevent the disaster or to rescue his boat any more expeditiously than was done by the salvors in the case, unless it should be held that it was his duty on the day previous to move his boat to another berth, or that it was his duty to stay on board constantly, and to be on watch, so as to summon assistance if danger was threatened.

It appears that the berth at the Gas Company dock was assigned by the National Lead Company. The McNeill Lighterage Company is evidently a copartnership, which obtained work from the National Lead Company, and which, in this case, made an independent contract to charter the Junior, and is thus by contract obligated to return the boat [986]*986and to look to the subcontractor for reimbursement, if unable to fulfill its contract.

We must therefore immediately pass on to the question of primar)'1 obligation on the part of the National Lead Company, both for the damages sustained and for fulfilling the obligation of the McNeill Lighter-age Company, if the fault be placed for the accident upon the National Lead Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 F. 983, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ticeline-nyed-1921.