United States v. The Columbia

39 F. 617, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 26, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 39 F. 617 (United States v. The Columbia) 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
United States v. The Columbia, 39 F. 617, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159 (E.D.N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Benedict, J.

This is a proceeding on the part of the United States to enforce a lien upon the steam-boat Columbia for carrying passengers in excess of the number allowed by law, on Sunday, July 17,1888. On that day the Columbia made an excursion trip from New York to Rock-away, starting from Twenty-Second street, New York city, stopping ‘at Tenth street, then at pier 6 North river, in New York city, then at Jewell’s wharf Brooklyn, thence proceeding to Rockaway and return. By law she was forbidden to carry a greater number of passengers than 3,000. The charge in the libel is that on the occasion in question she carried 3,677. The law applicable to the case is not in dispute. The steam-boat is conceded to be liable to pay $10.50 for each passenger in excess of 3,000 proved to have been carried by her on this occasion. The only question to be decided is the question of fact whether the proofs show that the passengers on board the steam-boat on the occasion in question numbered more than 3,000.

The evidence in support of the charge consists of the testimony of two passengers who were on board the Columbia on the trip described, and who testily to having counted the passengers as they left the boat upon her arrival at Rockaway. This count of passengers was made under the following circumstances: The two witnesses,—one named William TJ. Ripley, and the other, William M. Rogers,—with their families, constituting a party, were passengers on the boat. The boat, as they describe it, was terribly crowded. In fact she had a greater number of passengers than she had carried before during that season, or has carried since, so her assistant purser says. Induced by the crowded condition of the boat, these two passengers, after the boat had left Jewell’s wharf, arranged between themselves to ascertain the number of passengers on board by counting the passengers when they should leave the boat on her arrival at Rockaway. In pursuance of this agreement, as the passengers passed [618]*618off the boat at Rockaway, Rogers stood on the deck over one gangway, and Ripley stood on the deck over the other of the two gangways by which the passengers left the boat, and each counted the passengers as they passed out on the gangway below him. Ripley swears that on this occasion 1,982 passengers passed out on the gangway beloiy him, and Rogers swears that 1,795 passengers passed out-on the gangway below him. Each testifies that he was able to count the passengers as they passed out, and that of the passengers who passed out of the boat he actually counted the number stated by him. As against this evidence the first position taken in behalf of the boat is that when these witnesses respective^ swear that of the passengers that passed out under them, respectively, they counted the numbers stated, they swear to what was impossible for them to do, and for that reason their testimony should be rejected. But, while it may be conceded to be difficult to make an accurate, count of all the passengers leaving the boat under such circumstances, it must also be conceded that the evidence does not prove it impossible that these witnesses should have counted the number of passengers they state. They are intelligent persons, who have no interest whatever adverse to the steam-boat,' and they declare on oath that there was nothing to prevent their counting the' passengers hy the plan they adopted. Each declares that it was possible to count the passengers as they passed out on the occasion. This count was written down- at the time, and the result was ascertained by them without any knowledge on their part in regard to the number of passengers which the steamer was allowed by law to carry. This positive testimony is not, in my opinion, affected by the testimony of the customhouse inspectors, produced by the owners, who narrate the difficulties they have experienced in counting passengers, one of whom says: “I never have found an excess of passengers on any steamer yet.” But it is said that the count of Rogers is discredited by himself, because when he reported the case to the district attorney he reported 100 less passengers than he counted, having deducted 100, as he now says, to allow for mistakes. But on the stand Rogers gives positive testimony that on the occasion in question he counted 1,795 passengers who passed out on the gangway below him. It is the count, and not the report to the district attorney, which is important here. The appearance of these two witnesses upon the stand, the character of the statements they give, their intelligence and evident freedom from bias, all go to confirm the belief that what they say in regard to the number of passengers counted by them on the occasion in question is true. In the absence of controlling evidence to the contrary, such testimony is all-sufficient to prove that this boat carried upon the day in question passengers in excess of the number allowed by law.

But it is further contended on the part of the defense that the testimony of these two witnesses is overthrown by the proof furnished from the boat of the number of passenger tickets taken in on the trip in question. The proofs show that the boat took passengers at Twenty-Second street, at Tenth street, at pier 6, in New York, and at Jewell’s wharf, in [619]*619Brooklyn. There had been, as appears, a custom-house officer detailed to special duty in the First division of the collector’s office, whose duty it was to prevent overloading of the boat. His instructions, as he narrates them, do not appear to me to bo very efficient to secure an enforcement of the law; for he says: “A portion of my duty was, if I had reason to believe that boats were to be crowded, I was to make a requisition on my deputy collector, who sent that requisition to the surveyor, and he detailed officers to- count the passengers on- the boats that I might name.” But this is not important, for the officer was not present at all on the Sunday in question, because, as he says: “I was taken very sick that morning, and didn’t leave the house.” The boat, therefore, on this occasion took passengers without government supervision. Most passengers surrendered tickets on going- on board. A few—how many does not appear—had no tickets, and paid money to the purser. Some passes were out, and how many came in on passes does not appear. The tickets were taken in at the gangway as the passengers came on board the boat, by the purser and the assistant purser. It was usual to bunch the tickets taken at any landing into packages of 100 during the passage of the boat to the next landing, but .on the trip in question, when the boat arrived at pier 6, only part of the tickets taken at the prior landings had been bunched. While the boatwas at pier 6, Perkins, the general agent of the line, and Hoffmiro, the president of the company owning the boat, boarded her. As they came onto the boat, Perkins thought he saw an unknown man counting the passengers. He instantly called Hoffmire’s attention, and also the superintendent’s attention, to the man, and as soon as the boat left pier 6 proceeded to the purser’s office for the purpose, as he says, of ascertaining how many passengers could be taken at Jewell’s wharf wilhont exceeding the number allowed by law. About 15 minutes were occupied in going from pier 6 to Jewell’s wharf. During that time the purser’s office was visited by Perkins, by Hoffmire, by the assistant purser, and the master of the boat, and by two persons afterwards selected to count the passengers that should come on board at Jewell’s wharf. Perkins says that in the purser’s office he counted 23 bunches of tickets. One bunch contained only 14 tickets.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F. 617, 1889 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-the-columbia-nyed-1889.