Ure v. Coffman

60 U.S. 56, 15 L. Ed. 567, 19 How. 56, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 12, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 60 U.S. 56 (Ure v. Coffman) 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
Ure v. Coffman, 60 U.S. 56, 15 L. Ed. 567, 19 How. 56, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 417 (1857).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYHE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the eastern district of Louisiana.

It appears from the record, that the steamer G-ipsey was a packet on the Mississippi river, running from Hew Orleans to . Lobdell’s Store landing, above Bayou Sara, and, as all the other Mississippi steam river packets do, was in the habit of landing -freight and passengers at all the intermediate points and plantations. She was making a trip up the river from New Orleans on the evening of the 21st December, 1853. The bight was rainy and dark;' and after midnight somewhat foggy. It was light enough, though, for the boats navigating the river to run and to distinguish and make .all their landings. All of the witnesses say it was a proper night for running, and npne of the packets, or other boats, laid up on that night on account of the weather.' Alexander Desarpes, a witness for the claimant, says, “he-was the pilot of the Gipsey, and was on watch at the wheel at the time the Gipsey struck the flatboat. That the collision happened above the point at Trudeau’s wood-yard,¡about fifty-six miles above Hew Orleans, between twelve and one o’clock at night, on the 22d December, 1853. ■He says it was a pretty bad night, rainy, dark, and smoky, rather than foggy, with a little fog. There was light enough, however, f0r the boat to distinguish landings, abd she ran and made all of hex’s of freight and passengers as she went up. Her last landing before the collision was one of ^freight, at. J. B. Armant’s plantation, on the right-hand sid¿ of the river descending, about half a mile below; Trudeau’s wood-yard. We then Crossed the river from there, to go to George Mather’s plantation. . At that time the night was dark ana rainy, but the shore could be seen for some distance. There was á light *60 at Trudeau’s wood-yard' on the . bank, which, is pretty high there, at least fifteen feet above the water.; I could see this light a long distance — three, or four, arpents from the shore; there was a point of land just below the wood-yard; I was looking out when the boat was approaching the shore,’ for the purpose of going up that shore to.make a landing; I could see an outline of She shore, or bank, all along, and'distinctly, too'; I did •not discover the flat-boat until we. were right up against her; the flat-boat was lying' close to the bank, and in its shadow, and having1 no light on her I could not see her; she was lying just at the foot of the wood-yard; the light on'the bank was a good distance from the flat-boat, and did not shine upon her. As soon as we saw the flat-boat, we stopped the engine of the Gipsey, and backed. .If there had beén a light-on the flat-boat, I could have seen it at a sufficient distance to have avoided the collision,-but there was no light on her. As the flat-boat was low down in the water, if there had beéhi a light on her,' we ' should haye known, it was something down in the water. I saw nobody on watch’ on the flat-boat at the time of the collision, and heard no. hail from her before'it.”.. The witness further states that he had been a pilot on the river for more ' than’ten years, “running in this lower trade,” and adds, at the time óf and before the collision, the weather was such as boats . are in the -habit of running and making landings, and I, as a •pilot, consider that it,was safe, and proper to run the boat. Mather’s landing,-where the Gipsey was going to land, was about.a quarter of a mile above Trudeau’s wood-yard. Upon . the cross-interrogation of this witness, he does not give an intelligent or certain statement of the collision, or where or how ; the Gipsey struck the flat-boat’;, but says' she Was tied to a po'int, and her stern lay a little out. from the bank;, she laid up and down the river in. the same direction with the current; there are curvings in along the bank; the flat was lying at a point fastened, and:'there are curvings both above and below-that point, which was a mere jutting out of the bank in consequence of curvings above and below it. The direct examination being resumed, this witness says, on a clear starlight night, in such a stage of water as prevailed at the time, of the accident!, we could haye seen a flat-boat at a good distance in timé to prevent an accident. Tf there had been on the flat-boat such a light as is generally carried on deck by a steamboat, or. ,a. schooner, .or on flat-boats when they are running, I could have ■ seen it three or four-arpents off, and-this would have given.'me time .to avoid the collision. . .

.The. evidence of this witness is not in any material particular changed by any other witness examined in the case. It is *61 rather confirmed'; but the captain of the Gipsey, who was also sworn as witness, gives a more certain account of the collision, as to the part of the flat-boat which was struck by the steamer, and by what part of the steamer she was struck. The testimony is conclusive, that the flat being tied to the shore, at what might have bpen considered a proper and safe place, was struck by the steamer with sufficient force to cut a part of her down, and to sink her in a few minutes. There are three points to be noted in the testimony of Desarpes. The first is, that the steamer, being upward bound, had made a landing at Armant’s plantation, about half a mile below Trudeau’s wood-yard, and that her next place for making a landing was a quarter of a mile above that, on the opposite side of the river, at Mather’s plantation, making the distance between the two places about three-quarters of .a mile. ' Secondly, that in his opinion as an experienced pilot, and accustomed to the navigation of the river, there was nothing in the state of the weather to prevent the steamer from being run as usual, and put across the river to make a landing at Mather’s plantation, but that she was-run .so close in’ shore as to be brought into collision with the flatboat, and thereby that the witness admits that the only , cause of it was, that the flat-boat was lying close to the bank,, and so much in its shadow, and not' having a light, he could not see her. His language is, that if thére had been on the flat-boat such a light as is generally carried on deck by a steamboat or a schooner, or on a flat-boat when they are running, he could have seen it far enough off to have avoided the collision. '

Captain lire, then in.comniand of the Gipsey, gives the same account, scarcely with a variance, of the navigation of his vessel from Armant’s plantation until the collision had occurred, but says, with moré positiveness than his pilot spoke, that the forward end of the Gipsey — .some. part of the bow pretty -far1 forward — struck the'flat-boat. His language is, that he “was on the roof of the steamer, in front all the time, when, they bad made their landing at Armant’s, up to the moment of the collision. From Armant’s we ran the bend, of the river on the •same side a short distance, apd then crossed over to make a landing at Mather’s, above Trudeau’s wood-yard. '‘There was a light above the wood-pile, but I saw nothing but. its glare' before the collision, the wood-pile being between the light and my eyes. I cpuld sees the glare some three or five minutes before the .collision took place. "We had almost hit the flat-boat when-1 saw it. I was' looking out and saw the boat, seeing its outline pretty clearly about the, same time that I saw the glare of the light spoken of. It was the shadow of the bank, which is high there, which prevented me from seeing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 U.S. 56, 15 L. Ed. 567, 19 How. 56, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ure-v-coffman-scotus-1857.