40 F. 839 | S.D.N.Y. | 1889
The above libels -were filed by the owners of two scows, to recover for their being wrecked through the alleged negligence of the respondent while they, were let out to him and in his employ. The respondent had undertaken to remove the wooden building used as a lifesaving station on Far Rockaway beach, to a point about two and a half miles to the eastward, by the use of scows, on which the building was to be placed and transported. The libelants’ boats were hired for this purpose in the early part of March, 1889. At the time of the agreement it was stated that it was designed to transport the building through an inside passage; but liberty -was reserved to go outside, in the open sea, if the weather were calm and the sea smooth. The two scows were accordingly sent to Far Rockaway beach by the libelants, and there delivered to the respondent. They were taken a few hundred yards up Rockaway inlet, near to the station building, and the building was moved, and put upon the two scows, and got in readiness for transportation by the afternoon of the 14th. It had been previously ascertained that the inside passage to the eastward had become so obstructed as to make it unwise to attempt that course. The respondent had previously engaged the small tug-boat Kapella to take the scows with the building-in tow by a hawser. The afternoon of the 14th was mild, the wind light, and the sea smooth; but the wind was to the north-eastward, and there were signs of a storm to be expected before long. After the tow should get out of the inlet, which was only a few hundred yards in length, one or two hours would be a sufficient time to take the tow to Debbs’ inlet, near its destination. The respondent’s agent in charge of the work, and the officers of the life-saving station, thought it advisable to make the trip that afternoon, at high water, which was from 4 to 5 o’clock; and the tug was accordingly sent for to come from Debbs’ inlet, where it had been stationed. It arrived a little before 5 p. m., and proceeded to pull the tow by a hawser out of Rockaway inlet. Before starting Capt. Jaycox vigorous!}' protested against starting at that time, oh account of the signs of a coming storm, declaring that he would take no responsibility for the result. The general opinion of tlio other persons present being different, the respondent’s agent required him to proceed. When two-thirds out of the inlet, after rounding one of the sharp curves of the channel, in crossing the outer bar, outside of the line of
The respondent was not an insurer, nor a guarantor of the safety of the scows. In letting them out for this service, the libelants took the risk of all sea perils, and of all other dangers naturally incident to that service, except in so far as they might he brought about by the negligence and want of proper care and skill of the respondent or his agent, having reference to the nature of the enterprise. For such negligence, or want of due care, the respondent would be answerable; and the question here is whether the loss is fairly attributable to such negligence, or to other causes for which the respondent is not answerable. The immediate cause of thte loss was the storm. The next anterior cause was the grounding of the tug, in coming out of Rockaway inlet, in consequence of which the scows', with their burden, could not be taken to a place of safety. Had the tug not grounded, there being, as I think from the weight of evidence, plenty of water in Debbs’ inlet, the trip might have been safely made before the storm came on, and before dark, provided that the tug had sufficient power to tow the scows up Debbs’ inlet against the ebb-tide after reaching it. Although a doubt is suggested on this point by Capt. Jaycox, there is no very satisfactory evidence on the subject. If the tug had not sufficient power to pull the tow up against the ebb, she would be obliged to wait outside in the open sea till the next flood-tide. That would involve such an unjustifiable exposure of the tow as to make the respondent answerable for the result; because all agree that, before starting to leave Rockaway inlet, there were signs of an approaching north-east storm, and the tow was only fit for a calm sea.
Assuming, however, that the entrance to Debbs’ inlet might have been safely effected before dark, but for the grounding of the tug before she got out of Rockaway inlet, the grounding of the tug becomes the causa cavsans of the loss; and the question is whether this is or is not attributable to the negligence of the employes. On this point there is considerable testimony,' but it fails to show satisfactorily why the tug should have run aground if properly handled. In fair weather and a calm sea, and in a buoyed channel, stranding presumably occurs only through lack of care of some kind. The burden of proof is upon the defendant to excuse it by showing that it did not arise through any lack of care, skill, or diligence in
I am not satisfied with this explanation, as evincing due care and skill in navigation, when the other circumstances are taken into account. The place of grounding, as marked upon diagram B, by two of the respondents’ witnesses, is shown to be, not at the sharpest turn nor at the “elbow, ” as might be inferred from other parts of Hults’ testimony, but at a point considerably beyond that turn, and beyond the first buoy below it, and after both had been safely passed, and the tug had got headed to the westward. If the cause assigned were the true one, its operation would have been perceived at the previous turn, which was not the case. The wheel, moreover, was not at the time in the hands of a person either proper or competent for the purpose; it was managed by Hults, who was wholly unacquainted with the handling of tugs, and with the Ka-pella, and had never tried to steer her until that day. Capt. Jaycox says he gave the helm to Hults because Hults was supposed to know the channel. Hults says Jaycox asked him to take the helm for a few minutes, while he went into the engine-room; that he did so, and that Jay-cox was not in the pilot-house when the tug grounded. Others say that Jaycox was there at the time. The fact remains that the helm was in the hands of a man unacquainted with the handling and management of the tug, at a time and place that specially required all such skill and care as could be expected from the master alone. It was Jaycox’s duty to keep the helm; to receive such information about the channel-way as Hults could give him; and to proceed Avith such caution that even touching the ground Avith the stem should not pin him fast. Hults says the ■tug was going very slo\Arly, — slower than a slow walk; but Capt. Abrams, who was on the tug, estimates the speed at three knots, with Avhich her fast grounding better agrees. If that was the speed, it Avas a very incautious rate. The fact that after a feAV moments the tug could not be backed off, and that only “a couple of seconds” before grounding the tug was going right, as Hults says, seems to show not only that the tug was going too fast, but that the porting of the wheel was so short a time before grounding as to give it no time to operate. If the strain of the hawser was such as to prevent the tug from duly minding her helm upon any necessary change of heading, it Avas but the work of a moment to ease that strain, and to enable the tug to obey her helm. If Jaycox had been at the helm, as he ought to have been, I do not think the tug would have grounded.
If, hoAvever, there Avas no fault in the handling of the tug, and if the grounding Avere regarded as unavoidable, under the complicated circumstances of the case, as the respondent claims it Avas, still all these com
The defense that one of the scows was weak, and unable to withstand the stranding, so as to rise with the rising tide, and bo thereby carried up on the beach without much injury, cannot be sustained. A stouter boat might, perhaps, have escaped in that way. Rut these scows were both open to examination before they were hired, and were seen by the respondent’s agent. They were not let for the purpose of going safely through a process of stranding on the beach in a north-east storm, with a house upon them, nor was there any implied warranty of their suffi-cioncv for such a trial. There is nothing to indicate that they were not sound enough and- strong enough to transport the station-house through any water and sea that the respondent expected them to encounter, or to which ho had any right to expose them. They wore seaworthy for such purposes, and this is the extent of the libelants’ implied warranty. The condition of the scows is, of course, a material one on the question of damages. The libelants are entitled to decrees in both cases, with costs.