49 F. 389 | S.D.N.Y. | 1892
On the 16th of September, 1891, the libel-ant’s canal-boat Dave & Moso, loaded with 275 tons of coal, moored alongside the platform dock at 155th street and the Ilarlom river, to which she was consigned. Her bow was headed down river and projected 12 feet below the lower end of the dock, and her stem extended about the same distance above the upper end. Between 1 and 2 o’clock during the following night as the tide went down, the forward part of the boat caught on the bottom; and when the men on board were called between 1 and 2 a.m., she had a list to port, and with the help of others could not be shoved off. The bottom being sloping and tho stem of the boat free, she got a twist; and the stern, careening to port, took in water so as gradually to pull her off until she sunk. The bottom was of silt or sand, with no stones. Adjacent to the dock the water at mean low tide varied from 6 feet near the upper end of the dock to 4 feet at and below the lower end, where a drain of the surface water from Seventh avenue brought in considerable quantities of silt and sand. Twenty feet out from the dock the depth of water at mean low tide was from 12 to 17 feet; 30 feet out, from 15 to 20 feet. The canal-boat was 17 feet wide. Similar boats have been accustomed to go to the dock for several years past. Only two cases of injury from grounding are shown by the evidence ; and the proof is not clear whether those damages were at the dock or above. It was not uncommon for boats coming to the dock to catch temporarily, but they were easily shoved off without damage. The depths of water above stated are those ascertained by disk soundings, that is, to the top of the soft silt or sand. Soundings by the rod were about a fool or a foot and a half greater near the dock, and two or throe feet greater further off.
The libelant’s boat had repeatedly been at the same wharf before with similar loads, and met with no difficulty. There is no evidence as to how she was managed on those occasions. The man in charge at this time had never been there before. He knew nothing of the depth of water; made no inquiries on arrival; made no soundings, and gave but small slack to his bow-line, but much slack to his stern-line; and he went to bed without breasting off or making any other provision for the safety of the boat during the night.
Upon the above facts I think both parties were in fault; the city, for not dredging again about the lower end of the dock after a lapse of 17 months, when, as previous experience had shown, new dredging became necessary, and the accumulations of sand there being known. The man in charge of the boat was negligent in tying up for the night at such a place as a dock on the Harlem river at 155th street without sounding, or inquiring as to the depth of water, or breasting off. Ordinary prudence and the habits of boatmen in such locations are to make soundings, or otherwise ascertain whether the boat can safely lie over low water before leaving her without attendanceaor watch *for the night.
This duty, however, does not relieve the city from the obligation to remove by dredging at reasonable intervals the accumulations from drains at public wharves where they are inviting boats and collecting wharfage. Decree for the libelant for one-half the amount of his damage, (Christian v. Van Tassel, 12 Fed. Rep. 884,) with order of reference to ascertain the amount.