The libel states that, while the barge Yonkers, upon which the libelant lived, lay moored along-side the wharf, on the lower side of the slip, between piers 28 and 29, East river, bow in, the lighter Mystic, in going out of the slip, ran her bowsprit into the stern cabin of the Yonkers, and struck and broke the libelant’s arm, for which recovery of damages is sought. The answer alleges that while the lighter was stuck fast between two other canal-boats, in endeavoring to get out of the slip, the Yonkers drifted down upon the bowsprit of the Mystic. The weight of proof and of probability is inconsistent with the alleged drifting down of the Yonkers upon the Mystic. All the evidence indicates that the movement of the bow of the lighter was a very gentle movement, and I’have no doubt, taking all the evidence together, that it was some swing of the bow of the lighter towards the Yonkers, while her stem was moving in between the other boats, and while the lighter’s men were endeavoring to make more room for her, that brought about the collision. While the lighter is therefore responsible, the damages would evidently have been but slight had not the plaintiff herself most improperly and foolishly endeavored to fend off the bowsprit by putting her hand against the end of it as it approached the cabin; the result of which was that her hand was caught between the end of the bowsprit and the frame of the cabin window, and the outer bone of her wrist broken. A few seconds previously she had seen the bowsprit approaching, as she sat in the cabin, and she ran out to rescue her child from danger, who*
