101 F. 478 | D.N.J. | 1900
KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.
It appears from the evidence in these causes that on the 10th of April, 1895, at about half past 10 o’clock at night, a collision occurred between the schooner Isaac H. Tillyer, bound from Boston to Philadelphia, and the coal-laden barge Oneohta, in tow of the steam tug Dudley Pray, bound from
A libel has been filed on behalf of the owners of the barge Oneonta, aiming damages from the schooner and the tug. A cross libel has been filed on behalf of the schooner, claiming damages from the barge Oneonta, and a libel on behalf of the schooner against the tug. Both the barge and the schooner charge that the tug Dudley Pray was in fault, that she was negligent in the manner of making up and navigating the tow, that the tow was too long, the barges too far separated, and that, considering the length of the tow and the direction of the wind, she did not give the schooner a sufficiently wide berth to enable her to pass without colliding with the tow. The obvious duty of the tug, under the circumstances as detailed, upon sighting the schooner, was to take the necessary precautions to get out of her way, not only with the tug, but with the tow. Her duty in this regard was not changed by reason of her having a tow in charge. The Maverick, 28 C. C. A. 562, 84 Fed. 906. In order that the captain of the tug might not be misled, the schooner was bound to hold her course. The Marguerite (D. C.) 87 Fed. 955. The captain of the tug should have considered the length of his tow, and the increased hazard occasioned thereby. As was said in The John H. May (D. C.) 52 Fed. 884, “the tow, by reason of its length, was dangerous and unwieldy”; and he was