10 F. Cas. 412 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana | 1877
The Garry Owen came into the harbor of New Orleans about ■4 o'clock in the morning of February 4, 1870. It was very dark, and the wind was blowing a gale from -the north, and off the New Orleans shore. The wind and darkness made the landing of a steamboat a very difficult and dangerous task. The Garry Owen made several unsuccessful attempts to land — one below Canal street and others above. In making the last attempt, the Garry Owen came in collision with the steamboat Mary Bell, which was lying moored to the wharf, and the fantail of the Garry Owen was caught under the guard of the Mary Bell, and the wheel of the Garry Owen was thereby disabled, and she became unmanageable, and drifted from shore up stream and -towards the middle of the river, in a helpless condition. She blew her whistle repeatedly as a signal of distress. The steam-tug Little Jerry went to her assistance, but was too small to control her movements so as to bring her to the wharf. The Garry Owen drifted toward the iron-clad monitor Canon-icus, which was lying at anchor about the middle of the river, struck her and then passed between her and the Algiers side of the river, and then drifted below. She continued to blow signals of distress, and the Tyler started to her assistance, and reached her about the time that the Little Jerry cut loose from her. When the Tyler approached her, the Garry Owen was in the edge of the eddy, and had again commenced to drift up the river, carried by the force of the eddy-current.
The complaint of the libelant is, that in approaching the Garry Owen the Tyler collided with her, and that the collision was occasioned by the gross negligence, inattention and want of proper care and skill on the part of the officers and crew of the Tyler. The claimants assert that there was no gross negligence, or want of ordinary care, and that the- collision was the result of inevitable accident. There can he no question that the Garry Owen was helpless and in a perilous condition at the time the Tyler approached her, nor that she was then and for some time previous had been blowing signals of distress and calls for help, nor that the purpose of the Tyler was to save her and her officers, crew and passengers, who were in imminent danger of their lives. Under such circumstances, all that was required of the Tyler was that, in making an effort to save the Garry Owen, she should act in good faith and with reasonable judgment and skill: The Laura, 14 Wall. [81 U. S.] 333. The burden of proof is on the libel-ant to prove negligence and want of skill. The mere fact that the Tyler, under the circumstances, collided with and damaged the Garry Owen, does not of itself prove negligence or want of skill: The Gray v. The Fraser, 21 How. [62 U. S.] 184; The Heroine [Case No. 6,417]; The Marpesia, 1 Asp. Marit. Law Cas. 201. Have negligence and want of ordinary skill been shown on the part of the Tyler? In my judgment they have not.
I believe that the Tyler made the effort in good faith and with reasonable judgment and skill, and although the attempt resulted in the sinking of the Garry Owen, yet the Tyler ought not to be held responsible for the loss. Libel dismissed at libelant’s cost.