117 F. 945 | D. Or. | 1902
On the 22d of November last the steamer Kehani, having in tow the scow Lincoln, loaded with railroad ties, in coming out of Lewis river struck on the north draw pier, or the piling therefor, of the bridge, in course of construction by the respondent, as contractor, for the Washington & Oregon Railway Company, causing damage to such boats, for which this suit is brought. The boats are the property of libelants. The bridge is being constructed under authority of, and from plans approved by, the war department. The complaint is that Wakefield, in the construction of said pier, drove a clump of about 50 fir piles in the channel of the river, so that the tops thereof were even with the surface of the water of the river; that on November 22, 1901, the river had risen about three feet, and had submerged such piling, so that the location of the same could not be ascertained with the exercise of ordinary care by a person navigating the river; that Wakefield negligently failed to mark the point of such submerged piling with any buoy or other mark, or to protect boats navigating the river from coming in contact with said piling by placing fenders thereat, and that the accident and damage was a result of this negligence. The scow is about 350 to 450 tons burden, 130 feet long, and 34 feet wide on deck. Her draught is six feet. The Kehani is about 100 feet in length. The opening between the pivot pier and the pier causing the damage is 100 feet in the clear. The difficulty of navigating the river through this draw is increased by the fact that at the site of the bridge, or just above it, the upriver channel bends to the north about 20o. As a result of heavy rains, the river began to rise in the morning of the day of the accident, and was rising when the Kehani went up through the draw, about 9 or half past 9 o’clock. She went above the bridge about two miles to the forks of the river, where the scow was being loaded. There was a delay of an hour or an hour and a half or so, when the steamer, with the scow in tow, started down the river. When the Kehani went up the river, the water was just about over the piles in question. The captain of the steamer, on the previous trip up the river, about the 18th of the month, noticed some piling at the north pier. He “paid no attention” to this pier as he went up on the morning of the accident, but went right through. He says that he did not see it, because it was submerged, and saw nothing to indicate its location. Gerspach, one of the libelants, who was on the boat at the time, says he will not be positive whether the piles for the pier were sticking above the water when they went up the river on that morning, but thinks some were under the water already, and that there was a riffle there then. The boat had made frequent trips through the bridge, and those navigating it knew of the existence of this pier. The water rose with such rapidity that the
The libel is dismissed, without costs.