The tug E. J. Berwind going up the East River on the flood tide and bound ultimately
The master of the Mott Haven conceded that he could have held back and let the Berwind get by in order to proceed toward the coal dock at Ninety-Sixth street on the Harlem River, but instead of doing this he went forward, though he did not know whether the Berwind tow was going into the Harlem River or up through Hell Gate, until he reached a point where alarms, stopping, and backing were too late to prevent a collision.
In proceeding toward the Harlem River in the’flood tide the Berwind and her tow were approaching a place where there were swift currents that set in different directions. In such a situation the District Judge held that the case was one of special circumstances in which “due regard be had to all dangers of navigation and collision * * * ” (article 27, Pilot Rules [Inland Rules], 33 US CA § 212), and that prudent navigation required the Mott Haven to hold' back “until she was able to ascertain either by observation or by an exchange of signals whether the flotilla was bound into the Harlem River or through Hell Gate.” It is not necessary to hold that the ease was one of special circumstances in order to reach the conclusion that the Mott Haven was in fault. She was keeping on without knowing where the Berwind was going and without sounding any signal to the latter until it was too late to avert a collision by blowing an alarm, stopping, and reversing. Perhaps in view of the likelihood that a ferryboat would know that coal barges going upstream along Welfare Island were in all probability bound for the Harlem River, the Mott Haven should have taken it for granted that the Harlem River was in fact their destination and should have blown a signal to pass port to port or should have acceded to the signal of the Berwind if it was too late to inaugurate a port to port passage. But if, as seems to have been the case, the Mott Haven did regard the course of the tow as too uncertain for any definite signal, she should have blown an alarm and backed before she did.
The Mott Haven contends that the District Court was wrong as to the speed of the Berwind, as to the exact place where the collision occurred, and as to the asserted custom of vessels in the waters of Hell Gate whereby those going ¿gainst the tide hold back and wait until they can ascertain the course of those running with the tide. But none of these things militates against the conclusion that the Mott Haven was at fault. Irrespective of any custom, we think it was plainly negligent for her not to blow an alarm at once when she did not understand the intention of the Berwind (article 18, rule 3, Pilot Rules [Inland Rules], 33 USCA § 203, rule 3) and to go forward in a place of such dangerous tides after the Berwind had blown two whistles for a starboard passage which, had the Mott Haven been attentive, she ought to have heard.
But we think the Berwind .was also at fault. 'When she turned at Eighty-Sixth street toward the New York shore, she went up on the wrong side of the river at a place where the narrow channel rule governed. Article 25, Pilot Rules [Inland Rules] (33 USCA § 210); The Michael Tracy (C. C. A.) 43 F.(2d) 965. There was no proof that it was not “safe and practicable” to keep to the right instead of getting over within two or three hundred feet of the Manhattan piers. Had she done this, she would have passed under the stern of the Mott Haven and avoided any trouble. The Berwind also was at fault, when she received no answer to her signal of two whistles, to continue going forward in the flood tide, even for a short time. She was approaching the Mott Haven slightly on the port bow of the latter, and a port to port passage was the proper thing, for the two vessels were substantially head on, if we consider the general direction of
To sum the matter up, we conclude that the Berwind was in fault for proceeding on the wrong side of the channel and insisting upon an improper starboard to starboard passage for her own convenience until too late to prevent a collision, and that the Mott Haven was in fault for failing to blow a,n alarm if she did not know what course the tow was to take. After the Mott Haven had reason to know the Berwind’s destination, she was at fault for not holding back and for continuing on a course that was likely to result in a collision.
The decrees should be so modified as to divide the damages.