38 F. 849 | S.D.N.Y. | 1889
At about half past 11 a. m. of December 13, 1888, as the steamer Rio Grande, coming up the East river in the ebb-tide, was approaching her slip at pier 20, she came in collision with the brig Pickering, about 300 feet off pier 19, doing the latter considerable damage, for which the above' libel was filed. The Pickering was in tow of the tug Demarest, on a hawser of about 10 fathoms, attached to the Pickering’s stern, by which she had just been pulled out of her- slip stern first, preparatory to being taken along-side the tug to be towed up the river through Hell Gate.- Pier 19 is covered by a shed, which obstructed-the view to the southward. Before reaching the mouth of the slip, the tug gave oné long blast of her whistle. After getting out of the slip, the Rio Grande was observed near mid-river, off the Wall-Street ferry, approáching the slip between piers 19 and 20, aided by the tug Jewett. -The design of the Demarest was to pull the brig a few hundred feet straight Out- into the river, across the course of the Rio Grande. She gave no signal of two whistles, nor any other signal than the long blast before leaving the slip. Upon the proof, I am satisfied that the mode adopted by the De-marest of taking the brig out by lines attached to the stern was not the best; and that a vessel like the Pickering could be more expeditiously handled by a hawser attached to the bow, and carried thence to the stern, and there attached by a noose, to be cast off as soon as the brig was out, or.nearly out, of the slip. Had the latter mode been adopted, the brig •could have been more quickly headed up river, and the DeipaTest have got along-side nearer to the New York shore, and out of the way of the Rio Grande. Independently of this consideration, however, I think the Demarest was to blame for undertaking to cross the . course of the .Rip Grande without giving the signal of two whistles, which the! inspectors’ rules require. The long blast was in no sense an equivalent. It gave no indication of a tow behind her, and a tug moving out of the slip under sqch a whistle would not naturally attract any continued, attention from the Rio Grande, or the Jewett. The required signal-of two whistles
2. As respects the Rio Grande, the question is whether she reversed her engines as soon as the brig ivas seen, or ought to have been seen, backing out of the slip. It was her duty under old rule 19 to back at once, because the situation was one of manifest danger. The testimony of the pilot of the Jewett and of the first mate of the Rio Grande is that she did. The engineer estimates that she was backing a minute and a half, and got over a hundred turns backward; but all the witnesses in behalf of the Rio Grande agree that she was not moving at a speed of over a couple of knots; and, had she made any such number of turns backwards, or been backing for a minute, it is not credible that the ship would not have been moving astern in the water before advancing her length of 300 feet. The testimony leaves no doubt that the Rio Grande was much more than 300 feet below the point of collision at the time when the brig, emerging from the slip, became plainly visible, and when her intent to cross the Rio Grande’s bows was clear. I must regard the engineer’s testimony, therefore, as a mere random estimate, not to be relied on. The master of the Rio Grande testifies that he gave the verbal order to reverse as soon as it was received through the first mate from the pilot of the Jewett; that it was obeyed immediately; that he turned and saw the brig at that time well clear of the dock, coming across his bows, her stern about crossing the Rio Grande’s bow, and about 25 feet