2 F. 821 | S.D.N.Y. | 1880
This is a libel to recover damages sustained by the schooner Bobert Smith, and her cargo, by a collision with the schooner Albert Mason, in the harbor of New Haven, on the evening of the eighth day of November, 1877. The Bobert Smith was bound on a voyage from Portland, Connecticut, to New York, with a cargo of about 90 tons of brown stone. Between 6 and 7 o’clock she put into New Haven for a harbor, the wind being S. S. E. to S. E., and blowing hard. She came to anchor about two miles inside the light, on the west side of the channel, as the libel states, in about eight feet of water, at low tide. When she came in it was the last of the ebb.
Between 8 and 10 o’clock the Albert Mason also came in for a harbor. She intended also to come to anchor on the west side of the channel, and in fact proceeded directly towards where the Bobert Smith was lying at anchor, and to within a very short distance from her, when she undertook to round to for the purpose of anchoring, and just then her stern grounded. Before this she had taken in her jib and mainsail, under which she entered the harbor. Up to the time of so rounding to those on board of her had not seen the Bobert Smith. To work off the bottom she hoisted the peak of her mainsail, intending to work off more to the eastward. While doing this her master and others of her crew discovered something to leeward, and very near to them, which was in fact the Bobert Smith, but which, as they say, they took for a wreck or a sunken canal-boat. They approached it a little
The libel avers that immediately after the Eobert Smith Anchored a signal light was hung in the fore rigging, on the starboard side, and a proper watch' placed on deck, and “that from the time said signal light was lighted and watch set to, and until the collision, the said signal light was in its proper place and burning brightly.” The answer denies that the Eobert Smith had any anchor light, and charges the absence of the light on her part as the cause of the collision. The only question fairly arising on the pleadings and the evidence is whether the Eobert Smith had an anchor light set and burning as the Albert Mason came into the harbor and approached her. Though it was a dark and stormy night, lights of vessels could be seen at a considerable distance, and if the Eobert Smith had her light set it was inexcusable in the Albert Mason to approach her so closely as she did before rounding to, to anchor.
The point made that the Eobert Smith was in fault in not hoisting her jib and paying off to the eastward, so as to aid the Albert Mason in her efforts to avoid the collision, is not, I think, open under the pleadings. There can be no question that it was the duty of the Eobert Smith to have a light. She was not fairly out of the channel or that part of the harbor
It is impossible to reconcile the testimony upon any theory of mistake. Nor is the theory of inattention or failure of those on board the Albert Mason to observe a light, which they might have seen if they had looked, tenable in this case. The vessel lay in this close proximity a considerable time, and the light which they looked for and did not see, if it was there, was very near to them, and on the side of the vessel towards them. While there are some serious discrepancies between the testimony of those on the Eobert Smith and the other and credible proofs in the case as to the movements of the Albert Mason and the sail she carried, and some inconsistencies in their testimony, and between it and the averments of the libel, these alone would not be sufficient to impeach or discredit the witnesses of the libellant. Nor, on the other hand, are the witnesses for the claimants in any way discredited except by this flat contradiction in respect to the light. In fact, the witnesses on both sides appear to be alike credible, and I have not been able, after the most careful
Libel dismissed, with costs.