84 F. 500 | E.D. Pa. | 1898
The suit is for damages, alleged to have resulted from carelessness in towing a dry dock from Hoboken, on a voyage to Philadelphia, the dock being lost in a, storm on the way.
There is no difficulty about the law applicable to the case. The respondents were not insurers, but were responsible for the exercise of such cam, as the service undertaken required. They cannot be held liable for the loss sustained in the absence of: proof that it resulted from carelessness. Error of judgment respecting the weather at the time of starting, or in other respects on the voyage would he unimportant.
The libelants’ case was put at the hearing on three specifications of alleged carelessness; others charged in the libel were not urged, and will not therefore be considered. The first of the specifications pressed is that the respondents should not have started when they did; the second, that the hawser was insufficient for the service; and the third, that a harbor should have been sought before the sitorm was encountered. Should the first specification be sustained? The respondents had waited three days, while the wind was eastward and the weather had. The next morning, finding the wind in the northwest, the sky clear and the storm signals taken down, they started. The charge of carelessness in thus starting is based on an allegation that the wind passed around from the east northward instead of southward. If the allegation is true, (and it rests on the testimony of the libelants’ agent Grillen, who does not appear to have communicated this fact to the masters of the tug), I do not think it sufficient to convict them of carelessness. They could not be expected to remain up all night for the purpose of observing how the wind passed to the northwest; and even if they had been aware that, it passed northward I do not: think they would have been guilty of carelessness in starting, in view of the circumstances that the sky was clear, the wind in the northwest, the storm signals down and other vessels going out. 1 do not attach much importance in this respect to the case of The Vandercock, 65 Fed. 251. Whether the duration of good weather will be longer when the wind passes westward from eastward in one direction than when it. passes in another is not a question of law, but of fact about which there is certainly room for difference of opinion. Probably a majority of intelligent persons would say that the direction in -which it passes is unimportant. At least one experienced witness says it certainly is not important on the Jersey coast. At any rate there is no evidence in this case sufficient to prove that the passage northward is such an indication of had weather as should render one
Were they careless as respects the hawser — was it unsafe? It was an eight-inch line, new within a year. That it was large enough, if in good condition, I do not doubt. The expert testimony is clear in this respect. Was it in good condition? It drew out of the thimble off Sandy 'Hook, but this, as the testimony shows, frequently occurs with good hawsers; and when refastened it was safe in this respect and held, even when the tow sank. Griffen says it did not pull out of the thimble but broke at this point. The weight of the testimony is, however, against his statement. It did break when the tow was virtually submerged, just before sinking. But I do not deem this evidence of faultiness. At that time the waves drove the tow back and forth, subjecting the hawser to jerking, and sawing on the bits such as would, I think, necessarily break it even if in excellent condition. Griffen, who was on the tow, testifies that he noticed when, as he says, the hawser broke off Sandy Hook, the strands at the broken end, and saw they were worn. He is contradicted by many witnesses in the statement, that it broke at this point, and his testimony that he then observed its worn and unsafe condition is improbable. At this time a harbor was within convenient reach, and it seems incredible that he should have gone on at the risk of his life without calling attention to the danger thus manifest, if his testimony is true. Two witnesses, Gokey and Williams, testify that the captains of the tugs declared before starting on the voyage, that the hawser was “very bad.” This also seems improbable. It is certainly unlike the conduct of such men when entering upon such a service. The captains, who have no more interest in the subject than Gokey and Williams, deny positively making such a statement. They and a number of other witnesses called by the respondent, testify that the hawser was good, and safe for the service. After careful examination of all the evidence on this subject, I think a finding that the hawser was not safe would be unwarranted. Indeed, I think the weight of the evidence sustains a conclusion that it was. It held under the strain of both tugs and the tempestuous sea until Griffen, who as has been stated was on the tow, saw that it must go down, and demanded to be taken off. At this time, as he distinctly testifies, the dock was doomed; no hawser would have saved it. It must break loose, go to pieces,
The libel must be dismissed.