190 F. 650 | E.D.N.Y | 1911
The claimant purchased at a sale under judgment the steamlighter Dana, which had previously dumped a portion of a deck cargo of copper, upon the night of November 25th, in the slip between the lower North German Rloyd pier and the upper Hamburg American pier, in the Hudson river, at ITohoken, N. J. Upon the afternoon of the night in question, the Dana was moored alongside of a large square-sided barge, the Seneca, while waiting to load the copper upon the steamer Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, which was lying on the other side of the slip. The crew of the Dana were ultimately produced upon the trial. They testified that they left the vessel in good order after their day’s work was done, and that all of them went ashore. The engineer testifies that the vessel was then free from water, and not leaking; that his fires were banked, and there was. no steam to work the steam pump, while the deckhands even left the vessel to go to a theater in Hoboken, returning in the neighborhood of midnight. A watchman furnished by a company hiring men for that purpose was upon the vessel to see that none of. the cargo was stolen, and that no damage was done, and upon the return of the two deckhands, between midnight and 1 o’clock, this watchman was found standing watching the Dana. Her list was such that, according to
The Dana was a round-bottomed craft, with a pointed bow arranged for carrying the greater part of her load upon the deck rather than in the hold, and forward rather than aft. She thus rode higher at the bow when unloaded, and the carrying of a deck load balanced the weight of her machinery, which was placed well aft. She had just previously been repaired and her seams caulked, in so far as they showed the necessity of repair when she was light, but not drawn out of the water. The testimony indicates that she was able to carry a load of some 150 to 160 tons upon her deck with apparent safety. A load of more than that amount set her down by the head sufficiently to make her steer with some difficulty, and on previous occasions a load of 180 to 190 tons had caused a spreading of the boat and a leaking, which was not apparent when the load was not excessive. On the afternoon in question she had brought up a cargo of 173 long tons upon the deck, while her hold was filled with bundles of shingles. The conditions were such in coming up the bay that no excessive strain and no resultant damage can be traced to anything, unless to the weight of the deck load itself. A secret or undiscoverable leak between the skin of the vessel and the false lining to the forecastle is indicated by the testimony of some of the witnesses. The facility with which bilge water could run back through the limber holes, and the possibility that water could collect at the bow in a sufficient amount to affect the stability of the vessel, was indicated by the testimony of some of the witnesses.
The most difficult point in the case has to do with the amount ■of water in the vessel after the load was dumped, because of the testimony of the engineer of a Hamburg-American tug, who was summoned by the watchman just before the accident, and who arrived within a few moments thereafter upon his tug, having come, around from a pier to the south of the pier in question. This engineer, who sounded the water, in the Dana, examined it through the well, and testifies that it did not come over the floor beams of the vessel at that point. He did not try to use his pump, for he estimated that the water was not more than six inches deep in the well, and his pump would *suck at a depth of eight inches of water. He could find nothing on board of the Dana indicating the presence of sufficient water to affect her equilibrium, nor anything from which he ■could draw an explanation of the accident. Another witness at .daylight the. following morning when the vessel was lightened of a
There is also no evidence to indicate that the lighter and the Seneca came in contact or that the barge rested upon the lighter, so as to bear down the starboard side of the lighter sufficiently to do it any injury. On the contrary, the testimony would show that the vessels were properly moored and rested quietly, but that, when the deckhands returned, the lighter had already listed toward the barge, and was straining the lines thereto.
The libelant has also offered some testimony as to two water-tanks so placed upon the vessel that the pipe leading- to the boilers, and shut off bjr the stop-cock between these two tanks, could be affected by the operation of this connecting pipe as a siphon, if the stop-cock were left open. The general position of these tanks, the amount of water which they contained, and the fact that, even if the stop-cock was open next morning-, the weight of water would not by itself cause a dangerous list, do not indicate such carelessness because of the condition of this stop-cock as to entirely explain the accident. But the slight additional list from this source may have aided in producing the condition of danger, and for this the boat must be charged.
■ We are reduced, therefore, in the absence of any suggestion that the load shifted, or that the balance of the boat was disturbed by anything except the water inside the hold, to a consideration as to whether the libelant has proven his case by showing that the accident occurred from leakage, and that the leakage occurred from the spreading of the vessel and the opening- of seams through the carrying of such a load. The water in the vessel, whether much or little in quantity, would quickly respond to the decided change in level caused by the dumping of the deck load. But the lightening of the load forward should have caused a flow of water toward the stern, where the weight of the engines was constant, and, if on the following morning more water had shown in the stern than was noticed at midnight, it would logicalfy follow that the water which during the early part of the night had caused the boat to list when heavily loaded at the bow had gradually run toward the stern and distributed itself so as not to affect the equilibrium. In fact, the testimony as to a hidden and secret leak indicated that the water from this leak came in near the bow, and the. testimony of the witness Tuttle to the effect that 22 inches of water was present in the engine room at 8 o’clock goes to show that a considerable quantity of water was in the bow of the boat up to the time when the load was dumped. Assuming that the list was caused by the presence of water either accumulating from leakage or from siphoning from
It is urged that under this contract the owners of the boat were neither common carriers nor bound under the language of tlie particular charter. While it would seem that a charter of this nature for the performance of a particular service, and providing by its terms for particular conditions, would have to be viewed by those provisions, and that the parties thereto should not depend upon the general obligations of a common carrier, where tlie particular contract took the place of a common carrier’s liability, nevertheless, aside from the language of this particular charter, the obligation of the owner seems to be no different from that of a common carrier in providing a seaworthy boat.
.The libelant'may have a decree, with costs.