12 F. Cas. 803 | S.D.N.Y. | 1871
This is a libel filed by the United States to recover for the damages sustained by the revenue steamer Cuyahoga, owned by the United States, through two collisions which took place, on the morning of the 2S)th of September, 1863, shortly before daylight, between the Cuyahoga and the steam ferry-boat Hudson, in the Hudson river, near the Jersey City slip of the ferry from the foot of Montgomery street, Jersey City, to the foot of Desbrosses street, New York. The first collision took place while the ferry-boat was on a trip from New York to Jersey City. The Cuyahoga was lying anchored with her head to the north, the tide being ebb, and was struck on her starboard side, near her bow, and considerably damaged. On her next trip from Jersey City to New York, the ferry-boat struck a launch on the port side of the Cuyahoga, hanging at davits, and stove it in. There was a fog at the time.
It is claimed, on the part of the ferryboat, that the Cuyahoga was lying' in too close proximity to what was, on an ebb tide, the usual track or route of the ferryboats from the Desbrosses street slip on the New York side to their slip at Jersey City, which is the most northerljr one of the slips at the foot of Montgomery street, Jersey City. The evidence shows this to have been the fact. On an ebb tide, the boat which leaves Desbrosses street heads up against the tide and runs over pretty well to the New Jersey shore, and then drops down sideways with the tide and heads in to her slip. This makes her usual track on an ebb tide a much wider one than the width of a straight course between the two slips. If she does not pursue such course and have the free use of such track, she is carried below her slip at Jersey City, and fails to make it on the first attempt, and loses time. On the same morning on which these collisions took place, and in the same fog, and before these collisions, another ferry-boat, the Aresseoli, which was running from New York to Jersey City, on the Desbrosses street ferry, knowing that the Cuyahoga was at anchor where she was, kept so far down, in order to avoid her, as, with the ebb tide, to miss the slip" at Jersey City and go below it; and the Aresseoh, on a trip to Jersey City after these collisions, on the same morning, and in the same fog. came very near colliding with the Cuyahog.., running within a few feet of her, and, in her course after that, on the same trip, the tide being ebb, dropped by her and then headed up for her slip, but missed it and went below it. These boats weve entitled
These facts show’ great fault on the part of the Cuyahoga, and fault which accounts largely for the collisions. If the Cuyahoga had indicated her position by making a proper noise, there can be no doubt that she would not have been hit. The ferry-boats were guided, during the fog, in reaching their slip at Jersey City, by a fog-bell, weighing nearly six hundred pounds, and having a peculiar sound, distinguishable from that of other bells, and which was constantly sounding on the pier adjoining such slip. This fault of the Cuyahoga modifies and regulates the responsibility of the ferry-boat. The latter was not bound to omit her trips altogether in the fog. She was bound to use proper precautions, by using less speed, and keeping a proper lookout,' and feeling her way, and otherwise, in the .fog, so as not to come into collision with another vessel using like proper precautions. The ferry-boat did use such precautions, and the evidence discloses no fault on her part. She was running under a slow bell, before sighting the Cuyahoga, at both collisions, employing no greater speed than was necessary to give her pilot proper control of her in the tide that was running. She had two lookouts, one stationed alongside of the pilothouse, on the promenade deck, as near the forward edge of that deck as possible, and the other at the extreme bow of the boat on the main deck. Her engineer was at his post, and stopped and reversed his engine promptly on getting the bells for that purpose. Those bells were rung by the pilot in the pilot-house the moment the Cuyahoga was reported. The lookout Coe, who was on the main-deck forward, reported her. He is not produced as a witness, but proof is made that an unsuccessful effort was made to find him. He had, at the time of the collisions, been on the ferries for two years. The fact that he was at the post mentioned is shown by the pilot and by the other lookout, and he reported to them that there was a vessel ahead, before they coftld see her from their position.
The position of the ferry-boat at the second collision, when she came in contact with the boat on the port side of the Cuy-ahoga, as that vessel lay tailing down the river, is sufficiently accounted for by the fact that, as the ferry-boat left her slip at Jersey City, she saw the lights of a Court-landt street ferry-boat which was bound into the slip next adjoining below at Jersey City, and sheered up stream, against the ebb tide, by starboarding, so as to avoid being
The libel is dismissed.