176 F. 723 | 2d Cir. | 1910
November 15, J906, at about 0 :25 a. m. on the New York side of the East River near the Grand street ferry slips, the ferryboat Englis came into the collision with the grain-laden boat May A. Monk, which was the outer of two barges alongside the starboard side of the tug Geneva; there being another boat on her port side. As a result, the Monk sank, and considerable damage was sustained by her and her cargo. The libelants as owners of the boat and bailees of the cargo proceeded against the ferryboat, whose claimant brought in the tug under the fifty-ninth rule. The decree of the District Court was against the ferryboat alone, and the petition under the fifty-ninth rule was dismissed, with costs.
The morning was very dark and the tide strong flood. The ferryboat was coming down stream from Twenty-Third street, New York, bound to Broadway, Brooklyn, with her regulation lights and cabin lights burning. The tug was bound up the river showing her side lights and towing lights, the boats in tow showing white lights on poles. She rounded to under a hard aport helm for the purpose of
“The NoorcUand was at no time before the collision on a definite course, as contemplated by the statute and rules of navigation; and on the facts found she cannot claim that she had the right of way as against the Servia. The statutory steering and sailing rules before referred to have little application to a Vessel backing out of a slip before taking her course,' but the case is rather one of ‘special circumstances,’ under rule or article 24, requiring each vessel to watch, and be guided by, the movements of the other.”
The vessels in the present case were in view of each other for at least the space of a mile'in distance, and, considering, their respective speeds, of seven or eight minutes in time. Yet they concededly did not discover each other until they were not more than 200 feet ápart. There was nothing to obstruct vision except the momentary passage between them of the ferryboat Vermont as she entered the Grand street ferry slip on the New York side. The fault of the ferryboat is unquestionable. In respect to the tug we think her maneuver of crossing and recrossing the course of vessels bound up and down the river was such as to require her to keep a vigilant lookout for the purpose of warning such vessels of her movements. Yet the attention of her master in the pilothouse and her two deckhands was entirely fixed on 'the- operation of making the landing, and during the latter part of the- maneuver the deckhands, being on the port side of the tug’s house, could not see up the river if they had-looked. Enough has' been said to show that both vessels were grossly negligent in respect to the lookout kept.