18 F. Cas. 649 | S.D.N.Y. | 1870
The libel-lants, as-owners of the barge Halleck, sue the steam propeller Olive Baker, to recover the sum of $1.200, as the damages sustained by them in consequence of injuries caused to the barge, while she was being towed by the
This defence resolves itself into two matters —the slackening of the bow line of the barge against the will of the master of the Olive Baker; and the action of the tide and the tug, causing the Olive Baker to sheer and necessitating her backing, and causing the slackened bow line to part, and thereby bringing about the collision, through inevitable accident.
In regard to the slackening of the bow line, to whatever extent it was slackened, if it was slackened at all. the captain of the Olive Baker testifies, that he slowed his boat down while the captain of the barge was slackening the line, diming the trip, and before the entrance off the upper end of the Oob dock was reached, and that, after the line had been slackened and again fastened, the Olive Baker went ahead again. The Olive Baker, in undertaking to tow the barge, made herself responsible for any arrangement of the towing lines that was known to and acquiesced in by her. Whatever slackening of the line took place in this case, was acquiesced in by the Olive Baker. There were three lines — a bow line, a tow line midships, and a stern line, the tow line belonging to the Olive Baker and the other two lines to the barge. The evidence is satisfactory, and comes from those on the Olive Baker, that, when the Olive Baker was backing, before the collision, and in order to prevent it, although the bow and stern lines parted by the backing, the Olive Baker afterwards brought up on the tow line and backed on that, and the collision occurred after that. The parting of the bow lipe alone is set up in the answer, and the parting of that is attributed to its having been slackened. The evidence shows that it was a new and strong line. The headway of the Olive Baker and the barge were very great when the Olive Baker started to back, and the line undoubtedly snapped from Die sudden strain upon it, Die barge going ahead and the Olive Baker backing. As the tow line did not break and the Olive Baker brought up on it, and the other two lines parted before the tow line was brought up on, it would seem, that the tow line must have been more slack than either of the other two lines, after the backing commenced. But, for the condition of slackness of all the lines, the Olive Baker was. on the evidence, responsible, and, in so far as the collision was promoted by the parting of the bow line through its slackness, the Olive Baker, being responsible for such slackness, is responsible for the parting and its consequences.
As to the joint action of the tide and the tug in producing the accident, the evidence shows, that the tug, being light and not having anything in tow, was coming up from behind the Olive Baker. The tide was ebb and the Olive Baker was running against it. The barge was down by the stern and towed hard. The pilot of the Olive Baker saw the tug coming up on the starboard side of the barge, the barge being on the starboard side of the Olive Baker. The stem of the barge projected from ten to fifteen feet ahead of the stem of the Olive Baker, and the stern of the barge extended some ten feet in the rear of the stern of the Olive Baker. The bows of the two boats were pressed in together, so that their stems lay out from each other. As the tug was coming up. the captain of the Olive Baker, who was her pilot, and was at her wheel in her pilot house, blew a signal of two blasts of his steam whistle, indicating that he desired the tug to go to his port side. The tug made no reply, but went on. When the tug had got alongside ol' the barge, and was passing between it and the face of the Cob dock, so close to the barge that she scraped the barge as she passed, and so close to the dock that there was, as the captain of the Olive Baker says, only two and a half feet distance betwen the tug and the dock, the captain of the Olive Baker ported his helm, so as to crowd the tug still more, and tend to throw the head of the barge and of the Olive Baker to the right, into the bay, and in the direction in which the Olive
There must be a decree for the libellant, with costs, with a reference as to the damages.