20 F. Cas. 132 | E.D.N.Y | 1870
It appears quite plainly from the evidence that there was negligent management on board the ship, in permitting her to drag as she did, owing doubtless to the circumstance that, the master was on shore, the chief mate off duty, and the second mate alone in command. Accordingly, if, as a result of such negli-genee, the ship was placed in dangerous proximity to other vessels at anchor in the harbor, she must be held responsible for all damages arising out of her improper location. ~
There is no disputing, upon the evidence, that the brig was anchored in a proper place; that the precautions taken by her to prevent dragging, were proper and successful; that those on board of her were watchful and, when the ship was seen dragging towards them on the flood tide, took the proper steps to enable her to pass in safety; and that, when, upon the turn of the tide, the ship swung down upon the brig, everything possible to be done, on the part of the brig, to avoid damage, was done. As the evidence stands, I incline to believe the statement of those on board the brig, that the ship, in dragging past them, caught their chain, and by reason of that entanglement, the brig was started towards the ship, after she had brought up under the brig’s stern. The manner, in which the ship is stated to have passed the brig, does not appear to me improbable, when the currents of the locality, the wind and the tide, the weight of the ship and the nature of the bottom are considered. Nor does it appear impossible that the ship’s chain and anchor should have become entangled with those of the brig, as is claimed on her part. Certainly, the impossibility is not so manifest as to require me to hold, in the face of the positive denial of eight witnesses from the brig, that the brig’s chain was paid out after the ship brought up astern, and the vessels, by that means, brought nearer to each other. If it be true then, that, when the ship ceased to drag, she -was under the stem of the brig with her chain entangled with that of the brig, the berth was foul, and the damages which ensued when the vessels came together upon the turn of the tide, must be held to be the result of the negligence which placed the ship in that position. Furthermore, I am of the opinion that the ship would be responsible, if the facts were as claimed in her behalf upon the hearing. Under the admitted circumstances, the brig having selected a proper place of anchorage, was entitled to room to swing in safety upon as long a scope of chain as might be necessary to prevent her from dragging, and if, to avoid dragging, she was compelled to pay out chain after the ship had brought up under her stern, and where a nearer approach involved danger of collision upon the turn of the tide, the damages arising from such proximity could not be chargeable to the brig as resulting from any neglect on her part, but must be held to have arisen from that neglect which permitted this large ship to drag at a single anchor so long a distance, and placed her under the stern of the brig when a few fathoms change in the position of the brig would render a collision imminent. The decree in the first case must, therefore, be that the libellants reco\er oi the ship, “Queen of the East,” the damages by them sustained, by reason of the collision in question, with costs. In the second ease, the libel against the brig must be dismissed with costs.