91 F. 796 | E.D.N.Y | 1898
At about 6 o’clock in the evening of December 6, 1897, with fair weather and slight wind, the tug Kate Jones, on the port side, in charge of a licensed Hell Gate pilot, and the more powerful tug Taurus, on the starboard side, in charge of an unlicensed Hell Gate pilot, were towing, by a hawser of about 40 fathoms length, through Hell Gate, eight loaded barges, varying from 117 to 1B7 feet in length, arranged in two tiers of four boats each, with the Templar, the largest barge, on the starboard side of the rear tier, and the Brunette, the forward, and the Beaver, the rear, boats on the port. side. As the tow. rounded Hallett’s Point, about which the flood tide was sweeping to the southward and eastward, the barges dropped down, under the influence of such set of the tide, until the starboard rear barge, the Templar, struck on the shore at Steep
When the captain of a tug permits his tow to collide with the rocks bordering the shore, now on one side, now upon the other, in a locality familiar to navigators, the burden rests upon the towing party to give some exculpatory reason for the occurrence. The Webb, 14 Wall. 414; The Sarah J. Weed, 40 Fed. 844, 846. The answer, under the misapprehension caused by the erroneous date of the accident stated in the libel, alleged that the injury was attributable to some aberration of the tide. In truth, the tidal phenomena accorded with usual .expectation; and now the claimant traces the collision to the alleged fact, that those in charge of the Templar ported around HalIett’s Point, whereby seven other barges and two powerful tugs, under full headway, were dragged from their proper and safe course, so as to allow the Templar to strike on Steep Bocks, and it is urged that the injuries to the Brunette and Beaver were due to the Templar and Breeze putting their wheels over, and continuing this too long, giving the tow a contrary sheer to the northward. It is not satisfactorily shown that the acts charged did have or could have the attributed influence on the tow. The evidence is more convincing that the tugs did not pursue the well-known course from Hallett’s Point to Negro Point, but dropped s‘o far to the eastward that the tow was swept by the strong current down upon Steep Bocks, from which it was delivered after injury, and that the endeavor to extricate the tow from the danger brought the tugs dangerously near to the opposite shore, whereby the Brunette and Beaver were grounded. But the burden rests upon the claimant to give reasons for the event, and the one offered is not sufficient, and hence is rejected. The Harter act, invoked by the claimant, seems unusually inapplicable. The decree should be for the libelants, with costs.