On tlie fifth of August, 1883, the steam canal-boat Venus, with her consort Leto, was proceeding westwardly along the Erie canal. Both boats were loaded with cement. The Leto was pushed ahead of the Venus, being fastened to her by stiff iron couplings. At midnight, and when about a half of a mile west of May’s point, in the county of Seneca, a collision occurred between the Leto and the steam canal-boat Thomas Carroll. It is to recover for the injuries thus sustained by the Venus and Leto that this action is brought. The Carroll was loaded with grain, and was destined for New York. She was without a consort. At the point in question the canal is about 68 feet wide, the navigable channel being about 38 feet wide. The berme bank is on the north, or right-hand side, the tow path on the south, or left-hand side, going east. The three boats were of about equal dimensions, being 96 feet in length and 17J feet beam.
Where a collision occurs, on a bright starlight night, between two boats, going in opposite directions, at a speed of less than three miles an hour, upon the sluggish waters of the canal, it cannot be attributed to inevitable accident, and especially so, when they see each other in ample time to execute all necessary maneuvers. Merely to state the facts is to answer the proposition in the negative. As there was no vis major, it necessarily follows that either the Venus and her consort, or the Carroll, or both, were at fault.
A careful examination of tho evidence has failed to disclose any dereliction of duty on the part of the Venus and Leto which can fairly be said to have contributed, in any appreciable degree, to the accident. For it is quite evident that the injured vessels would not bo inculpated, even though it were determined that all the accusations now brought against them, both in equipment and management, wore fully supported by the proofs. It is not easy to trace any connection between the collision and the absence of inboard screens for the lights, the use of the stiff coupling, or tho failure to have a lookout on the how of the Leto. Had the screens been present and the coupling absent, had tho captain stood at the exact point where, it is now asserted, he should have been, the consequences would have been the same. Nothing that the Venus and Leto reasonably could be expected to do to avert the injury was omitted. The crew exhibited as much skill and prudence as could he expected in the circumstances. Had they executed some of the maneuvers and followed some of the theories advanced upon the trial, not only would the disaster, in all probability, have been more severe, but the libel-ant would, in part at least, have been held responsible for it. The Venus and Leto were where they had a right to be, and where it was tlieir duty to be. Immediately upon discovering the proximity of the Carroll, and informing her of tlieir presence, they followed the ancient law of the sea, and put their helm a-port. They kept as close to the berme bank'as possible, and were there when the blow was given-
If the Carroll, as her master says, was aground, pr dragging on the bottom of the canal, 19 or 20 feet from the berme bank, unable to get off, she should hot have contented herself with one signal or two signals. She should have informed the Venus and Leto beyond the reach of doubt that she lay directly in their path; the path, which, in ordinary circumstances, it was their duty to take. But she did nothing of ,the kind. The libelant insists that the Carroll at first
Where a boat is in an unusual position, where she ought not to he, whore she has no right to be, she must take adequate and necessary means to inform others of the fact. Upon either theory, then, tlie Carroll was negligent, and the agreement of her master, immediately after the accident, when it was thought the injury was slight, to pay the damages incurred, is very suggestive as to what his opinion, at that time, was.
It follows that there must he a decree for the libelant, with costs, and a reference to compute the damages.
