201 F. 424 | E.D. Va. | 1912
This case grows out of a collision that occurred in Hampton Roads, on the 20th day of February, 1912, between the British steamship Bangor, and the barge Robert Donaldson, in tow of the steam tug Viking. The libel is filed by the Bangor’s master against the tug and barge, and the master of the barge has also filed an intervening petition and libel against the tug.
The Bangor, light, an ocean-going steamer of 2,201 net tons burden, 330.6 feet in length, 43.2 feet in breadth, and 21.6 feet draft, was and had been anchored at the quarantine station on the western side of the main channel, about three-quarters of a mile to the southward and westward of the hospital ship Jamestown, stationed near Old Point Comfort, Va. On the day in question the Viking, a combined freight and tug boat, of about 145 tons gross, 110.1 feet in length, 21.5 feet in breadth, and 7.3 feet draft, was towing the Robert Donaldson, a barge of 185 feet in length, 23.10 feet in breadth, and 13.6 feet draft, 389 gross tons, and 378 net tonnage, about one-half capacity loaded, bound to Philadelphia by the bay and inland route, intending to stop' in the Poquossin river, with a view of completing its cargo. The day was clear, and weather fair, with little or no wind; a strong ebb tide running.
The tug, in going out of Hampton Roads, attempted to pass around the bow of the Bangor, the ship at the time heading up the channel and to the southward and westward, and cleared the same variously estimated at from 60 to 300 feet, and the barge collided with the Bangor; the starboard bow of the barge coming into collision with the port bow of the ship, causing serious injury to both vessels. The barge, at the time, was being towed on a hawser claimed by the libel-ant to be 500 feet long, and admitted by respondents to be 360. feet, and the tug was making about 4% miles an hour.
The assignments of fault by the libelant against the tug and barge are many in number, and on the part of the latter vessels, the assignments are in large measure of fault one against the other; and in turn they assign against the Bangor that she was anchored in an improper place, was without a proper ’lookout, and at the time of the collision should have played out more chain, with a view of preventing the accident. The court will not attempt to enter into a general discussion of the various assignments of fault, but merely pass upon those material to be determined, and bearing directly upon the collision, considering them against the ship, the tug, and the barge, in the order mentioned.
• First. The faults alleged against the Bangor are entirely without merit. She was anchored in a recognized anchorage ground in Hampton Roads, with ample room on both sides of her for the tug and tow to have passed, and with a great space to the eastward and southward
The criticism respecting the lack of a lookout by the Bangor is equally without merit, certainly so far as this collision is concerned, as there is no pretense but that the ship was seen, and its position known, several miles away, and there was nothing that a lookout could have done to avoid the collision. The suggestion that the ship was in fault for failing to play out more chain before the collision, is also without merit; and in any event, if in default in this respect, it would have been error in extremis, for which she would not be liable.
While all of the above enumerated faults against the barge may not be said to be fully established by the testimony, the conclusion of
The barge’s master says that he supposed the tug would pass on the port side of the ship, until within something less than 300 fedt away, when he observed his change of course. This statement, however, is not supported by the testimony, as the barge was on a hawser of 360 feet, and probably longer, and the tug’s purpose to cross the bow of the anchored ship, and the danger of such an experiment to the tow, must have been evident several minutes before the collision. To make successful such a maneuver on the part of the tug required the constant attention of those on the barge to avoid the latter’s colliding with the ship, and this duty could not have been performed by only one person upon a barge of this size.
The barge, at the time of the collision, was under charter by the owner of the Viking, and there is considerable evidence to support the charge on the part of the ship that the Viking was incapable of handling properly the tow; but that question need not be determined positively, in arriving at a conclusion in this case, as it is evident that the barge was in fault in the two respects mentioned — that is to say, in not being properly manned, and as a consequence in failing to fully perform its duties at the time of the collision. ■
From what has been said, it follows that the Bangor was without fault, and that the collision was caused by the joint negligence of the tug and the barge, for which they are each liable, and a decree will be entered so ascertaining, and at the same time, dismissing the intervening petition and libel filed on behalf of the barge.