228 F. 186 | 2d Cir. | 1915
Appeal from decree dismissing libel for negligent towage. .October 20, 1913, between 9 and 10 p. m., the tugs Wyomissing and Bem, belonging to the Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, left Port Reading with a flotilla of coal-laden boats, consisting of six tiers of four boats each. The scow Van Winkle, outside boat on the starboard side in the fifth tier, was carrying 1,372 tons of coal, giving her a draft of 14 feet. The railway company’s dockmaster at Port Reading knew that the scow was leaking when he put her in the tow, and indeed had received a message from the main office to do so. About 6 a. m. the next morning, at low water, the scow ran upon a rock or boulder, which made a'hole in her square bow some 2 or -3 feet above her bottom. She sank with her bow projecting above the surface and her stern entirely submerged, and there was from 19 to 24 feet of water at different points around her.
The District Judge dismissed the libel, saying among other things:
“At the same time the evidence satisfies the court that at the point where the barge was sunk at mean low water there could not have been less than 14 feet 6 inches of water in depth, even giving to the libelants’ testimony all the effect claimed for it. .Now the evidence is that the bow of the barge showed signs of forcible impact against and contact with rocks to a distance of 2 to 3 feet above the bottom of the barge; that is, when'the barge struck, her bow must have struck an obstruction which reached up 2% feet higher*187 than the bottom of the barge. Thus, if the barge was only drawing a normal draught of 14 feet, the barge must have struck with her bow against an obstruction or shoal of a rocky character which rose up 2% feet higher; so that, if the minimum low water was 14 feet G inches at that point over the higher obstruction struck by the bow, the barge at that time must have been drawing near 17 feet. * * *
“Testing the barge master’s testimony by the circumstances of the case, the conclusion follows that he was mistaken if and when he sounded on the morning of the 21st he thought he found only 12 inches of water in the bottom of the barge. The evidence is he had gone to bed exhausted by a hard day’s pumping, had slept for several hours, and waked that morning and sounded for the depth of water in the barge. And inasmuch as the soundings noticed by him are wholly irreconcilable with the circumstances of the case, the con-elusion is that he was mistaken, and that the only way to account for the barge’s striking as she did is by the explanation that she had been leaking all night, that her draft liad increased from the normal of 14 feet to something ill the neighborhood of 17 feet, and that striking on the bottom at 17 feet or over she was dragged until the bow encountered a slightly higher part of the shoal rising some 2 to 2% feet up against which the bow struck, in consequence of which blow the planks of the bow were crushed in, and up over which the .bow of the barge was dragged, so as to give it the uplifted appearance it had after the barge finally sank. The sinking, therefore, was due, not to the fact that the barge was towed out of the proper channel, or over a place which at its normal draught would not have been wholly and entirely safe for it to be towed at that stage of the tide, but was due to the greater and abnormal draught caused by an unsea worthy condition;'1 that is, a leakage, and for which the towing company respondents would not be responsible.”
We think on these Tacts the libel should not have been dismissed. The proofs show that the seo.w when fully loaded drew 1.7 feet, which therefore was not an abnormal draft. There was no representation as to her draft made to the railway company, and it knew that her actual draft was liable to be increased on the trip, because she was leaking. The libelant was entitled to have his scow safely towed at any draft she could stand, whether due to cargo or to a leak. Of course, if she had foundered, as the answer alleges, because of the leak, the tug would not be responsible; but it is clear that she sank as the result of striking on the rock.
When a tug strands a tow on a well-known and constantly frequented course, she is bound to explain the accident. The Ellen McGovern (D. C.) 27 Fed. 868. If the tow strikes a rock in the channel, as the District Judge found in this case, the claimant is bound to show that the rock was an unknown obstruction. The Mary N. Hogan (D. C.) 30 Fed. 927; The Pierrepont (D. C.) 42 Fed. 687. As it has failed to do this, the decree is reversed, and the court below directed to enter the usual interlocutory decree in favor of the libelants.