Case ID: f_74/html/0898-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "COXE, District Judge.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

THE BULGARIA. UNION TRANSIT CO. v. THE BULGARIA.
    (District Court, N. D. New York.
    June 12, 1896.)
    Collision — Steamer with Moored Vessel.
    A steamer which, in attempting to roach her berth at the south pier at the westerly end of St. Mary’s Fails Canal, ran into a moored vessel in plain sight, in ordinary weather, and without the intervention of any interfering current, held solely in. fault.
    This was a libel in rem by the Union Transit Company against the steamer Bulgaria, to recover damages sustained by the steamer W. H. Stevens in collision with the Bulgaria.
    Norris Morey, for libelant.
    Harvey D. Goulder, for claimant.
   COXE, District Judge.

Between 2 and 8 o’clock on the morn- . ing of June 16, 1895, the steamer W. IL Stevens was in the act of being moored to the south pier at the westerly end of the St. Mary’s Falls Canal. Her bow was fast. Her stern was about 10 feet from the pier and was being drawn in by means of a line from the pier to her capstan. , She was helpless, and, in contemplation of law, was a moored vessel. It was not dark. There were electric lights all along the pier and dawn was commencing. There was no wind and nothing abnormal in the elements.

It is usual for vessels awaiting their turn at the lock to tie up at the south pier. To do this requires ordinary care and prudence and nothing more. It is a very simple maneuver. The Stevens had accomplished it without the slightest difficulty. The Bulgaria followed the Stevens into the canal, passing the end of the pier only a short time afterwards. She had the Stevens in sight for some time and knew of her location at the pier. The proper place for the Bulgaria was the berth just west of the Stevens. Instead of taking it she ran into the Stevens almost end on, the bluff! of her port bow struck the Stevens’ stern and she proceeded on with such force that her stem started the heavy timbers of the pier.

The rule is conceded that in such circumstances the presumption is that the moving irnssel is negligent, the burden being upon her to show that she is free from fault or that the accident was inevitable. The Bulgaria has done neither. A mere statement of the facts is a demonstration that the accident could have been avoided. The task of the Bulgaria was one which a mere tyro in navigation should have accomplished successfully. To assert that it was absolutely impossible for her to reach her dock without crashing into another vessel lying at a different berth is an amazing proposition and one wholly new to admiralty jurisprudence.

The theory upon which it is sought to exculpate the Bulgaria from a liability, which, at the time, was frankly admitted, is that she was caught in a mysterious and warlock current which drove her into the Stevens in spite of every effort of her navigators to prevent it. The difficulty with this' theory is that it is based upon the imagination ot counsel rather than upon the proof. The weight of testimony is to the effect that there is never any dangerous current at this point, and, except when the lock is being filled or a high wind is blowing there is no current which should interfere in the slightest degree with the mooring of a vessel at the south pier.

It was not proven that the lock was being filled at the time of the collision, and, as before stated, there was no wind. How it would be possible for any current which might exist at that point to force a vessel to take the erratic, course pux*sued by the Bulgaria it is not easy to perceive. But it is enough to say that if dangerous currents existed it was the duty of the master of the Bulgaria to know of them and guard against their effects. The Bulgaria has not overcome the presumption arising from her collision with a stationary vessel which was absolutely free from fault. Were it necessary for the court to go further and designate the precise fault of the Bulgaria there would be little hesitation in finding that the collision was due, primarily, to her undue rate of speed. She was carried past her true mooring place and instead of going down the canal she endeavored to rectify her mistake by porting and backing. It was too late. The momentum could not be overcome in the narrow space she had thus left for maneuvering.

Further discussion is unnecessary. Suffice it to say that upon the entire record the court is convinced beyond a doubt that the collision was due solely to the negligence of the Bulgaria. The libelant is entitled to the usual decree.