Court Opinion

ID: 8744076
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 11:00:21.340037+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:34.004375
License: Public Domain

THOMAS, District Judge.
The railway of the Long Island Railroad Company is carried over Flushing creek by a drawbridge, herein called the “Railway Bridge.” Some 480 feet north of it is the highway bridge. The channel between the bridges is practically straight, and the width is about 180 feet. Xorth of the highway bridge the railway bridge can be seen whether the draw of the lower bridge is open or shut, but if the vessel be on the west side it is claimed that the railroad is entirely shut off, and it is probable that it is obscured. The west side is often preferable for heavy draught vessels, for the purpose of avoiding the easterly rocks, which extend for some distance below the bridge, and it was upon the westerly side that on August 16, 1900, the steam tug O. F. Roe approached the highway bridge in its undertaking to deliver the schooner Shepard and cargo at Jones’ Dock, south of the railroad bridge. At a considerable distance north of the highway bridge the tug whistled for the opening of the draw in the highway bridge, and the same signal is practically used, at least it is available, to give notice to the tender of the draw in the railway bridge. When the tug had *286passed the highway. bridge, her pilot discovered that the upper bridge was closed, and at a'time thereafter, which will be noticed, the tug dropped back alongside, on the port hand of the schooner, and made fast; but before the headway could be stopped the schooner struck against piles on the eastern side of the dock, and received the injury which is the subject of this libel. It is urged againsi the railroad company that the tender' did not open the draw, nor give timely notice that it was closed, and against the tug that she entered the space between the two bridges without knowing the condition of the draw, and in not sooner stopping the schooner upon the discovery that the draw was closed. The navigators of the tug were very familiar with the conditions. They knew that while yet north of the highway bridge they were not customarily advised whether the draw was open or shut; hence the present claim that the railroad company should have given a warning suitably north of the bridge was neither expected, and in fact such warning was contrary to the practice of the parties, in which there had been long acquiescence. Moreover, if the signal had been given and observed, it is obvious that the tug would not have stopped north of the highway bridge, because it was the invariable practice of this tug to go beyond the first bridge, and, ,if the draw was closed, to stop and await its opening. There was ample opportunity to do this in safety. Hence it is immaterial whether the bridge tender used a flag, as he states he did, to give notice that the draw was closed. The tug would not have stopped north of the "bridge, and' when he entered the bridge he saw -that the draw was closed, and the tug was just where it was expected to be in such an event, and where it would have been in any case. Hence, while the tender was undoubtedly on the bridge, the probable absence of the flag is unimportant. Moreover, a train was shortly due, and there was no time to open the draw before it passed, and therefore the draw was properly closed. What, then, caused the accident? It was the failure of the tug to undertake sooner the stoppage of the schooner. The tug had been accustomed to conduct craft more easily managed, and the master made a miscalculation of his ability to arrest the sj)eed of the schooner béfore she came on the piles at the left of the railway bridge, the contact with which was so moderate that the injury seems to have been due to some peculiarly unfortunate manner of striking. It is urged that the; tug could not have stopped earlier, but it is believed that this contention is not sustained. The distance between the bridges permitted the tug to drop back and make fast some time before she did, as the schooner’s hull was 115 feet, the hawser 60 feet, and the tug 65 feet, in length. Hence, when the stern of the schooner cleared the bridge, the bow of the tug was 240 feet from the upper bridge, in a place where the tug expected that the upper draw might be closed. At that time the tug should have gone back, and made fast at once, and begun to arrest the headway of the schooner. This maneuver was not undertaken until a considerable portion of this distance had been passed. The time was either slightly too short, or sufficient energy was not used- to effect the desired stoppage. The fault of the pilot was that *287of miscalculation, but it is sufficient to make the tug liable. There should be a decree dismissing the libel as to the railroad company, and adjudging the tug liable for the damages and costs.