Judges: Thomas
Filed Date: 4/19/1902
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The Mars is a large sea-going tug, and the Jenna Hughes is a barge 220 feet in length. On March 23, 1901, the tug, with the barge in tow, laden -with 2,000 tons of coal, and drawing 143/2 feet, left Philadelphia for New York, reaching Over Falls Shoal, at the entrance of Delaware Bay, about 5 :io p. m., March 24th. From Over Falls Buoy the captain of the tug claims that he ■steered for about five miles in the direction of the Seventeen Foot Lump, on a course E. N.; that he then went on a N. E. course for about three and a half miles; whereupon he laid a course N. E. by E., up the New Jersey shore. The usual course is N. E. Y* E., but the •captain of the Mars claims that he made the additional allowance on account of a fog that came up about 6:3o p. m., after the tug had taken its final course, and when the Cape May Light was bearing N. W., distant about six miles. The .course up the coast of N. E. by E. should have taken the tow about two and a half miles clear of the bell buoy ■off Hereford Bar, and three miles off from Hereford Bar. In fact the tug brought up on the bar, whereupon the barge came up on the hawser, and took bottom, and for the injuries thus received this libel is filed. The fog was dense, and the last course adopted by the tug was sufficient. It appears that the tide began to run flood at the entrance of Delaware Bay, at 6:57. The captain of the tug states that he had slack water or ebb tide in the neighborhood of Over Falls Shoal, which would soon turn to flood, and that the tide was flood at Hereford Bar at the time of the accident. Attention is also called to the fact that: “Tidal currents on the coast of New Jersey, when uninfluenced by the winds, as a general rule follow the trend of the shore, except close in near the entrance of the several inlets, where the current •of floods sets in shore, and that of the ebb off shore.” There was no wind. Thus it appears that the captain of the tug had an opportunity to set his course along the coast before the fog set in; that he steered by compass; that nevertheless, in going a distance of eight or eight and a half miles, he deviated three miles and grounded; and this deflection occurred during about an hour and forty-five or fifty minutes. With no wind, with a tide that should not-have carried him in shore, and with full opportunity to maintain his course by compass, and while going at the rate of about five miles an hour, the tug ran ashore. Such a state of facts must condemn the tug in the absence •of adequate explanation.
Upon his cross-examination, Capt. Miles of the tug was asked: ■“Q. And you account for going on the bar because of the bad steering of the barge? A. I have no other way to account for it.” The answer does not suggest that the tug was deflected from its course by the defective steering or action of the barge, and there is no sufficient evidence to sustain such contention. But it is alleged in the answer that after the tug took bottom “she immediately signaled to the barge, which was on a hawser 225 fathoms long, first by whistle and afterwards by the megaphone, to cast off her hawser and come to anchor. The persons on the barge did not obey the order promptly, but finally did let go their anchor. The result of their delay was that the barge ran up on the hawser, swung round, and took bottom lierself.”
A decree will be entered accordingly.