THE PRINCETON.
557
discharged. 62 Fed. 847. From these decreea the receivers of the tug have appealed. James Armstrong, for libelant Harris. Anson B. Stewart, for libelant Tracy. Samuel Park, for claimant the Nutmeg State. Before WALLACE and LACOMBE, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM. The collision occurred at 2 :35 p. m. on December 26, 1893, under the following circumstances: The Monitor was coming down the East river, about in midstream, having three barges on each side; the Dickerson being outside, on the starboard side. The tide was ebb, and the wind northwest and strong. She had reached a point about opposite pier 39, when the Nutmeg State was perceived just starting -from her berth at pier 35, and turning to go up the river. Two whistles were blown by the tug, indicating her intention to pass starboard to starboard. They were promptly responded to by the Nutmeg State. Had the navigation thus agreed upon been persisted in, there would undoubtedly have been no col· lision, because the Monitor would have passed the point of intersection before the steamer, on her turn to port,-necessarily a long one, because of her own length and the ebb tide,-reached the mid· dIe of the river. But the tug failed to conform her .navigation to her signal. She starboarded, it is true, but, immediately after giving her signal, slowed her engines down to one bell. We concur with the district judge that this failure to keep the promise of her signal was the proximate cause of the collision. The Nutmeg State had no reason to anticipate such a violation of the agreement that the tug would keep on, and, when it was perceived that she had slowed, it was too late to avoid the catastrophe. It is unnecessary to add anything-to the discussion of the facts by the district judge. Decrees are affirmed, with interest and costs, and with costs, respectively. THE PRINCETON. HOBOKEN FERRY CO. v. PENNSYLVANIA R. CO. (Cireuit Court ot Appeals, Second Circuit. April 24, 1895.) No. 115. L COLLISION OF FERRYBOATS IN NEW YORK HARBOR-FOG SIGNALS.
The statutory rule requiring steam vessels under way in a tog to sound steam whistles at Intervals ot not less than a minute, applies to all such vessels moving In waters which they have not the exclusive right to occupy, and in which other vessels may be met. Held, therefore, that a terrYboat, which was moving about in a dense tog, part ot the time within and part ot the time without the line of the piers, attempting to find her slip, was In fault for ceasing to sound the signals. Distinguishing The Shady Side, IT Blatchf. 132, Fed. Cas. No. 12,692. Reversing 61 Fed. 116_ A ferryboat has not the eXclusive right to occupy the water lying within the ends of the piers above and below her slip; and, althougb
I.
B.um-RIGBTS OF .I<'ERRYBOAT INSIDE OF PIERS.
658
FEDERAL REPORTER,
vol. 67.
same; they would not be trespassers there, as they might unintentionally get inside the line In a fog. S. BAME.
vessels passIng up and down the rIver would not ordinarily enter the
Vessels passIng up and down the Hudson rIver unduly encroach upon the rights of ferryboats when they keep so near the ends of the piers as to unnecessarily embal,'rass the latter in their movements In entering or leaving their slips. Held, therefore, that a ferryboat which had crossed from Hoboken to the New York shore; and was slowly feeling her way down the river in a dense fog, near to or within the ends of the piers which were located above and below the slip of another ferryboat, was in fault for colllsion with the latter.
Appeal from the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. This was a libel by the Hoboken Ferry Company, owner of the ferryboat Orange, against the ferryboat Princeton, the Pennsyl· vania Railroad Company, claimant, to recover damages occasioned by a collision between the two vessels. In the district court the libel was dismissed. 61 Fed. 116. 'fhe libelant appeals. Stewart & Macklin, for appellant. Robinson, Biddle & Ward, for appellee. Before WALLACE and LACOMBE, Circuit Judges. WALLACE, Circuit Judge. The .collision which is the subject of controversy in this cause took place in the Hudson river, in the early morning, in a heavy fog, between two ferryboats, the Orange and the Princeton. The Orange was upon one of her regular trips from Hoboken, bound for her slip at the foot of Bar· clay street; and the Princeton had come from Jersey City on one of her regular trips, bound for her slip at the foot of Desbrosses street. Owing to the heavy fog, the Orange, instead of proceed· ing on her usual course, had been brought over near the New York shore,somewhat above the ferry slip of the Princeton, and was slowly feeling her way down the river near the ends of the piers, sounding her fog signals at proper intervals, and had got nearly opposite the slip of the Princeton, when she heard the paddlewheels of the Princeton, a short distance off on her port bow. She immediately reversed her engines, and sounded alarm whistles, but instantly the Princeton became visible, and struck the Orange on the latter's port bow. The Princeton, while opposite her slip, had been obliged to wait for a tow which passed between her and the ends of the piers, and had drifted with the flood tide somewhat above her slip. She then went forward, and attempted to make her slip, but failed to do so; and, intending to make a second attempt, backed out and up the river a distance of about 200 feet, and had ordered her engines ahead, but w.as still moving backward when the collision took place. She had been sounding her fog signals at proper intervals up to the time when the tow passed in front of her; but at that being so near her slip, she stopped sounding them, and from that time until the collision, an interval which occupied two or three minutes, she omitted to give any signals. The ferryboats of the several lines had distinctive
559
fog signals, and each vessel 'on this occasion had heard and recog· nized the signals of the other; but when the Princeton stopped giving signals the pilot of the Orange assumed that she had entered her slip, and until her paddlewheels were heard supposed she was out of the way of the Orange. It is quite difficult, if not imposible, in view of the density of the fog, to locate the precise spot of the collision, and the contradiction in the testimony of the witnesses need not be ascribed to any intentional misrepresentation on the part of any of them. The. district judge was of the opinion that it was inside of a line drawn from the end of pier 41 to the end of the first pier below the slip of the Princeton, and the .weight of testimony would seem to favor that conclusion. Both piers projected into the river beyond the entrance of the ferry slip, pier 41 about 300 feet and the lower pier about 200 feet. As these piers were about 600 feet apart, there was a very considerable area of water between a line extending from their ends and the entrance to the ferry slip. The pilot of the Orange had discovered that his vessel was near the piers when some little distance above pier 41. His vessel at that time was then heading a little west of south, and he testifies that he thereupon headed her more to the south, and kept her on that course until the collision occurred, a period of three or four minutes. This change must have brought the Orange quite clos6 to the end of pier 41 as she came opposite to it, and by the time she was opposite the ferry slip it is probable she was inside of the line of the pier ends. Upon these facts we think both vessels should be held in fault. The Princeton violated the statutory rule which requires all steam vessels, when under way in a fog, to sound a steam whistle at intervals of not more than one minute. She had been under way, going forward and backward, part of the time outside and part of the time inside of the line of the pier ends, during a 'period in which she should have sounded her whistle two or three times. It is not necessary to hold that the rule applies to a ferryboat after she has entered her slip, although still under way, because the Princeton had not entered her slip; but, unless its language is ignored, it must apply whenever a vessel is under way in waters which she has nort the exclusive right to occupy, and in which other vessels may be met. The Princeton did not have the exclusive right to the area between the ends of the piem, and, although vessels passing up and down the river would not ordinarily enter it, they would not be trespassers there. In a fog such vessels might find themselves unintentionally and excusably inside of the line of the pier ends. The case of The Shady Side, 17 BIatchf. 132, Fed: Oas. No. 12,692, is cited as an authority for the proposition that a vessel moving in a fog in a slip between the 'piers is not required to sound fog signals. In that case the vessel 'charged with violating the rule was so far inside the pier ends that her omission to give fog signals was harmless, and, as the court said, would have tended to mislead the other vessel if they had been given. We fully acquiesce in the judgment in that case,
560
and in:the.cautious language of the opinion that the rule Ie only intended to apply to vessels moored or moving in the way of commerce, and not to those lying at docks, or, ordinarily, to those moving in slips. In the present case the pilot of the Orange was actually misled by the omission of the Princeton to continue sound· ing signals. IIe knew of the proximity of his vessel to the slip of the PrincetOl1; knew that the Princeton had been approaching her slip on a course crossing the course of his own vessel, and was led to assume, as he reasonably might, when the signals of the Princeton stopped, that the latter had actually entered her slip, and was beyond the.path of the Orange. He was thus lulled into a mistaken sense of security by her conduct. The Orange must be condemned because she was navigating un· justifiably near the entrance to the ferry slip of the Princeton. Vessels passing up and down the Hudson river unduly encroach upon the rights of ferryboats when they keep so near the ends of the piers as to unnecessarily embarrass the latter in their movements in entering or leaving their slips. This proposition has recently been reiterated in The Breakwater, 155 U. S. 252, 15 Sup. Ct. 99. The exigencies of navigation frequently compel ferryboats to make maneuvers similar to those which the Princeton was making, and no other vessel is justified in unnecessarily encroaching upon the room required for executing them. The Orange was off her usual route, and was not in the vicinity of her own slip. If a course near the ends of the piers was safer or more convenient for her because of the dense fog, it was for the same reason more hazardous to the ferryboats whose slips lay along that course, and whose entrance or exit from them might be intercepted by her presence. Doubtless the master of the Orange did not intend to allow his vessel to come so near the entrance of the ferry slip, but he had ample warning of her proximity to it; and when he discovered the situation, and changed her course more to the southerly, he should have changed it more to the westerly, so as to keep a reasonable distance away. . Both vessels having been in fault, the presumption is that the fault of each contributed to the collision. If those in charge of the Princeton had expected that another ferryboat would be navi· gating between the ends of the piers, they probably would not have omitted the precaution of giving the fog signals. If these signals had not been omitted, the Orange would probably not have been misled, and could have taken necessary precautions to avoid collision. The case is one where each vessel has been guilty of a breach of duty, and it is impossible to say that the fault of one did not influence the conduct of the other. We conclude that the decree of the tlistrict court should be reversed, and a recovery awarded to the libelant for half its damages. It is thereforeocdered that the cause be remitted, with instructions to the district court to decree for the libelant conformably with this opinion, with the costa .of this appeaL
ILLINOIS STEEL CO. t1. SA.N ANTONIO &: G. S. RY. CO.
561
ILLINOIS STEEL CO. (Circuit Court.
T.
SA.N ANTONIO & G. S. RY. CO. et aL No. 556-
w.
D. Texas, San Antonio Division. May 9, 1895.)
WRITS-SERVICE ON CORPORATION-RETURN.
Under Rev. St. Tex. art. 1223, authorlzing the citation in a suit against an incorporated company to be served on the president, secretary, or treasurer, or on the local agent of such company, where the writ commands the marshal to summon a railroad company, but does not name the officer on whom it is to be served, a return showing service of the citation on the president, secretary, and local agent, respectively, in person, shows a valid service on the railroad company.
l.
SAME-MOTION TO QUASH.
Where a return shows that a citation was served on the president, secretary, and local agent of a corporation defendant (Rev. St. Tex. art. 1223), naming them, the citation will not be quashed on motion of defendant, on the ground that the names of the officers served were not contained in the petition and writ, even conceding such omission to be material, where defendant does not deny under oath that the person served were its officers or agents.
Action by the TIlinois Steel Company against the San Antonio & Gulf Shore Railway Company and others on a promissory note. Defendant railway company moves to quash the citation. Suit is brought by plaIntiff to recover of defendants the sum of $27,903.99, evidenced by the promissory note executed by defendants to plaintiff on the 1st of, November, 1894. The petition alleges that plaintiff is a corporation, created and existing under the laws of Illinois; and that the defendant railway company is a corporation created and existing under the laws of. Texas, having Its principal public office and place of business in the city of San Antonio, Bexar county, and Western district of Texas, and that its presid(mt, secretary, llnd treasurer reside in said county and district, and, further, that it has a local agent representing it therein. The petition prays that the defendants be cited "in the manner authorized and provided by law." As to the defendant railway company three citations were Issued and served, respectively, upon G. G. Clifford, as president, R. E. Saddler, as secretary, and V. B. Colley, as local agent. The citations are similar, and are of the following form: "United States ot A.merica, Western District of Texas, at San Antonio. Citation in Circuit Court. "The President of the United States to the Marshal of the Western District of Texas, Greeting: You are hereby commanded to summon the San Antonio & Gulf Shore Railway Company, a resident of the county of Bexar, in the Western district of Texas, if to be found therein, to be and appear before the honorable circuit court of the United States, at a court to be holden in and for said district, at San Antonio, on the first Monday, being the 6th day, of May, A. D. 1895, and the flrst day of the regular term of said court in course, to answer a petition and complaint exhibited and filed in said court on the 18th day of March, A. D. 1895, in a suit numbered on the docket of said court No. 556, wherein the IllinoIs Steel Company is plaintiff, and the San Antonio & Gulf Shore Railway Company, Wm. Davis, John Ireland, H. O. Engelke, and George Dullnig are defendants. The nature of the plaintiff's demand Is as follows, to wit: Praying judgment against each of said defendants for the sum of $27,903.99, besides interest, costs, and $6.62 protest fees, due upon a promissory note dated November 1, 1894, executed by said defendants, whereby said defendants, and each of them jointly and' severally, for value received, promised to pay to the order of plaintiff at the Fifth National Bank of San Antonio, Texas, the said sum of $27,903.99, in U. S. gold coin of standard weight and fineness, with interest v.67F.no.5-36