Opinion
July Term, 1896.
Judgment and order reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event. —
This case has twice been before the court upon appeal (76 Hun, 181; 88 id. 509). The facts are substantially set forth in the opinion in 88 Hun, 509, and it is unnecessary to restate them here. The only substantial differences that are claimed to exist in the facts now before us from those when last before the court are, it is claimed, that it now appears that the boats Baker and Cook were racing at the time of the accident, and that also, just prior to the occurrence of the accident, the Cook turned in towards the middle of the channel, thus bringing her hawser across the bow of the plaintiff's boat. The evidence, while it may be considered as tending to establish that the boats were in fact racing, does not show that they were going at a greater rate of speed than was testified to upon the last preceding trial. And while the plaintiff testified that the Cook turned towards the middle of the channel just prior to the accident, he also testifies that at that point the channel kept getting narrower, and that the boats kept getting nearer and nearer together, and that is what he meant in saying that the Cook turned in towards the middle of the channel; so that practically the facts presented here upon this appeal are not different from those before presented.
It is contended that the accident happened through the concurring negligence of the Baker and the Cook; and assuming that the action of the Baker was in violation of the rules of navigation, and was the primary cause of the accident, yet it is contended upon the part of the plaintiff that the defendant did not discharge its whole duty in not seeking to avoid the result of the Baker's action; that it becoming manifest, or probable, that a collision would occur if both boats continued in their course; that the defendant did not take proper care and precaution to avoid the impending collision; that seeing that the Baker was insisting in continuing in its course, refusing to slow up, and persisting in its endeavor to pass the Cook at a place where it was dangerous so to do, that it was incumbent upon the Cook to take such precautions, even to the extent of waiving what might be termed its legal right of way, as would prevent the tows coming together. Assuming it to be the duty of the Cook when it found that the Baker was persisting in its endeavor to pass at a point where it was dangerous to do so, it then remains to be seen as to whether it could do other than it did do for the purpose of preventing any collision between the boats. The weight of the testimony I think establishes, as it did before, the fact that the Cook continued as near to the Vermont shore as it was possible to do without running aground. The testimony is that it was digging the mud from the bottom, that it only departed from its course in following the channel as it grew narrower. It is contended, however, upon the part of the plaintiff that it should have slowed up sufficiently to avoid the danger, and there is some testimony upon the part of the plaintiff's witnesses that the Cook made no effort to reduce its speed; but other evidence tends to prove, and I think establishes, that the speed of the Cook was reduced, and that it could not be further reduced without the tow "kicking up," to use the language of the boatmen testifying, and thus be brought into collision with the tow of the Baker, or running aground in the shallow water of the Vermont side of the channel. I am inclined to think that the preponderance of testimony shows that the navigator of the Cook did not do anything but what could reasonably be expected of him under the circumstances. For these reasons I think the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event. All concurred.