The Wyomissing
Opinion of the Court
March 28, 1914, the tug Wyomissing with a hawser tow of twenty-five light boats in six tiers of four each and one tailing on behind was on her way from Port Eiberty, N. Y., to Port Reading, N. J. The tide was ebb, and as she approached Elizabeth-port, in the Kills, her helper tug, the Pencoyd, went on the starboard side to keep the tow as it rounded the bend on the Staten Island side at Holland Hook or Dooley’s Point from swinging against the Iron dock on the New Jersey shore. Dredge No. 7, belonging to the Morris & Cumings Dredging Company was at work at a point half a mile west of the bend excavating the channel under a contract with the government. The low had to pass between her and the New Jersey shore, and in doing so pulled the Meta Harjes, port boat of the fourth tier, against the mud scow on the starboard side of the dredge. To recover for the damage so caused her owner filed this libel against the tug Wyomissing, whose claimant brought in the Dredging Company under the fifty-ninth rule (29 Sup. Ct. xlvi).
The pilot and several witnesses on the tug testified that he had blown a danger signal in approaching the dredge as notice to her to move the scow which was alongside. The witnesses from the dredge testify that no such signal was heard, and in view of the noise which the operation of the machinery makes this is most likely. At all events they did
The decree is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE WYOMISSING
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published