(after stating the facts as above). The combination of circumstances which brought about the collision with the central abutment of the bridge was one for which the tug cannot be held responsible. The tide was ebb, setting upstream towards the Hudson river and against the Bronx abutment of the bridge. The tug was proceeding up the river with a tow on each side, the Isabella on the port side and another coal barge, the Eureka, on the starboard side. The Isabella was towed stern first at the request of her master, the entire width of the flotilla being about 61 feet. The width of the draw on the Bronx side was 120 feet, leaving a space of about 30 feet on either side, assuming that the tug navigated directly in the center of the draw. The Manhattan side of the draw was choked with car floats, making it impossible to see up the river on that side for some distance. As the No. 2 approached, the large tug No. 7, with a railroad float loaded with cars on her starboard side, projected herself without warning directly across the draw. The No. 2 was confronted with a sudden peril for which she was in no way responsible. She could not proceed on her course without collision with the float. As the tide was setting across the draw, it was a difficult manoeuvre to back without coming in contact either with the piling surrounding the central abutment or with the Bronx abutment, which was of stone. She did collide with the piling around the central abutment. No fault can be predicated of her action in this regard. It would have been remarkable if she had been able to stop and back her unwieldy tow against a cross tide without striking one^or the other of these abutments. It is said that she should have signalled her intention to go through the draw, but we are referred to no rule requiring her to do so. She was navigating on the right-hand side of the river, intending to pass through the right-hand draw. There were no boats coming down the river and apparently her course was clear. Undoubtedly there was grave fault somewhere — first, in permitting the car floats to tie up in the western draw, not only obstructing the chan*102nel but the view of navigators going up and down the river; second, in permitting the piling around the central pier to become out of order, and third, in permitting the unwieldy car float to close up the easterly draw without warning of her intention so to do. For these faults, however, the No. 2 is in no way responsible. It is said that she should have had a lookout, but we fail to see how a lookout would in any way have averted the disaster. He could have seen nothing which the pilot of the tug failed to observe. It is true that one of the witnesses, the master of the steam tug Mattie, which was following the No. 2, says that he saw the railroad float crossing the eastern draw when he was at 122d street, which is four blocks from the bridge,' but later on in his testimony he makes it clear that it was not his intention to convey this impression. He says that when he saw No. 7 she was entering her slip on the Bronx side of the river and entirely clear of No. 2 and her tow and that he did not see the car float when it was obstructing the passage. Indeed, from the testimony and the diagrams fur-, nished, we think it would be well nigh impossible to see the car float at the point first indicated by the witness.
This brings us to what are practically the only questions in dispute, namely: Was the Isabella injured by contact with the central pier, and if so, was the injury occasioned by conditions the existence of which the master of the tug knew or ought to have known? Assuming that the first question should be answered in the affirmative, we proceed to an examination of the second. The master testified that he did not know the condition of the spiling around the central pier below the high-water line. The testimony indicates that the obstacle which caused the injury to the Isabella was over four feet below the high-water line. A witness who made photographs at low water, after the accident, testifies to the dilapidated condition of the central pier, but we think it would be establishing too stringent a rule to hold tugs liable because their, masters are not acquainted with the condition of the abutments of all the drawbridges along the river which are only visible at low water. In view of all the circumstances we cannot say, having in mind the other perils which confronted him, that the master 'of the No. 2 was at fault by reason of the contact with the central pier. The tug was neither a common carrier nor an insurer. The highest possible degree of skill and care was not required of her. A pilot navigating a narrow, crowded tidal stream crossed by many bridges is sufficiently occupied in avoiding visible perils and should not be charged with fault because, for instance, he is unaware of submerged projecting bolt heads in the piling of an abutment which, except in case of an unforeseen emergency, could not cause injury to his tow.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.