223 F. 581 | 6th Cir. | 1915
(after stating the facts as above).
1. Sailing Conditions Favorable. The navigating conditions were entirely consistent with a safe passing of these ships. Admittedly, the night was clear, and the lights of the ships and on the adjacent shores were alike easily discerned; there were no intervening boats to disconcert the eye and no wind or noises to disturb the hearing; the channel with abundant water was 800 feet in width; and the sailing line was straight and in the center of the channel between the points at which the boats were respectively sighted. In spite of these conditions, surprising difficulties arose soon after each boat had picked up the other. The Fisher was bound up the river and the Clement bound down.
2. Passing Agreement. The first difficulty of the case is met here. According to the master- of the Fisher, immediately after making the turn from the south to the north Grosse Isle channel range, he sighted a vessel ahead and a little below the Mamajuda lights, which proved to be the Clement, and received from her a one-blast passing signal, to which he responded with a like signal; and an agreement for passing port to port was thus concluded. The master of the Clement admits that a port to port passing agreement was made, though not through an initial signal of one blast from the Clement. He testifies that something else happened before. In one instance, he said when the Clement was above the Mamajuda lights, and, in another instance, when she was a little westward of the north channel Grosse Isle range, he “noticed the Fisher coming up the bend at Fighting Island,” and that when she crossed the intersection of the south and north Grosse Isle channel ranges he gave the Fisher “two whistles,” but got no answer, and after waiting “a sufficient time” he “blew two more.” The master of the Fisher declares he did not hear these signals; but however this may be, the master of the Clement thereupon noticed from her lights that the Fisher was on his starboard, and again that she had turned to her
“When he blowed me the one I checked my steamboat down at once to slow speed and blew him an alarm or an attention whistle, whdtever you might call it, to attract his attention, and then as he had gone further over to the eastward, and the boats were so there was no danger, plenty of room to pass by, I answered with the one whistle.”
On cross-examination he stated that he thought it safe to accept the Fisher’s one-blast signal at the time it was given, but also said:
“I blowed a danger signal to attract his attention, and then answered it to let him know I understood he wanted that side, and was going to let him have it. Q. In other words, you said to him, ‘That is dangerous, old fellow, but you can have it if you want it’? A. Yes, sir. Q. What did you blow a danger signal then for? A. To attract his.attention. If he had understood me, I said, ‘Now, if you want that side, take it, all right, but understand it is dangerous.’ Q. To look out for yourself? A. Yes, understand w.e were agreed on it.”
It will be observed that the masters placed the two ships at substantially the same points in the Detroit river at the time each sighted the ship of the other; that they are in harmony as to the exchange of a one-blast signal; but that they differ as to the initial signal, each saying that his one-blast was given in response to a like signal from the other. Further, while both state that when the one-blast signals were exchanged the ships were in situations safely to pass port to port, yet it is plain that the ships could not then- have been as far apart as the masters say they were when sighted. At that time they placed the Clement near the Mamajuda lights and the Fisher at the crossing of the two Grosse Isle channel ranges. That portion of the north channel range is 6,000 feet in length. The master of the Fisher testifies that, when the ships exchanged one-blast sign’als, the Clement was in the neighborhood of three-quarters of a mile away, while the master of the Clement testifies that when the Fisher sounded one blast the Clement was within “five or six lengths” of the Fisher — “2,500 or 2,600 feet or more.” Such estimates of distance, it is true, are not very reliable. Yet these masters were men of long experience in navigating the Great Lakes and the Detroit river, and it is hard to conceive that they could have so mistakenThe length of the portion of the range they were sailing. This is especially true of the master of the Clement, since he .estimated the distance in lengths of his ship and in close correspondence with the distance he gave in. feet. We are therefore constrained to believe that the Clement, if not also the Fisher, was well advanced on the Grosse Isle north channel range when the exchange of one-blast signals' was concluded; and that the masters are so much at odds concerning both the distance between their ships and the circumstances which led to the exchange of single blasts as practically to destroy the value of their opinions touching the safety of passing port to port. Above all, the repeated, admissions of the master of the Clement that
“Inability to avoid a collision usually exists at the time the collision occurs; but it is seldom a matter of much difficulty to trace the cause of the disaster to some antecedent omission of duty on the part of one or the other, or both, of the colliding' vessels.”
3. The Collision. Although the master of the Clement did not explain why he believed the port to port passing araugement would be dangerous, it is to be presumed that the conditions were such as to require most careful maneuvering of the ships in order to avoid disaster. In seeking causal connection then between the passing arrangement and the collision, it will be helpful to consider what the relations of the ships were at that time to the channel range, what was then done by both sets of navigators to avert danger, and also the speed of the ships. The navigating officers of the P'isher claim that when the passing arrangement was concluded they had the Grosse Isle north channel range lights astern of the Eisher, and the ship, which turned out to be the Clement, nearly dead ahead, whereupon an order was given and executed to port the Fisher’s wheel, and shortly after this order was repeated and obeyed for the purpose of opening the Clement’s range lights. The master of the Clement (in connection with a statement that he had shortly before passed certain other ships port to port) said the Clement “was on the north channel Grosse Isle ranges, or a little to the westward, or had been on the range”; again he and his second mate said the compasses of the Clement were then compared and adjusted and a reading taken with relation to the chart course, the one saying this was before the Clement reached the intersection of the Grosse Isle north channel and the Grassy Island ranges, and the other that it was done on the Grosse Isle north channel range; and it may be added that this location of the Clement agrees with the testimony of the navigating officers of the Fisher that when they got the channel range lights over her stern they had the Clement nearly dead ahead. Further, the master of the Clement says that, when the one-blast passing signals were concluded, the P'isher was over his port bow from 150 to 200 feet. Pie states, however, that he gave no order to his helm at that time, because he did not consider that there was any occasion for such an order. Plainly, then, whether under the testimony the Clement be treated as sailing on the range line, or on a parallel line to the westward, at the time it is said she accepted the Fisher’s one-blast signal, the distance between either line continued and the con tinuation of that of the Fisher, and consequently the degree, of safe»
It would be futile to attempt to reconcile the testimony as to what happened as the boats approached the point of collision. The steamers seem to have been kept on the courses they respectively selected upon the completion of the passing arrangement, until it was too late to maneuver effectively to escape danger. Much is said on both sides as to which vessel disrupted the situation. The master of the Fisher testifies that the Clement turned to her port suddenly, and “appeared to be crowding us.” And the master of the Clement insists that the Fisher sheered to the westward and across the range line or bow of the Clement, disclosing her green light, but quickly turned back showing her red light and attempted to cross the Clement’s bow to the eastward; that, in spite of the Clement’s effort to avoid collision, the bluff of her port bow struck the' Fisher on her port side aft of the boiler house. The testimony describing these movements of the ships shows a degree of excitement and confusion on the part of the respective navigating crews which was calculated to exaggerate alike their impressions and narrations of the situation and the events. This is seen, for example, in a sudden, though vain, effort of the master of the Fisher to sound a danger signal at the time he claims the Clement was crowding the Fisher. He says the gear fouled and only “two short toots” resulted. The Clement did not regard them as an ordinary two-blast signal, yet responded with two blasts. The confusion is further
Furthermore, both of these ships are open to criticism on account of their lookouts. At the time the passing arrangement was concluded, the Fisher’s lookout was not at his place of duty; and while the Clement had her lookout in proper position from the time the Fisher was sighted until the collision, the lookout was neither called to testify nor his absence accounted for. The Clement had the right of way at the start (Navigation Rule 24 [Comp. St. 1913, § 7934]) and insists, as we have seen, that she claimed it by calling for a starboard passing. The master of the Fisher qualifies his statement that he did not hear the two-blast signal by admitting that, under the circumstances, he may have heard but one of the blasts of the Clement. The result was, as
“This is true, and the libel is defective on that account, but in admiralty an omission to state some 1'aeta which prove to be material, but which cannot have occasioned any surprise to the opposite party, will not be allowed to work any injury to the libelant, if the court can see there was no design on his part in omitting to state them. There is no doctrine of mere technical variance in the admiralty, and subject to the rule above stated, it is the duty of the court to extract the real case from the whole record, and decide accordingly.”
See, also, The Gazelle, 128 U. S. 474, 487, 9 Sup. Ct. 139, 32 L. Ed. 496; Davis v. Adams, 102 Fed. 520, 523, 524, 42 C. C. A. 493, and citations (C. C. A. 9th Cir.). If objection to the testimony had been taken below it is clear that the cross-libels might have been cured by amendment. Pioneer Steamship Co. v. McCann, 170 Fed. 873, 880, 96 C. C. A. 49 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.); Monongahela River Consol. C. & C. Co. v. Shinnerer, 196 Fed. 375, 384, 117 C. C. A. 193 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.). It certainly cannot be safely said that the collision might not have been avoided if the Clement had ported her helm upon closing the passing arrangement, or if her speed had been reduced to hare steerageway. In saying this, we appreciate the language of rule 23, which only exacts an alteration of the helm “whenever required,” and also of rule 26, which only requires reduction of the speed to “hare steerageway” when the ships have “approached within half a mile of each other”; and still it cannot be that a master can rightfully omit to alter the ship’s helm when he knows that the passing agreement he enters into is dangerous; and, further, this master himself says the ships were within, the half-mile limit when the agreement was closed.
It results that in our view the faults found as to the two ships were concurrent' in causing the collision, and that the damages must be divided. Since .the issues, the testimony, and the assignments relate only to the question of fault and the rulings thereon, as pointed out in the statement, it is neither necessary nor proper to pass' upon any of the questions, apart from those determined by the decree itself, that may arise between either of the shipowners and the cargo appellants or those representing death claims or the claim, for personal injuries.
The decree (except so far as it accords to the Buffalo Steamship Company the benefit of the limitation of liability under sections 4283, 4284, and 4285, with their amendments and supplements, - of the Revised Statutes) is reversed, with costs; and each cause is remanded, with direction to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion and order a reference therein to ascertain the damages.