2 F. Cas. 266 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1870
Causes of collision, civil and maritime, since the passage of the act establishing certain rules and regulations for preventing such disasters, depend, in most cases, upon controverted matters of fact, to be determined by the testimony of witnesses rather than upon questions of law. Decided cases may be referred to in which it is suggested, if not positively stated, that an appellate court will not, in general, re-examine the decree of the subordinate court upon the merits in such a case, where it appears that the matter in issue depends upon the credibility of the witnesses; but those remarks were not necessary to the •decision of the appeal in any one of those cases, nor do they express the correct rule upon the subject as understood at the present time in the supreme court. Newell v. Norton, 3 Wall. [70 U. S.] 267; The Potomac, 2 Black, [67 U. S.] 584; The Marcellus, 1 Black, [66 U. S.] 417; The Water Witch, Id. 500. Since the passage of the act of March 3, 1803, appeals are allowed to the circuit court from any decree rendered in the district court, in any cause of admiralty and -maritime jurisdiction, where the matter in dispute, exclusive of costs, exceeds the sum or value of fifty dollars, and the provision is, that the circuit court is authorized and required to “receive, hear, and determine such appeal.” 2 Stat. 244. Provision is also made, by the rules prescribed by the supreme court, that the testimony given in the district court may be taken down by the clerk and be transmitted to the circuit court, to be there used on the appeal, or it may be retaken by deposition at the election of the parties, and the fiftieth rule provides that further proof may be taken in the circuit court, which shows to a demonstration that the facts as well as the law of the case are open to revision on appeal in the circuit court. The Baltimore, 8 Wall. [75 U. S.] 382. Where the appeal involves a question of fact, the burden is on the appellant to show that the decree rendered in the subordinate court is erroneous; but it is a mistake to suppose that the court of paramount jurisdiction will not re-examine the whole testimony in the case. 2 Stat 244; [The Baltimore, supra;] 8 Wall. [75 U. S.] 382.
Both vessels, under the circumstances of this case, were bound to observe and follow the rules and regulations established by congress to prevent collisions on the water, and it is clear, if they had done so, the collision would not have occurred. 13 Stat. 60. Inevitable accident is not even suggested, nor could it be with any hope that any such view • would 'be adopted by the court, as it was clear that one or the other, or both, were in fault. Union S. S. Co. v. New York & V. S. S. Co., 24 How. [65 U. S.] 313; The Morning Light, 2 Wall. [69 U. S.] 556. Proper regulation lights were shown by the schooner, as required by law, and the proofs also show to the entire satisfaction of the court that she had a competent lookout properly stationed on the vessel. Proper sidelights, as required by the regulations established by the act of April 29, 1864, were also shown by the steamer; but she had “a central range of two white lights,” as required by section -11 of the act of July 25, 1866, for “all coasting steamers” and other steamers, navigating bays, lakes, rivers, &c., as therein specifically provided. ■ 13 Stat. 59; 14 Stat 228. Extended remarks upon the circumstance that the steamer had two white lights, instead of one only, as prescribed by the first-named provision, are unnecessary, as it is clear, even if the steamer was not one falling within the regulation established by the subsequent act, that the circumstance that she had two white lights did not contribute, in any respect whatever, to the disaster.
The respondents admit that the two vessels came in collision on the day, and substantially at the place, as assumed by the libellants, and that the schooner suffered damage; but they do not admit that she was totally lost, nor do they admit the extent of the injury to the cargo, as alleged in the libel. They admit the collision, without qualification, and the proofs show that the steamer struck the schooner on the port bow, near the stem, carrying away the bowsprit, stem, and port knight-head, and that the effect of the blow extended across the vessel, crushing out the starboard bow, which caused the vessel immediately to capsize and sink. Steamships are required to keep out of the way of a sailing ship, when the two are pro
Argument to show that those rules are applicable to the case before the court is unnecessary, as that point is conceded by both parties, and is too plain for controversy. Pri- or to the collision, and at the time the two vessels came together, five persons, to wit, the master, mate, wheelsman, and two seamen, were on the deck of the schooner, three having been there for some time, and the •other two came up from the lower watch just before the collision took place, and they all testify, in the most positive manner, that the schooner did not change her course. Support to their statements is also derived from the testimony of the master of the schooner “Nightingale,” which was to the leeward, and sailing in the same direction as the schooner of the libellants. He was on •deck at the time of the collision; saw both vessels at the time; and he states that he did not see any change in the course of the injured schooner before she was struck by the steamer. Testimony was introduced by the respondents, tending to show that the witness had made contradictory statements upon the subject out of court, but the testimony introduced for that purpose is not of a character to impair, essentially, the credit of the witness. Attempt is made by the respondents to controvert those statements, and to show by the statements of witnesses on board the steamer, and by evidence in its nature circumstantial, that the schooner did change her course, and that the collision was •occasioned by that departure from the rules •of navigation as established by the act of •congress. Three persons were in the pilothouse of the steamer when the schooner was •descried, and they remained there as the two vessels advanced to the place of collision; ■and there was also one seaman on the deck, ■called, in the testimony, the bow watch. Those in the pilot-house, to wit, the pilot, second mate, and wheelsman, testify that they •descried the schooner when she was a mile •distant, and they state that the schooner did subsequently change her course before the ■collision occurred. Repugnant statements cannot both be true, and when they cannot be reconciled, the one or the other must be rejected; and in the performance of that •duty it usually becomes important to ascertain which witness had the best means of knowledge, as it is more reasonable to conclude that the error is the result of mistake than of deliberate intention. Evidently the libellants’witnesses speak from actual knowledge, and unless they have willfully stated what they know to be false, their statements, it would seem, must be correct. They were on the deck of the schooner, and they cannot well be mistaken in respect to the matter in controversy. Distant nearly a mile,—as the respondents’witnesses were,—and situated in the pilot-house of the steamer, they could only infer what they have affirmed, or to say the least, inference must have entered very largely into their statements as to what transpired on the deck of the schooner, as .it is hardly to be credited that they could see either the helmsman, or the wheel. Mail Steamship Co. v. Rumball, 21 How. [62 U. S.] 382.
Certain circumstances, stated by the witnesses situated in the pilot-house of the steamer, are invoked by the respondents as confirlmatory of their theory, and it is insisted, in argument, that one of those circumstances is of itself sufficient to overcome the statement of the libellants’ witnesses, that the schooner did not change her course; and to prove the affirmative of that issue, circumstantial evidence may undoubtedly be sufficient to control direct testimony of a repugnant tendency, and to establish a theory of an opposite character; but it is indispensably necessary, in order that it may have any such effect, that the circumstantial facts, from which the inference is to be drawn, should be fully proved. An inference from an inference, if it be allowable at all, cannot be regarded, even in a civil case, as having much probative force, because the chances that it may be erroneous render it unsafe as the basis of judicial action. This is especially so when it is opposed to the direct statements of credible witnesses, who are otherwise entirely unimpeached. Presumptive proof is admissible in every case; but the collateral facts, from which the presumption is drawn, must be fully proved. Certainly no safe inference or presumption can be drawn from such facts until they are satisfactorily established. 1 Stark. Ev. 13, 57. The express testimony of the witnesses in the pilot-house of the steamer is, that when they first descried the schooner, they saw both her green and red lights, and that, as she advanced, her green light disappeared, and the inference from that circumstance is that she ported her helm, and fell off to the leeward. Sailing ships under way shall carry the same lights as steamships under way, “with the exception of the white mast-head light, which they shall never carry,” that is, they shall carry a green light on the starboard side, and a red light cm the port side, constructed as required in the regulations enacted by congress; and the further provision is, that they shall botn be fitted with inboard screens, projecting at least three feet forward from the light, so as to prevent those lights from being seen across the bow. Lights constructed and fitted in that way