4 F.2d 102 | 5th Cir. | 1925
This is a libel in personam, brought by the appellant for damages to his auxiliary schooner, which occurred in a collision with a barge in tow of appellee’s tug. The collision occurred at night in the channel of Mobile river, just below the city of Mobile. The point of collision was opposite Dredge Island, where the river bends. The channel was normally about 400 feet in width, but there was an obstruction which made it necessary for a vessel coming down the river in passing this point to swing to the eastward and toward the center of the channel. The tug, General Carl A. Loah, with two barges in tow, was in the center of the channel coming up the river, and the barges were somewhat nearer the western edge. The master of the schooner Over the Waves, just as he was about to pass the tug, observed a light to the west of the center of the channel, and, thinking that another vessel was coming up the river, attempted to pass immediately astern of the appellee’s tug, and ran into the tug’s hawser. In this manner the schooner was thrown against the first barge and damaged.
The testimony is in irreconcilable conflict, but that for the appellee is to the effect that neither of the barges had its side lights burning, but each one had one white light on her stem; that the forward barge was 175 feet in length,, and was being towed 125 feet behind the tug; and that the rear barge was 200 feet in length, and only 10
We are of opinion that appellant’s schooner was at fault, in that, notwithstanding lights on the tug indicated a tow, it attempted to cross the center of the channel immediately behind the tug, without first ascertaining that the tow was not alongside. But there wore no side lights on either barge, and the nearest white light was at least 300 feet behind the tug. Both barges were to the westward of the center of the channel, and reasonably indicated an obstruction ahead of the schooner, which as it then appeared might be too close to the westward edge of the channel to permit the schooner to pass to starboard. The schooner, therefore, was apparently in imminent danger, and its action in undertaking to cross behind the tug, to the east side of the channel was reasonably prudent under the circumstances.
' The tug, also, was clearly at fault. The Rules of Navigation provide that barges being towed by a steam vessel in tandem “shall each carry a green light on the starboard side and a red light on the port side and a white light on the stem, except that the last vessel of such tow shall carry two white lights on her stern athwartship horizontal to each other,” etc. Article 25 of the Rules of Navigation makes it the duty of a steam vessel, when it is safe and practicable, to keep to that side of the fairway or mid-channel which lies on its starboard side. The channel where the collision took place was a narrow channel within the meaning of this rule. The No. 4,161 F. 847, 83 C. C. A. 665.
Admittedly each of these rules of navigation were being violated by the tug. There were no green and red side lights on either barge, only one white light, instead of two, was on the rear barge, and the tug was in the center of the channel. The burden was on the appellee to show, not only that its violations of these rules probably did not contribute to the collision, but that they could not have done so. The Pennsylvania, 19 Wall. 125, 137, 22 L. Ed. 148; Belden v. Chase, 150 U. S. 674, 14 S. Ct. 264, 37 L. Ed. 1218; The Martello, 153 U. S. 64, 14 S. Ct. 723, 38 L. Ed. 637; The Britannia, 153 U. S. 130, 14 S. Ct. 795, 38 L. Ed. 660; Lie v. San Francisco & Portland S. S. Co., 243 U. S. 291, 37 S. Ct. 270, 61 L. Ed. 726. If the barges had been equipped with proper lights, in all probability there would have been no collision.
Both the schooner and the tug being at fault, the libel should not have been dismissed, but the damages should be equally divided. The Anna (C. C. A.) 297 F. 382.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.