67 Me. 399 | Me. | 1877
The rules of navigation prescribe the conduct of vessels towards each other while traversing the natural highway of ocean and river. They are founded in common sense and experience. They were established for the general security of commerce, for the prevention of collisions and the consequent protection of life and property, and for the ascertainment of the rights of parties when collisions occur through the violation of rules applicable thereto. The general principle is that when collision may result from the continued directions of two vessels, that one which can the more readily vary her course, is bound to do so. Hence one sailing before the wind or with a fair wind, must for the reason mentioned, give way to another close hauled to the wind. And a steamboat, which can be moved at will in any direction — forward, backward, or stopped altogether — having her movements more under immediate control than any sailing vessel, which can go only when and where the winds and currents permit, always has the power to avoid collision when managed with ordinary skill and prudence. These rules have become settled by repeated adjudication and they are now embodied in the statutes of the United States. Those applicable to the case at bar are as follows: “If two vessels, one of which is a sail-vessel and the other a steam-vessel, are proceeding in such directions as to involve risk of collision, the steam-vessel shall keep out of the way of the sail-vessel.
“Every steam-vessel, when approaching another vessel so as to involve risk of collision, shall slacken her speed, or, if necessary, stop and reverse.
“When by rules 17, 19, 20 and 22 one of two vessels shall keep out of the way, the other shall keep her course,” &c. JR. S. of U. 8., c. 5, § 4233.
The rules of admiralty on the subject of collision do not concur in all respects with those of the common law. This being an action at common law, tried by a jury, the presiding justice properly instructed them, in substance, that if the collision were the fault of the plaintiif, or of both parties, or of neither, the plaintiff could not recover. If it happened by the fault of the defendants and without any contributory fault of the plaintiff, then he could
We now pass to a consideration of the motions.
The western bank of that reach in the Penobscot river extending from “Pulpit Bock” down to and including “Stubb’s Point,” is very high, the Point rising more than one hundred feet above the water. Between the Bock and the Point the course of the river is S.E. by E.; and when the Point is turned the river flows due south. In this lower reach some two to three thousand feet below the Point and about three hundred feet from the eastern shore, is “Buck’s Ledge,” between which and the western shore is the channel about seven hundred feet in width.
At about noon on July 2, 1874, near high water, with a flood tide and a six knot breeze “south a little easterly,” the plaintiffs’ schooner, Bloomfield, of forty-five tons, with no cargo on board, manned by a master, one able bodied seaman and a boy of sixteen years, was sailing up the lower roach under a mainsail, foresail and gall-topsail on the port side, and a jib, with the captain at the wheel and the seaman near him on the port side of the wheel. At the same time, defendants’ steamer “Cambridge,” of about thirteen hundred tons, on her regular trip from Bangor to Boston, with the captain, one helmsman and a passenger in the wheelhouse, was steaming down the upper reach, at her usual speed of twelve knots. She rounded the Point with helm hard to port and in attempting to pass the Bloomfield on the latter’s port side struck her on her starboard quarter, a little aft of her fore rigging, cut her in two and passed between the severed portions some distance.
The plaintiffs contended before the jury that they were in no fault; hut that the collision was caused by the negligence of the defendants’ servants, in that both pilots were off duty at the time, taking their dinner, that the speed of the steamer was not slackened, that she neither stopped nor reversed; and that there was not room enough for the steamer to pass, as she attempted to, between the schooner and the western shore, but that she should have passed on the other side where the channel was open and free. On the other hand, the defendants contended that as soon
This question of fact was the principal and most important one in controversy, and was distinctly submitted to the jury. The rules of law applicable to the case were lucidly, fully and forcibly explained. If the jury followed the law of the charge, (and we perceive no reason for believing otherwise), they must have found the issue for the plaintiffs. We are now asked to set - aside the verdict based on such finding, on the ground that it is against the weight of evidence, and on the ground of newly discovered evidence reported.
But after a very careful examination and consideration of the evidence reported, we do not feel at liberty to disturb the verdict. The evidence is in dire conflict, and the witnesses on each side quite numerous. The two vessels were approaching each other in opposite directions, and were, therefore, “proceeding in such direction as to involve risk of collision,” and it was the steamer’s bounden duty, under the rules of navigation, “to keep out of the way of the sail-vessel,” “slacken her speed, or, if necessary, stop and reverse.” She did not keep out of the way of the Bloomfield, but collided with her ; and she is therefore prima facie at fault. The Carroll, 8' Wall. 302. Neither did she stop and reverse, although it would now seem that the collision might possibly have been avoided by such action. The captain of the steamer,
On the other hand, the crew of the schooner, having full and absolute knowledge of the real fact, assert positively and unequivocally that she kept her course, and that her sails did not jibe, although the wind being so nearly dead aft, the mainsail may have taken the wind from the foresail so that it did not fill and the fore-boom may have swung in. Seven other witnesses at various places on the eastern shore, residents in the vicinity of the occurrence, some with more or loss nautical experience, and all freqnent observers of the passing and repassing of vessels there, testified, — some positively that the schooner did not change her course, and others that with their attention directed to the vessels approaching each other, they observed no change. But notwithstanding the defendants’ opposing testimony and the negative character of some portion of the plaintiffs’, the jury, upon a full consideration of the whole evidence, were convinced that the plaintiffs had sustained the burden imposed upon them. They seemed to be of opinion that (as was said in the case of the Neptune, quoted approvingly in The Fannie, 11 Wall. 238, 242), “What a witness asserts he did, or did not do, on his own vessel at the time, is generally more satisfactory evidence of the facts than the opinion and belief of a dozen others formed from what they supposed they saw or heard on another vesseland that the landsmen standing still and having fixed points • of observation, were not subject to any illusion as to the movement of the vessels; while those on the steamer might, as the cross-examination of some of them shows they evidently did unconsciously arid unwittingly impute the steamer’s change of course to the schooner. If the schooner, as many testified, was nearer the western shore than Buck’s Ledge, sailing north so as to clear Stubb’s Point, her port side would be first seen by those on the bow of the steamer; and
The alleged declarations of the captain and one of the crew of the schooner are substantially denied by them.
If the schooner kept her course, it was all the steamer had a right to require; and whether she had a proper lookout or not becomes entirely immaterial. If she had, or had not, a sufficient lookout, she did precisely what her duty required. The Fannie, sup.
The newly discovered evidence comes from three residents in Bangor who were on the steamer at the time of the collision, which fact the books of the defendants contained, and proper diligence would have secured their attendance as witnesses at the trial. Their testimony is simply cumulative upon the main issue. One of them (Pond) testified, on cross-examination, “The collision took place as we rounded Stubb’s Point — -just below it. ■ I don’t think the bow of the steamer swung around before the collision. I did not notice any swinging of her bow. Sails of the vessel changed two or three points so that they fluttered. . . I saw
no change in steamer.” The two others testified, substantially, the same. Such evidence could not have changed the result.
Motions overruled.