12 F. 906 | S.D.N.Y. | 1882
The weight of testimony is that the Spartel made no change in her course except the usual change in the vicinity of Sand’s point from W. S. W. to S. W. ⅛ S. This must be deemaÉl therefore, to have been the change observed by those on bba Vim, though it must have taken place when the vessels were further apart than the estimate given by the Vim’s witnesses! Spartel, while upon her course of W. S. W. before reaching I point, would show her red light only to the Vim, which was southward, upon a course which must have been very nearly
There is, perhaps, no definite limit of distance for the application of this rule in all cases. Special circumstances must doubtless modify any general rule in that respect; but where there are no special circumstances affecting the navigation under rule 24, it would seem that the limit of two miles, which is the distance prescribed at which lights must be made visible, ought also by necessary implication to be taken as the distance, if the lights are seen, within which vessels should be required to keep their course, and deviation from it be held to be at their own peril. If that rule is not applied in regard to navigation at night, provided the night is such that the lights could be seen at that distance; or, if not visible at that distance, then from the time when they are visible, — any different rule, which depends upon some less estimated distance of the Hbels apart, and its supposed sufficiency to enable the other vessel o out of the way, would be attended with such uncertainty and jxity as to be very embarrassing in practical application, and b defeat the very object of the rules enacted to ensure certainty lifety in navigation.
As regards navigation in the night-time, I think, therefore, that vessels must be held subject to the twentieth and twenty-third rules from the time the opposing vessel’s colored lights are first seen, or would be discovered by a proper lookout, subject to the qualifications of the twenty-fourth rule. From that time the one vessel has a right to shape her course so as to discharge with certainty and safety the duty of keeping out of the way imposed on her by law, and the other vessel within the same limits is prohibited from change except at her peril; and this view seems to be involved in the decision of Judge Nelson in the case of The Scotia, 5 Blatchf. 227. See, also, The Great Eastern, 2 Moore, P. C. (N. S.) 31, 44.
The evidence leaves no doubt in this case that the Spartel was far within this limit of two miles when her change of course was made. The place of collision, as appears from the great majority of witnesses, was about half a mile west of Sand’s point. The master of the
This conclusion would have been reached even if it had appeared that the schooner’s change of course had been made deliberately, and-in view of the steamer ahead. It is not affected by the circumstance, as clearly appears from the testimony, that the steamer had not been noticed, though plainly within sight at the time. The captain testifies that he acted as lookout, standing by the starboard quarter, with no one forward. Sand’s point is the commencement of the pilotage ground coming into New York. The pilot, Schofield, had boarded the Spartel shortly before reaching this point; but a discussion ensued between him and the captain concerning the terms on which he would leave the Spartel and go to one of the other schooners astern, and allow the captain to take the Spartel to New York. The matter had not been settled at the-time of the collision, and the pilot testifies that he had not taken charge of the schooner. It seems clear that this debate diverted the attention of the captain, and that little or no attention at that time was paid to other vessels. The captain testifies that when he first saw the Vim he saw both her colored lights directly ahead, three or four minutes after his change of course; so that it is clear this change was made without any reference to the Vim. If he had observed her lights before this change, he would, therefore, have seen her at least two points off his port bow, and at a distance, as I find from the testimony, not vary
I think it is also clear that the Vim did not, after the Spartel’s change of course, perform her whole duty to keep out, of the way of the schooner. The schooner’s change of course, though a fault, because made when only about a mile distant and after the Vim had shaped her course to go to the southward of her, must, nevertheless, have been perfectly understood by the captain of the Vim, because it was made, as the evidence shows, at the usual place of change, following the channel course. This change, as several witnesses testify, brought the green light in view and shut out the red. Those in charge of the Vim must have known, therefore, that the schooner had either changed to the channel course, with her red light obscured by the jib, or else changed still further to the south, so as properly to shut out the red light. In this uncertainty the Vim was not justified in keeping upon a southerly course to pass to the right. That course apparently tended directly towards a collision, and it so resulted. The weight of the testimony on the Vim’s part is much weakened by the very great error in the distance ascribed to the schooner, i. «., an eighth of a mile only, when this change in her course was made. The distance, as I have said, must have been nearly a mile, and the difference is of the greatest importance as respects the duty and responsibility of the Vim. The error in this
From all these circumstances it must be held that the Spartel, at the time of her change of course, when a mile distant, so as to show her green light, must have been nearly directly ahead of the Yim, and that, considering the schooner’s slow speed, abundant time and room remained to the Yim to keep out of her way by going upon either side of her. I think it clear that she would, in fact, have done so by putting her helm much less than either hard a-port or hard a-starboard. That her wheel was ported tardily, and but slightly and ineffectively, is evident from the result, as well as accordant with the. pilot’s manner of testifying in relation to it. And if, as alleged, the Spartel’s red light after her change could not be seen, it was the plain duty of the Yim either to starboard her wheel at once and go to port, or to stop until the Spartel, under her green light, had passed to the starboard bow of the Yim, or else to back, if necessary, as required by
I think the pilot of the Yim is in error in stating that the several whistles were sounded before the Spartel’s change of course. No reason appears for any such whistles at that time; the captain puts them after her change, and none were heard on the Spartel till about the distance the captain states of one-eighth of a mile away. Nor can the pilot’s testimony be credited that they hauled up on a course of N. B. by E. after passing Stepping Stones, and so kept about three-quarters of an hour. On that course the Yim would have run upon Hewlitt’s point or Gangway ledge. In that location it is not possible, except by going zigzag, to deviate much from the regular course of about N. E., and there is no reason to suppose that the Yim followed any other course till after she had passed Gangway ledge half a mile before the collision.
The whole evidence taken together shows, I think, that though the Spartel wrongfully changed her course when within a mile of the Yim, yet the latter, having still abundant time and space to keep out of the way by a further change in her own course, did not take any such prompt or decisive measures to do so as were perfectly within her power; but that she still proceeded nearly upon her former course until the Spartel was near at hand, and then sounded whistles of alarm, and depended, apparently, in part upon the Spar-tel’s luffing up, instead of herself assuming the whole duty of keeping out of the way, as required by law, and changing her own course promptly when this was made necessary by the faulty change of the Spartel. The previous fault of the Spartel did not relieve the Yim from this duty. The safety of life and property requires each vessel, no matter what the previous fault of the other, to use, with prompt