74 F. 261 | 9th Cir. | 1896
(after stating the facts). The appellant contends for the reversal of the decrees upon the ground that, in order to make out .a case against the Oceanic, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove by a preponderance of the evidence the commission of some act which should not have been committed, or the omission of some duty which should have been performed, and which act of commission or omission on the part of the Oceanic was the direct or approximate cause of the injury complained of; and that there was a total failure to introduce such proof, there being no proof whatever showing negligence in the conduct of the Oceanic. It is insisted that as the Oceanic entered the Golden Gate its officers and crew were at their proper stations; that an efficient lookout was kept, and proper discipline maintained; that the Oceanic was in all respects found and equipped in the most complete manner, and was under perfect command; that the proper fog signal was given, and had been given by blasts of the steam whistle sounding
An important fact established by uncontradicted testimony is the fact that the flood tide, entering San Francisco harbor, makes, in along the; south shore, striking the land just outside of Ft. Point, and from there deflects and sets with a strong current nearly due north towards Lime Point until it reaches about mid-channel, where it turns, taking a straight course into Ban Francisco Bay. The narrowest part of the entrance to San Francisco Bay is between Ft. Point and Lime Point, and this current setting northward from Ft. Point when the tide is flooding creates a tide rip rendering navigation across it extremely difficult. A vessel outward bound, upon striking the tide rip, is liable to be deflected from her course and slewed to starboard by force of the current. Another fact is that the collision occurred somewhere between Ft. Point and Lime Point. As the City of Chester, after signaling that she would go to port, behaved exactly as she would if caught by the tide rip, it is natural to infer that the vessels, at the time of signaling to each other, were both on the south side of mid-channel; and, as the first signal was given by the Oceanic, counsel for the appellant have labored to convince the court that in entering the Oceanic hugged the north shore, and that the collision actually occurred a considerable distance to the northward of mid-channel. To illustrate the testimony and indicate the course of the Oceanic from a point two miles out
The course of the Oceanic from the ocean outside the headlands to the place of the collision near Lime Point, is indicated on this map by a straight black line, and the course of the City of Chester by the black line curving to the point of meeting the Oceanic, and the sweep of the tide around Ft. Point is indicated by the curving black lines. The course of the Oceanic as indicated by this diagram was changed when off' Point Bonita, from N. E. by E. to N. E. E., taking her across the channel and across the course of outward-bound vessels. If the court should find as a fact that the course of the Oceanic in entering, and her position at the time of coming in sight