Captain Wardell seeks review of an Opinion and Order of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) suspending his merchant mariner’s license. While we note that there were significant procedural defects in the Coast Guard’s administrative hearing, we uphold the NTSB’s decision because Captain Warded failed to introduce any evidence that could rebut the presumption of negligence operating against him.
BACKGROUND
Captain Warded was the pilot aboard the S.S. GREATLAND on March 17, 1985, and he was conning the vessel at the time of an allision 1 with the Port of Anchorage City Dock.
On March 4, 1985, an administrative hearing was commenced at Anchorage, Alaska, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Wilkes presiding. The Coast Guard alleged that the allision occurred because Captain Warded was negligently off course during the approach to the dock and was closer to the dock than prudent when he initiated his “dock turn.” It was the Coast Guard’s contention that the resulting lack of turning room caused the allision.
Captain Warded contended that the GREATLAND was on course and had commenced her starboard turn at the usual point one mile off the dock, but that an unusually strong current embarrassed her progress in the midst of her starboard turn toward the dock resulting in the allision.
On March 5, 1986, the ALJ found that the presumption of negligence created when a moving vessel hits a stationary object had not been rebutted, and further, that negligence had been shown by substantial evidence. He determined that the vessel was off her intended course when she reached the turning point, and that she was only one-half to one-quarter of a mile away from the dock when commencing her ill-fated starboard turn. The ALT rejected Captain Warden’s contention that the vessel encountered an unexpected current once into the turn, finding the current was within its normal range as to both direction and force. The AU made a finding of fact that Captain Wardell’s failure to plot the position of his vessel demonstrated his failure to meet the level of care required of a pilot, and that this was relevant to the determination of negligence charged. The AU imposed a suspension of Captain War-dell’s license for three months, considering, inter alia, the extensive damage the accident caused.
On July 20, 1987, the Vice-Commandant affirmed Judge Wilkes’ decision. The Vice-Commandant determined that it was error to allow Lt. Klimas’s testimony and accompanying documentary evidence into the record, but that Captain Wardell had failed to demonstrate prejudice since the controlling presumption of negligence had not been rebutted. The Vice-Commandant rejected the Captain’s argument that the presumption could not be relied upon once the Coast Guard introduced evidence of actual negligence.
Captain Wardell appealed the Vice-Commandant’s decision to the National Transportation Safety Board. The NTSB affirmed the decision of the Vice-Commandant that the presumption of negligence had nit been rebutted, and held that the severity of the sanction was appropriate.
ANALYSIS
The Presumption
When a moving ship collides with a stationary object, it is presumed that the moving ship is at fault.
The Louisiana,
70 (3 Wall.) U.S. 164, 173,
This presumption of negligence may be rebutted by showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, either that the collision was the fault of the stationary object, that the moving vessel acted with reasonable care, or that the collision was an unavoidable accident.
Bunge Corp. v. M/V Furness Bridge,
Captain Wardell erroneously argues that this presumption cannot be relied upon once the Coast Guard presents any evidence of actual negligence. The authority he cites,
S.C. Loveland, Inc. v. East West Towing, Inc.,
This court has previously addressed the presumption of negligence in a situation where parties introduced conflicting evidence on the cause of the collision. In
Pacific Tow Boat Co. v. State Marine Corp. of Delaware,
The NTSB’s Decision
Orders of the NTSB are reviewable, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), and may be overturned only if “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law,” or “unsupported by substantial evidence.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A);
see also Ferguson v. NTSB,
The NTSB decision held that Captain Wardell had not introduced any evidence which could, as a matter of law, rebut the presumption of negligence operating against him. Captain Wardell contended that the unforeseen, adverse current provides a non-fault explanation for the allision that, within the meaning of
Commandant v. Jahn,
NTSB Order EM-88 (1981), rebutted the presumption of negligence. In
Jahn
the NTSB held that the appellant had negated the presumption of negligence by producing evidence “that the presumptively blameworthy occurrence
could
have
Wholly apart from a pilot’s presumed knowledge of, and ability to handle, currents within his areas of expertise, a vessel’s proper management invariably and continuously involves informed judgments respecting the impact of currents on effective navigation. Consequently, the fact that a current may have precluded the successful completion of a turn does not, in itself, provide any basis for assessing, much less for excusing the possibly deficient, performance of the vessel’s pilot. We think, rather, that in order for a pilot to overcome the presumption of negligent performance that his vessel’s allision with a fixed object has created, the seaman must, where he attributes the allision to unmanageable currents “embarrassing” his navigation, show not only that the vessel due to the effect of the current could not have been navigated so as to avoid the allision once the turn was begun, but also that the effect of the current could not have been foreseen and compensated for through the exercise of prudent seamanship before the turn was initiated.
Wardell at 6.
We agree with the NTSB’s decision that Captain Wardell had ample opportunity to introduce evidence at the administrative hearing to show that he was not at fault, and that he failed to make such a showing. Pilots of vessels operating within their area of expertise are held to a very high standard when an allision occurs. There is a strong presumption of fault. The record reveals that Captain Wardell did not meet this burden.
Because we agree with the NTSB that Captain Wardell did not rebut the presumption of negligence, his claims regarding due process violation must fail. Captain War-dell contends that his due process right to a fair trial was violated because the AU allowed Lt. Klimas to testify as an expert and because the AU violated the rule of exclusion which in generally followed in such hearings. We note that the Vice-Commandant’s decision, as well as the NTSB’s decision, commendably recognized that such procedure was improper. However, Captain Wardell was not prejudiced by these errors as he was given every opportunity to introduce exculpatory evidence. Since he failed to carry this burden, and since we do not find his punishment to be ex'essive, the decision of the NTSB is AFFIRMED.
