60 F. 299 | 2d Cir. | 1894
The schooner was bound from Darien, Ga., to Bath, Me.; the steamer, into the port of Yew York, from Havre. According to the libelants’ contention, the schooner was sailing under reefed sails on a course about Y.- Y. E. by her compass, making from three to four knots an hour. The weather had been foggy, and at the time of the collision had partially cleared, so that lights and objects could be seen at a considerable distance. It was the mate’s watch, and he was on deck, with a man at the wheel and another on lookout. The masthead light of the steamer was discovered four or five miles distant, bearing, as the libel says, “off the schooner’s starboard bow,” and subsequently the steamer’s red light came into view about two miles distant, and bearing abaft the schooner’s starboard beam. The mate watched the red light for a while, and, believing the schooner was not seen, burned a torch to the leeward of the mainsail. Subsequently, by directions of the captain, he burned a second torch, and, while it was burning, the captain came on deck. After this second torch, as the schooner’s witnesses testify, the steamer burned one. When about a mile and a quarter off, both colored lights of the steamer appeared, heading directly for the schooner. The steamer’s hull shortly appeared, heading towards the schooner, whereupon a gun was fired on the latter. The steamer then ported her helm, shutting out her green light, and, coming on with little, if any, diminution of speed, struck the schooner forward of her fore rigging on the starboard side.
The district court held the schooner in fault for havfing an “insufficient green light.” The witnesses for the schooner testified that both, lights were properly set, sufficient, and- burning brightly. All the officers and lookouts from the steamer testified that no green light was seen oh the schooner while the vessels were approaching, except that the steamer’s captain thought at one time that he could make one out. The steamer’s witnesses also testify that
The evidence from the steamer shows that she was going at a speed of 13 ¡ knots, her full speed being 37⅛ on a course S. 59 W. magnetic. Competent and efficient officers were on her bridge, compe Sent and attentive seamen on the lookout. The first seen of the schooner was a torch light, either ahead or a little on the port bow. It was inferred that it was that of a pilot boat, and, as La Champagne was in search of a pilot, she burned a torch herself on her port side to indicate that she wished to take one. All the witnesses from the steamer who gave evidence as to the burning of her torch, save one, testify that it was burned prior to the schooner’s second torch. The master and mate of the schooner testify that the steamer’s torch was not burned until after the schooner had burned two; but the wheelsman on the schooner corroborates the statement of those on the .steamer that her torch was burned after the schooner’s first, and before her second, one. The district judge has expressed no opinion as to the order in which these torches were burned. The weight of evidence seems to us strongly to support the contention of the steamer, and, in the absence of any expression of opinion upon that point by 1he judge, who saw the witnesses, we have reached the conclusion that, subsequently to the burning of the steamer’s torch, one was burned by the schooner. With the exception of the captain, who, very shortly before collision, thought he saw a green light, and asked the second captain, a man of excellent eyesight, if he saw it, all the witnesses from the steamer testify that they saw no colored lights on the schooner before collision. The officers of La Champagne, moreover, testify that they saw a white light, not visible continuously, but which “disappeaiel from time to time, exactly like the lights on pilot boats which are hidden by masts and by the sails, the same as if a vessel were heaved by a swell or a wave.” They further testify that, when the torches were burned on the schooner,
The district judge held the steamer in fault because (1) she mistook the schooner for a pilot boat, and (2) did not sooner reduce her speed.
There was evidence from some of the witnesses called by the steamer that at or immediately prior to the collision they saw a lighted lantern on the schooner’s after house. Another of them (who went on board the schooner with the steamer’s captain) saw a lantern there after the collision, and was instructed to put it out, as well as the side lights, when the' schooner was abandoned. The captain of the schooner admitted that there was a lighted lantern on board, but said it was in the; oil room until, after collision, it was brought out to read the steamer’s name by. Whether or not there was such a light on the after house while the' vessels were approaching each other is an issue the district judge does not express any opinion upon. He does hold that “there was UP light on the schooner that could possibly present the appearance of the white masthead light required of pilot boats by the rules of navigation.” The weight of evidence seems to indicate that there was a lantern on the after house. Certainly, unless the testimony of the steamer’s officers is to be wholly discredited (and the district judge did not discredit them), they saw something luminous on or about the schooner, other than the torches or the invisible green light. The district judge reached the conclusion that, whatever it was which was thus visible to them, it “cannot be deemed to have been justifiably confounded with a pilot’s masthead light.” In this part of the case we are dealing, not with a fault of the schooner, but with the question whether the navigators of the steamer had sufficient grounds for their mistaken belief as to the character of the schooner. There is nothing to indicate that they have deliberately fabricated the statement that they saw an intermittent white light. The district judge credited their evidence generally. That they were competent and experienced mariners is practically conceded. That they were watchful and vigilant, scrutinizing the approaching vessel carefully, is hardly disputed. That they believed what they saw to be the masthead light of a pilot boat on station is abundantly established. Hot only do they testify to such belief, but their entire conduct in making preparations for receiving a pilot aboard con
This conclusion practically disposes of the other fault attributed to the steamer, viz. that she did not check her headway sooner. She did stop and inverse at full speed, immediately upon discovering, by the illumination which accompanied the firing of the schooner’s gun, that the latter was not maneuvering to- come alongside and put a pilot aboard, but was crossing the steamer’s course from port to starboard. But it is claimed that she should have slackened speed sooner, even though she supposed the schooner was a pilot boat which had assented to her request to send aboard. The officers of the steamer who saw the intermittent white light say that it appeared such a short distance above even the second torch that, supposing it to be at the masthead, they inferred the schooners, was a long distance off. They changed direction a point to starboard in order to put the schooner a little more on the port hand, and thus make it more easy for the pilot to come up to the steamer. They continued on at the reduced speed of 13⅛ knots, postponing further maneuvers till the vessels should be nearer to each other, and supposing they were approaching a vessel which had a common purpose with themselves, viz. to approach near enough to the proper side of the steamer to send a pilot aboard in a small boat. Before condemning the steamer for thus keeping on, when the circumstances justified a belief that the other vessel was not a sailing vessel, bound, under the 'rules, to keep her course in presence of a steamer, but was one which had agreed to co-operate in maneuvers appropriate to accomplish the common purpose, the court should be satisfied that the failure to diminish speed was a maneuver dan
We are not satisfied that by coming to port, instead of to starboard, when the explosion of the gun disclosed the character and course of the schooner, the collision would, as libelants claim, have been avoided.
The decree of the district court is therefore reversed, with rests of appeal, and cause remanded to that court with directions to dismiss the libel, with costs.