33 F. 589 | N.D. Cal. | 1887
I have carefully reconsidered the evidence in these cases, and have come to the conclusion that the judgment heretofore rendered was erroneous. That the cause of the accident was the fouling of the Enoch Talbot’s anchor with a kedge, which had been lost or abandoned by some vessel, and which was lying on the bottom of the bay, unknown to and unsuspected by any one, is, I think apparent. When the anchor was hove up, after the accident, it came to the surface crown up; and with the chain so wound around it as to deprive it of all efficacy as an anchor, except from its mere dead weight. It is. suggested by the‘advocate for the libelant, that there is no j>roof that this fouling occurred before the Talbot began to drag. There is, of course, no direct proof, because ocular observation was impossible. But to what other cause cap we attribute the dragging of the ship? There was no high wind or sea. The ebb-tide was running, however, with unusual force, There was nothing, therefore, in the nature of a to major, which could have caused a well-anchored ship to break from her moorings. She had lain at the same place for 18 days, when suddenly, on the night of August 7th, the second mate, who kept the anchor watch, observed that she was dragging. The only probable explanation of this circumstance is that her anchor had fouled, and lost its hold on the bottom, which, in fact, proved to be the case. To suppose that this,occurred after she began to drag is to leave the dragging wholly unexplained and inexplicable. But the condition in which the anchor and chain were found, when subsequently hove up, seems to demonstrate that the fouling must have occurred before, and not after, the dragging commenced, and was in fact the cause of it. The condition of the anchor and chain was illustrated in court,.by the. exhibition of a model. From the number of turns which the chain had taken around thé stock and crown it was apparent that the ship must have swung to the tide more than once, after the kedge was picked up; a fact inconsistent with the idea that the kedge was picked up after she began to drag, and when she was drifting to the .ebb-tide.'
If then, the fouling of the anchor was the true cause of the accident, the collision must be ascribed to a peril of the sea; for such an unusual and unforeseen occurrence is like striking on an unknown or sunken rock, or a derelict wreck,—an accident for the consequences of which the ship is not responsible. But.the master of a vessel, even though the cause of the accident may be a peril of the sea, is nevertheless bound to the exercise of reasonable care and nautical skill to avoid or mitigate its injurious consequences. The only fault charged upon the master in this case is
I do not consider that the proofs show that the master in this case committed any error disclosing a want of reasonable skill and diligence. I think, on the contrary, that the preponderance of proof is in favor of the conclusion that the dropping of the second anchor would have been wholly ineffectual to prevent or modify the injurious consequences of the accident. Libel dismissed.