23 F. 807 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan | 1885
This collision was evidently caused by a misapprehension upon the part of the officers of each vessel with regard to the course of the other. The officers of tho Osborn, as well as those of her schooners in tow, and the officers of the steam-barge Hecla, which was following behind her, heard, or thought they heard, the first whistle of the Alberta, from one to two points off their starboard bow, the second and third whistles still broader off, and the last one, an imperfect, muffled sound, well upon tho Osborn’s starboard beam. These signals indicated to them that the Alberta was on a substantially par
In attempting to gather the actual facts of a collision from the contradictory testimony of witnesses it should be borne in mind: (1) That the testimony of the crew of each vessel, with regard to her course and the various orders given to and executed by the wheels-man and engineer, should be credited in preference to the testimony of an equal number of witnesses upon another vessel relating to her movements, as they appeared to them. (2) That the probability that a vessel, bound from one headland to another, will take the usual and direct course between them is so strong that a deviation from such a course, without'adequate cause, ought to be established by the clearest preponderance of testimony. Gauged by these rules, the angle at which these vessels approached each other is readily ascertained. The proper course from Marquette to Whitefish point is E. j- N., but on account of the fog that Evening, and to give the headland a wider berth, the Osborn deviated half a point to the northward, making her actual course, as sworn to by her officers and wheelsman, E. by N. Upon the other hand, the compass course from Whitefish point to Tort Arthur is N. W. by W. £ W., but to keep clear of vessels coming down the lake, Capt. Anderson ordered his wheelsman to pursue a course N. W. £ W. for one hour after passing Whitefish Point light. I have no doubt the collision occurred at or very near the intersection of these courses. As the two steamers were meeting at an angle of only four and'a half points, and the Alberta struck the Osborn at an angle of one point greater or less than a right angle, (and whether it was greater or less, the- evidence is conflicting,) there is a difference of from three and a half to five and a half points to be accounted for. That the Osborn starboarded one point just before the collision is averred in her libel, and proved by her testimony; and I have a stx-ong impression that the Alberta, at about the same time, ported her wheel
If the Alberta did port in ignorance of the actual position and course of tho Osborn, it was a fault for which she ought to be condemned. It is one of the elementary rales of navigation that a vessel ought never to alter her helm in ignorance of the position and course of an approaching vessel. It is true that by such change she may escape a collision, but tho chances are equal that she will bring it about. Instead of experimenting, it is her duty to stop, and sometimes to reverse. The James Watt, 2 W. Rob. 270, 277; The Bougainville, L. R. 5 P. C. 316; The Franconia, 4 Ben. 181, 185; The Shakespeare, 4 Ben. 128; The Lorne, 2 Stuart, Vice Adm. 177; The Scotia, 5 Blatchf. 227. I do not find it necessary, however, to express a decided opinion as to the guilt of the Alberta in this particular, since she -was so clearly at fault for maintaining an excessive speed that her case is hardly susceptible of argument She was navigating tho most frequented waters of Lake Superior. Almost the entire commerce of the lake takes its course to or from Whitefish Point light. It was night, and there was a fog prevailing so dense that the headlight of a vessel could be but dimly seen at a distance of 000 feet. The fog-signals of at least two steamers were in plain hearing, and bearing somewhat ahead. These signals indicated, in language well understood on tho lake, that both steamers wore incumbered by tows. All her surroundings called for the utmost caution; yet she was proceeding at such a speed that the force of the collision drove her stem about half way through the Osborn, making a wedge-shaped hole 16 feet in depth, by 12 feet in width. Under these circumstances it is useless to argue that tho testimony of the master and engineer of the Alberta shows that she was proceeding under a slow check. The wound itself is the one fact which outweighs all the other evidence. It cannot be argued or explained away. I am satisfied from the testimony of tho experts as to the weight and momentum of the respective vessels that she must have been proceeding at a speed of at least 10 miles an hour. It is hardly necessary to say that this is not the moderate rate of speed which the rule requires.
There was an equal obligation on the part of the Osborn to maintain a moderate rate of speed. She was not only encompassed by similar perils, and warned by like signals of the approach of another steamer, but these signals indicated that the Alberta was upon her starboard
Indeed, I am strongly inclined to think that both these vessels were in fault for not stopping altogether and drifting until their respect
“If a steamer in a thick fog—so thick that she can hardly see before her— hears another vessel in her neighborhood on either bow, not being able to see her, and she herself not going at her slowest pace, the question is whether, under those circumstances, the officer in charge of the steamer ought not to conclude that it is necessary, in order to avoid risk of collision, that he should stop and reverse? I do not hesitate to lay down the rule, not strictly as a matter of law, but as a matter of conduct, that tho moment such circumstances as these happen, it is necessary, under the article, to stop and reverse. * * * However difficult it may be for persons in command of steamers to do what the la w directs, in my opinion, we must hold strictly that in a dense fog the moment another vessel is found on the bow, or in near vicinity on either bow, and she herself is going at any speed, it has then become necessary, under the eighteenth rule, not merely to slacken speed, but instantly to stop and reverse.”
In this case the court appears to have taken a decided step in advance of prior decisions, and I am not prepared to say that the rule therein laid down, in so far as it demands not only a stoppage, but a reversal of the engines, should be rigidly applied to every case of steamers meeting under the circumstances stated. At the same time, it seems to me entirely proper and reasonable to hold that when steamers are approaching each other in a fog so dense that a vessel can be seen only a few hundred feet, there is a “risk of collision” which makes its obligatory upon both to stop their engines and drift, until such risk is determined.
The case of The McIntyre differs from the one under consideration, if at all, only in the fact that the officers of the Osborn thought, from the signals of the Alberta, that she was upon an opposite and parallel course and would pass in safety. This, however, was a mere conjecture. The officers of each vessel must have known that the other
“It was the whistle of the other vessel which told him, not exactly where she was, but about where she was, and that she was in a position in which he could not consider her an absolutely safe vessel in regard to him; i. e., he could not consider that he had passed her or that she had passed him either ahead or astern. While he was not at once bound the moment he heard the whistle, wherever it might be, to stop and reverse his engine; but having heard the first whistle, which was about four points on the port bow, he hears another and another whistle; and I cannot help thinking that the evidence shows that it was something like three or four whistles that he heard.”
Now, without expressing a decided opinion in this case, whether, under the circumstances, it was the duty of these vessels to stop and reverse, I am clearly of the opinion that it was incumbent upon them either to stop, or to proceed at the lowest rate of speed compatible with the maintenance of steerage-way.
Neither of these steamers was provided with such a lookout as the exigencies of the case required. Both of them were under charge of the master and second mate, who stood together, on the bridge in the one ease, and in front of the pilot-house in the other. Neither vessel had a lookout forward or aloft, or in other position where his opportunities of observation were better than those of the officer of the deck. It was held in the case of The Colorado, above cited, that steamers, while navigating in dense fogs, should carry at least two lookouts, and if there had been any evidence that a want of this precaution had contributed to this collision, I should have felt bound to condemn the steamers for this omission. But as each appears to have discovered the other as soon as it was possible to do so, I am not prepared to say that either should be condemned on that account.
A decree will be entered adjudging both vessels in fault for excessive speed, dividing the damages, and referring the case to a commissioner to assess and report the same.