5 F. Cas. 439 | S.D.N.Y. | 1870
The schooner Bride, an American fishing vessel, owned by the libellant and one Henry B.. Taylor, who was her master, and was on board ‘of her, as such, at the time, was at anchor on the Grand Bank of Newfoundland, on the 22d of September, 1866, in the pursuit of her business as a fishing vessel, in a dense fog, when, at about twenty minutes past four o’clock in the afternoon of that day, she was run down and sunk by the ship Chancellor, then on a voyage from New7 York to Liverpool. The starboard side of the schooner was struck by the stem of the ship, and, of ten persons composing the company of the schooner, all perished but one. This suit is brought to recover the sum of $8,400 as damages for the loss of the’schooner and her outfit, and of the fish and oil on board of her at the time. The interest which belonged to Taylor has become vested in the libellant.
There are several facts in the case which are undisputed. The wind at the time was; from south south-west to south-west, blowing a moderate breeze. The ship was heading east by south half south, the wind being, therefore, from half a point to two points and a half abaft the beam of the ship on her starboard side. The fog had been prevailing for four or five days, and was so thick that nothing could be seen more than half the length of the ship ahead. The ship was on her starboard tack, under all her canvas except her studding sails, and going about six knots an hour, and a fog horn was being blown upon her at intervals of about ten seconds, by a lookout man who was stationed on the top gallant forecastle. There " were two men at her wheel, the master was standing on the starboard quarter near the wheel, and had been there for about half an hour before the collision, and the officers and crew were all of them on deck. There were four officers and twenty-eight men before the mast. The latitude of the ship, at noon that day, was 45° 30' north, and her longitude at the same time was, by dead reckoning, about 49° west. The schooner had anchored at
The libel avers, that, as soon as the proximity of the ship was known or suspected <on board of the schooner, the master of the schooner blew loud blasts upon a horn, and her mate rang loudly a bell upon her forecastle. The answer avers, that it is the custom, on the Grand Banks, in fogs, for vessels under way to blow, at intervals of fifteen or twenty seconds, a fog horn, and for vessels at anchor to sound, at intervals of a few seconds, a bell, and in that way give notice to approaching vessels as to whether they are under way or at anchor; that the ship had a full watch on deck, with two men at the wheel, and a competent lookout; that a fog horn was sounded on board at intervals of from ten ■•••to fifteen seconds; that, while the ship was sailing through the fog, a horn was heard ahead, and, as the sound indicated, a little on the starboard bow; that the wheel of the ship was then put to port, no object being at the time visible ahead; and that, by the time the wheel had been put half way down, a bell M7as heard, and almost immediately the schooner loomed up ahead in the fog and at anchor, and the wheel was at once ordered to be put hard a-starboard, but, before the order could be fully obeyed, and the course of the ship be changed, she came in' contact with the schooner.
Ordinarily, in a suit in rem for a collision, the first inquiry to be made is, whether the vessel sued was in fault, and not until it is established on the part of the libellant, that the vessel sued was in fault, does any inquiry arise, as to whether the libellant’s vessel was in fault. But, in this case, the facts are such, that the determination of the question whether the ship was in fault, must depend upon the determination of the question whether the schooner was in fault. The 10th article of the “regulation for preventing collisions on the water,” contained in the act •of April 29th, 1804 (13 Stat. 60), provides as follows: “Whenever there is a fog, whether by day or night, the fog signals described below shall be carried and used, and shall be sounded at least every five minutes, viz: (a) Steamships under way shall use a steam-whistle placed before the funnel, not less than eight feet from the deck, (b) Sailing ships under way shall use a fog horn, (c) Steamships and sailing ships, when not under way, shall use a bell.” In this case, the evidence shows, that the company of the schooner were all of them on deck, except the cook and the captain; that four of them had their lines out, fishing; that no bell had been rung or any horn blown on the schooner during the day, although she had a bell hung on a post near the windlass, and several horns convenient of access, one of them being hung in the companion way leading to the cabin from the deck; that, suddenly, a blast from the ship’s horn was heard on board of the schooner; that the captain of the schooner then came on deck and blew a horn; that then the sound of a horn from the ship was again heard on board of the schooner; that the captain of the schooner then blew a horn a second time, and the bell of the schooner was rung, and the ship was heard and seen close upon the schooner; that the lookout on the topgallant forecastle of the ship heard and reported the sound of tho horn from the schooner, nothing being visible through the fog, but it does not appear, that the sound of more than one of the blowings of the horn on the schooner was heard on the ship before the collision; that, immediately on the hearing of the horn from the schooner, the wheel of the ship was ordered by her master to be put to port, the sound of the horn being heard faintly by him from ahead but a little on the starboard bow of the ship; that the helm of the ship had been got about half to port, when a bell was heard from the schooner; that thereupon the helm of the ship was ordered by her master to be put hard a-starboard, but, before it was got half over to the starboard, the collision occurred; that, when the master of the ship heard the horn from the schooner, he, from the course of the sound and the direction of the wind, took it to be from a vessel under canvas, under way, on her port tack, and, therefore, crossing his bows from his starboard to his port side; that he, therefore, ported his helm, to let her pass on his port side; and that, on hearing her bell, he concluded she was at anchor, and a little on his starboard hand, and, consequently, tailing to his port hand, and, therefore, he then starboarded, to pass under her stem. It is quite apparent, from the proofs, that, when the horn of the schooner was first heard on board of the ship, the ship was so close upon the schooner that a collision was almost inevitable; that there was no substantial, if there was any, change in the course of the ship, by either the porting or the starboarding of her helm; and that the manoeuvres of the ship were the proper ones, in view of the sound she heard from the schooner. Now, on all these facts, it is impossible to deny that the schooner was grossly in fault. She violated the law of navigation by lying at anchor without sounding her bell at all. When aroused to a sense of her danger and her duty, by hearing the fog horn of the ship, she violated the law again by sounding a horn instead of a bell, and by not sounding a bell until after she had heard the horn of the ship a second time. These violations of law being shown, the burden of proof is upon the schooner to show that the collision was in no degree owing to any such violation. Waring v. Clarke, 5
Was the ship in fault? The general charge made in the libel against the ship is, that she was recklessly, negligently or carelessly managed by those navigating her. There is, in the libel, no specific allegation as to what the faulty management on the part of the ship was. As already stated, no fault can be found with what was done on board of the ship, after the proximity of the schooner was made known. The ship was manoeuvred as she ought to have been, in view of the indications given by the sound from the schooner. A fog horn, a little on the starboard bow of the ship, with the wind just abaft the beam of the ship on her starboard side, indicated a vessel under canvas, under way, crossing from the starboard side to the port side of the ship, and, therefore, the helm of the ship was properly put to port. The bell indicated a vessel not under way, and probably at anchor, and, with the wind as it was, if at anchor, tailing to the port side of the ship, and, therefore, the helm of the ship was properly put to starboard. Nor was any thing left undone on board of the ship, after the sound from the schooner was heard, which ought to have been done. The only serious charge against the ship is, that she was sailing at too great a speed, in view of the thickness of the fog. The testimony is, that the breeze was a moderate one, that the ship was going about six knots an hour, and that she had all her canvas on except her studding sails. In the case of The Itinerant, 2 W. Rob. Adm. 236, 243 (decided in 1844), Dr. Lushington says: ‘‘It is unquestionably the duty of every master of a ship, whether in an intense fog or great darkness, to exercise the utmost vigilance, and to put his vessel under command, so as to secure the best chance of avoiding all accidents, even though such precautions may occasion some delay in the prosecution of the voyage.
I have made these observations because of the character of the testimony introduced on the part of the claimant in this case, and because no sanction is intended to be given, by the decision in this case, to the doctrines advanced on the part of the claimant, through his witnesses, as to the rule by which vessels have a right to govern themselves, in regard to the proper rate of speed in a fog. Each case must be judged of by its own circumstances, for, what would be not too great a rate of speed ih a fog. under one state of facts, would be too great a rate, under another state of facts. Vet, there are general rules for the government of vessels, as to their rate of speed in a fog, based upon uniformity of principle and leading to uniformity of decision. The Itinerant, 2 W. Bob. Adm. 230, 242.
In the present case, in view of the fault on the part of the schooner in not sounding her bell at all, while at anchor, before she heard the horn of the ship, and in view of her further fault in misleading the ship, by sounding her horn, instead of her bell, after she had heard the horn of the ship, and in view of the fact that, the burden of proof being on the schooner, to show that the collision was not the consequence of such faults, she has not so shown, and in view of the fact, that the burden of proof is on the schooner, to show that the collision was owing, in any degree, to the too great speed of the ship, I cannot come to the conclusion, on the evidence, that it is shown affirmatively that a too great speed on the part of the ship contributed to the collision. On the contrary, the weight of the evidence is, that, if the schooner had not committed the faults she did, the ship would not, even at the speed she had, have collided with the schooner. The evidence does not show any such actual known proximity of other vessels, in the vicinity of the place of collision, at or about the time of tha collision, or any such probability of meeting other vessels there, either under way or at anchor, as to make the actual speed of the ship at the time, in view of the wind, and of the sail she had on, and of all other attending circumstances, a reckless one. Therefore, I cannot pronounce the ship in fault. The libel must be dismissed, with costs.