110 F. 588 | D. Mass. | 1901
This was a collision between the English steamer Devonian, on a voyage from Liverpool to Boston, arid the three-masted schooner .Perry, proceeding from Boston to Rockport. It occurred on April 29, 1901, at about 10:20 a. m. The weather was clear, the water smooth, the wind light from the southeast. The place was between buoys 9 and 11 in Boston Harbor, the tide not quite half ebb, and running about a knot and a half. The Perry was 122 feet long, drawing 9 feet without her center board, and about 15 feet with it. The Devonian was 570 feet long over all, and drew nearly 24 feet. As the schooner kept her course, the steamer was at fault unless special circumstances be shown.
The steamer’s theory of the collision is this: She was coming up the harbor, slowly stopping from time to time to let vessels pass. Just below the Gas buoy she stopped to let a tug and tow go by. Then she started, and at the Gas buoy entered a passage very narrow for vessels of her size. The original ship channel at this place is of considerable width, but there were dredges and drill scows placed near its middle by the United States government, in order to deepen it. The steamer could not pass safely except to the south of the dredges and scows, and so the passage, as indicated by temporary buoys, was no more than from 300 to 500 feet wide. The length of this narrow passage was from 2,000 to 2,500 feet. Just as the steamer had entered upon it, passing the Gas buoy, those on board her perceived the schooner coming out on the south side of the channel, from a fleet of vessels moored there, with sails hoisted. Imme
“The rules require a steamer to keep off the course of a sailing vessel if it is practically possible for the steamer to do so; that is to saj, if she can do so without accident, such as collision with another vessel, running aground, or the like- * * * In ease' of‘the manifest inability of the steamer to give way, therefore, and in that ease only, does she have the right of way over a sailing vessel.”
Even if we assume, as the steamer contends, that, after the schooner was seen, neither the steamer nor the tug could have done anything more to avoid the collision, we must still ask, ought not the steamer to have done something else before seeing the schooner? It was approaching a narrow passage, from which it could not back out, — a passage which sailing vessels were likely to cross, and in which on that morning they could not readily maneuver, owing to the lightness of the wind. If its size and the dangerous narrowness of the channel gave to the steamer'peculiar privileges, as I think was the case, they imposed upon it peculiar duties. If it had the right of way in that passage agai-nst a sailing vessel properly warned, there was the greater need of giving the fullest possible warning. That a sailing vessel" might at any moment emerge from the anchored fleet was manifestly possible. That there would be danger if this happened was plain. To guard against this danger was easy. A steamer, which is ordinarily bound to avoid a sailing vessel, ought not to enter upon a narrow passage, where it cannot avoid a sailing-vessel, and where a sailing vessel very probably cannot avoid it, until it has done its best to ascertain that the passage is and will remain clear. The steamer, might have waited below the Gas buoy until the
It is true that the pilot testified that the steamer was not moving at the time of the collision, but, if her engines had been going full soeed ahead for a minute, or even for half a minute, I do not think the steamer could have been absolutely stationary. Mr. Crosby says she was not. Perhaps she had been stopped by her anchor before she was started ahead, and the pilot’s observation may have been made at that time. This order of the pilot was doubtless given in extremis, but it not only discredits the testimony of Captain Muir
“We concede that, as urged by counsel for the respondent, the governing rule is modified when the steamer cannot obey it without getting into serious peril, and there is no other way to avoid it but to disregard the rule. The Marguerite, 87 Fed. 953. But in such case it is obvious that the steamer is bound to resort to all other practicable means before she can be justified in violating the statutory regulation.”
Again, the helmsman of the steamer testifies that he put the steamer’s wheel hard a-port before the collision, and with him agrees the statement of Captain Muir. Apparently this maneuver was improper, as, if the steamer’s head had been only a little more to port, the collision would not have happened. Still, again, if the hole in the schooner’s side was deepened by the steamer going ahead after the collision, and if the necessity for the steamer’s going ahead was caused by its bow being to starboard, thqn increased damage may have been caused by improper steering. As other faults have been found on the part of the steamer, it is not necessary to discuss this .question further.
The court has next to consider if the schooner also was at fault. She had no lookout. Her counsel contended that the want of a lookout did not contribute to the collision; that she kept her course, and that this was her only duty; but the privileged vessel has no right to keep her course with her eyes shut. The rule requiring a lookout is imposed alike upon the burdened and privileged vessel. The duty of the privileged vessel is to hold her course; the duty of the burdened vessel is to keep off that course. But the privileged vessel is to hold her course, constantly observing the burdened vessel, in order to notice if the latter fails in her duty. When the failure of the burdened vessel becomes apparent, the privileged vessel must change her course as prudence commands. If she thereafter keeps her course by reason of failure to observe the fault of the burdened vessel, she is at fault. Want q>f watchfulness .on the part of the privileged vessel does not altogether excuse the burdened vessel, but it is none the less a fault. In this case the schooner saw the steamer when the former was on the port tack. The schooner then knew that the steamer was large, and would have difficulty in maneuvering-, in the narrow passage it must shortly enter. The schooner ought not to have lost sight of the steamer, especially while tacking in an anchored fleet, and considering her own slight maneuvering power. Yet, after losing sight of the steamer, the captain of the schooner did not again notice her until his attention was attracted by the tug’s whistle. The want of a lookout was a plain fault, which probably contributed to the accident. It is at least doubtful if the schooner could have anchored in time to do an}' good. Perhaps the failure to catch the tug’s rope was a mere accident, though the whole conduct of those on the schooner savors of negligence amounting almost to recklessness. As both vessels were at fault, the damages must be divided.