delivered the opinion of the court.
This court has repeatedly held that under the act of February 16, 1875, 18 Stat. 315, “ to facilitate the disposition of cases in the Supreme Court of the United States, and for other purposes,” we are no longer at liberty to pass upon disputed questions of fact, but, are bound to accept the findings of the Circuit Court as conclusive, and are limited to a, determination of questions of law and to the validity of such rulings, excepted to at the time, as may be presented by a bill of exceptions prepared as in actions at law.
The
Abbotsford,
It does not, however, necessarily follow that this court is bound to determine the case upon the precise facts found by the Circuit Court, if, in its opinion, such findings are ambiguous, contradictory or incomplete, or fail to establish a satisfactory basis for a decision. The. Circuit Court is bound to pass upon and find every material and ultimate fact necessary to a propel determination of the question of liability, and, in case of refusal to make such finding, an exception may be taken thereto, which can be considered by this court upon appeal. It cannot be that this court is concluded by a finding, for instance, of. a single material fact tending to show fault on the part of- one vessel, when there is uncontradicted evidence of other facts, which show either that this fault did not contribute to the collision, or that there were contributing faults .upon the part of the other vessel 'which might make a case for .¿■division of damages. If a Circuit Court could find as a fact that a collision was due to the fault of one vessel, an appeal to this court would be useless, and unless the findings set forth all the material facts, the ultimate finding of fault becomes .more or less a finding of a fact, when it should be. a legal inference from other facts.
The question'is by no means a new one in this court. In
The Francis
Wright,
There is no practice under this statute which is peculiar to courts of admiralty. The rule is general, that wherever the trial court finds the facts and the conclusions of law therefrom it is bound to find every fact material to its conclusion, and á refusal to do so, if properly excepted to, is a ground for reversal. Thus, in cases tried by the court without a jury, under Rev. Stat. sections 649 and 700, the findings of the Circuit Court are conclusive upon this court,-and the power of this court to review extends only to the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment,
Tyng
v.
Grinnell,
Under a similar method of procedure in several of the States it. is held that the findings must contain all the facts and circumstances necessary to a proper determination of the questions involved; and in default thereof, the judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the case sent back for a new trial. Wood v. La Rue, 9 Michigan, 158; Howerter v. Kelly, 23 Michigan, 337; Adams v. Champion, 31 Michigan, 233; Briggs v. Brushaber, 43 Michigan, 330; Bates v. Wilbur, 10 Wisconsin, 415; Addlemom v. Erwin, 6 Indiana, 494.
The facts found in the present case are substantially, that the Wolverton and her tow were bound from Roberts’ Stores, in the East River, upon' the Brooklyn side, to the Long Dock, in Jersey City, upon a W.N.W. course, and at a speed of about seven miles an hour. The Packer, with her barge alongside, constituting in fact one vessel, was heading around the Battery- into the East River, and at the time she first saw the Wolverton was upon a course E. by N., and heading' against a strong tide, at a speed of about two miles an hour. ,’The two vessels made each other about five hundred yards apart. Prom this statement of their respective headings it is quite evident, and the court also finds as a fact, that they were upon crossing courses; that the Packer had the Wolverton on her starboard side,' and was bound, under the 19th Rule of § 4233, to keep out of her way.
In fulfilling this obligation, however, 'she was entitled to act, within the limitations imposed by the requirements of good seamanship, upon the judgment ■ of her master, and to put her helm to port or starboard; and there was a córrela^ ti ve duty, no less imperative, on the part of the Wolverton “to keep her course.” Rule 23.
The Sea Gull, 23
Wall. 165, 176;
-New York &c. Steamship Co.
v.
Rumball,
21 How; 372, 384;
The Adriatic,
It was suggested upon the argument that there was a rule of the supervising inspectors, making it obligatory upon a crossing steamer to avoid the .one having the right of way by porting her helm in all cases. ' But no such rule is incorporated *368 in the record or in the briefs, and it is not a regulation of which we can take judicial notice. But even if, such rule were proved, it is by no means clear that the circumstances of this case would not bring it within the exception contained in the. 24th Buie of “ special circumstances ” requiring a departure from the general regulations.’
Whether the Packer was guilty of fault in starboarding or not, the duty of the Wolverton was clear. She was bound (1) to keep her course, and (2) to check her speed, if there was apparent risk of a collision, and, if necessary to avoid immediate danger, to stop. She.did neither. .The 8th finding is that '
“
the vessels saw each other when about 500 yards apart; ” and the 9th, that “ as soon as the Packer saw the Wolverton she blew two blasts of her steam whistle. She was then tinder a starboard wheel and making in somewhat toward the end of the piers.”. There is no finding whether the signals of the Packer were heard by the Wolverton or not; but it is fairly inferable that if the whistles were blown at a distance of 500 yards they would be or ought to have • been heard, and under such circumstances the porting of the Wolverton was a gross fault, unless it can be excused by the imminence-of the peril.
The Corsica,
The Wolverton seems also to have been at fault for excessive speed. If. the officer in charge were satisfied that the signals of the-Packer and her apparent starboarding were an error and involved a risk of collision, it was his duty, under Rule 21, to slacken speed before crossing her bows, or, if necessary, to stop, or even to reverse, if it could be done without danger to tow. This rule was applied by the House of Lords-to.a collision between crossing vessels in th’e recent case df The Memnon, 62 Law Times (N. S.), 84; S. C. 6 Asp. Mar. Law Cases, 488, wherein it was declared to be the duty of the-vessel entitled-to keep her course to comply with the rule as to slackening speed, or stopping and reversing, if necessary,' and if she does not do so, the burden is upon her to show that-to continue her speed was in fact the best and most seaman-. like manoeuvre under the circumstances, It is not easy to see ■how, under any view of the facts,’the Wolverton can be exonerated from fault in this particular. ■
It appears from the bill of exceptions that, after -the Circuit Court had made its findings of fact in this .case, eight additional findings were submitted . by the claimant, which the Circuit judge declined to find otherwise than he. had already found, except with regard to the compass course of the Wol *370 verton, which he had found to be N.W. by N. by mistake. We have already held that the Circuit Court is bound to find all such facts as are material and necessary to a correct determination of the question of liability involved. Upon examination of these proposed findings in connection with the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions, we think that most of them are immaterial, or are covered by the findings actually made. The sixth, however, is important, and reads as follows: “ The porting of the Wolverton’s wheel when she was about 200 feet from the Packer was a change of four or five points from her course.” We think the claimant was entitled to a finding in regard to this point. It would also have been more satisfactory if the court had found the number of points the Packer swung under the order to starboard given “ upon signalling the Wolverton,” as found in the ninth' finding. But as no request was made for a finding upon this point, and no exception taken to the omission, it is now too la£e for the claimant to demand it.
The decree of the court below, will be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opi/nion.
