19 F. 765 | E.D. Mich. | 1884
Much testimony was introduced upon either side, tending, upon the part of the libelant, to prove that the collision took place on the easterly.side of the channel, and within two or three hundred feet of the red can-buoy; and, on che part of the claimant, to show that it must have occurred within a short distance of the head of the island, and upon the extreme westerly side of the channel. As usual, ■each crew swears almost as one witness to its own theory of the case, and in direct conflict to the other, each endeavoring to get his own vessel, as far as possible, toward its own side of the channel. We think, under these circumstances, it is much easier to extract the truth from the admitted facts and probabilities of the case than from any attempt to reconcile these contradictions or determine which of the two crews is more worthy of belief. Assuming that a tow bound up, with a light southerly wind, would naturally keep the center of the channel between Bois Blanc island and Amhurstburgh, we find nothing to in
Wo do not, however, deem this question of vital importance, as we are all agreed that the propeller was guilty of fault in exhibiting her green light to the tug, after signals of one whistle had been exchanged between them. The propeller was coming down the channel, exhibiting her red light to the tug. Good seamanship and her signals both required that she should pursue a consistent course, and exhibit her red light, and her red light only, until she had gotten abreast the tug. Assuming that she must leave the ranges and starboard a point or two to take her course down the river, slie had no right to swing so far to port as to exhibit a green light to the ascending tug. It was a movement which could not fail to erabarrass and confuse the master of the Swain, and was, in our opinion, the primary cause of the collision which ensued. Even if the tug was on the westerly side of the channel, as the propeller insists, and the propeller star-boarded her wheel to prevent running upon the island, she was still in the wrong, as she should have stopped long enough to permit the tug to pass her, instead of starboarding so far as to exhibit her green light. We have no doubt that she swung further to port under this order to starboard than her master intended, and that
' The question as to the liability of the tug is a much more difficult one, and depends entirely upon the conduct of her master after the propeller had swung to port so far as to shut in her red and exhibit her green light,i and the danger of collision had become imminent. Some minutes prior to this the two vessels had exchanged signals of one whistle, and where proceeding with a perfect understanding that each was to pass upon the port side of the other. The sudden star-boarding of the propeller, and the exhibition of her green light, were ' calculated to create an uncertainty in the mind of Capt. Tormey as to the intention of the propeller. He might draw the inference either that the propeller had starboarded to go down the channel between Bois Blanc island and the mainland, as was actually the fact, or that she had repudiated the understanding, and was endeavoring to take a new course down on the starboard side. Acting upon this hypothesis, he blew two whistles, and starboarded. This would have been a proper maneuver had the intention of the propeller been as he supposed ; he was mistaken, however, and the maneuver brought about the collision it was intended to avoid. His proper course was to comply with rule 8 of the Supervising Inspectors, which reads as follows :
Rule 8. “If, when steamers are approaching each other, the pilot of either vessel fails to understand the course or intention of the other, whether from signals being given or answered erroneously, or from other causes, the pilot so in doubt shall immediately signify the same by giving several short and rapid blasts of the steam-whistle: and if the vessels shall have approached within half a mile of each other, both shall be immediately slowed to a speed barely sufficient for steerage-way until the proper signals are given, answered, and understood, 'or until the vessels shall have passed each other. ”
The same obligation to slacken speed is contained in the twenty-first sailing rule of the.Bevised Statutes, (section 4233,) in the following terms:
, “Every steam-vessel, when approaching another vessel so as to involve risk of collision, shall slacken her speed, or„ if necessary, stop and reverse.”
As it is substantially agreed that the propeller was only about 600 feet off when her green light was exhibited, it is at least open to doubt whether the action of the tug did, in fact, contribute to the collision, and whether any maneuver upon her part could have prevented it. The gentlemen by whom I have been assisted upon the argument advise me that, in their opinion, the vessels were then too ■ close together for any effieient.action upon the part of the tug. But
“That when, as in this case, a ship at tlie time of a collision is in actual violation of a statutory rule intended to prevent collisions, it is no more than a reasonable presumption that tlie fault, if not the sole cause, was, at least, a contributory cause of tlie disaster. In such a case the burden rests upon the ship of showing not merely that her fault might not have been one of the causes, or that it probably was not, but that it could not have been. Such a rule is necessary to enforce obedience to the mandate of tlie statute. * -i.- * The evidence in the present case leaves it uncertain whether, if a fog-horn had been blown on the bark, it would not have been heard sooner than the bell was heard, and thus earlier warning have been given to tlie steamer—seasonable warning to have enabled her to keep out of the way. * * * It may be assumed, therefore, that the legislature acted under the couviction that a fog-horn could be heard a greater distance than a bell, and required the use of one rather than that of tlie other for that reason. To go into the inquiry whether the legislature was not in error—whether, in fact, a bell did not give notice to tlie steamer that tlie bark was where she was as soon as a fog-horn would have done—is out of place. It would be substituting our judgment for the judgment of the law-making power.”
The obligation to slacken speed whenever by a false maneuver on the part of another vessel a steamer incurs the danger of collision, lias been enforced in numbers of cases, and under circumstances very similar to those which existed in the case under consideration. The Huntsville, 8 Blatchf. 228, 231; The Comet, 9 Blatchf. 323, 329; The Ogdensburg, (Chamberlain v. Ward,) 21 How. 548, 560; The Manitoba, 2 Flippin, 241, 255. By far the most exhaustive discussion of this question is contained in the judgment of the house of lords in The Voorwarts and Khedive, L. R. 5 App. Cas. 876. This was a collision in the straits of Malacca. The two steamers were heading upon nearly opposite courses, and appeared about to pass eacli other safely, green light to green light; but when they were about half a mile apart the Voorwarts suddenly ported her helm and throw herself across the bows of the Khedive and rendered a collision imminent. The captain of the Khedive ordered the helm to be put hard a-starboard and the engineers to stand by the engines. Two minutes afterwards he ordered them to stop and reverse; and a minute and a half afterwards the collision took place. The judge of the admiralty court hold that both vessels were in fault. The court of appeal found the Voorwarts solely to blame for tlie collision, and reversed the judgment of the admiralty court. The house of lords reversed tlie judgment of the court of appeals and restored that of the admiralty court,
“It appears to me that it was the deliberate policy of the legislature to compel sea captains, when their vessels are in danger of collision, to obey the rule, and not to trust to their own nerve and skill; and that it was an essential part of the same policy to admit of no excuse for non-observance of the rule, short of satisfactory evidence, either that the captain was constrained to disobey it by other perils of the sea or that he adopted a course which, in the circumstances, was better than that prescribed by the rule. And, for my own part, I cannot think the legislature has acted unwisely in applying a uniform statutory test to all such cases, instead of leaving them to be decided by the variaable test of ‘fault,' as ascertained in each case, with the aid of nautical opinion.”
The same rule was applied to the non-exhibition of lights by the prify council in the ease of The Hochung and Lapwing, L. R. 7 App. Cas. 512.
There are cases, it is true, in which a master is justified-in continuing at full speed even though a collision be imminent; but they are rare and depend upon circumstances wholly exceptional. Such a case was presented at the last term in The Colwell and Joy, where a tug having three vessels, with their sails up, in tow, was proceeding down Lake Erie, with a favorable wind, and met another tow coming up, which attempted to cross the bows of the former. We held in this case that the tug was justified in proceeding at full
In the case under consideration, while I differ from the nautical assessors with great hesitation, I am not entirely prepared to concur in their opinion that the collision would still have happened had the tug kept her course and stopped her engines. Considering that the propeller had time, not only to recover from her swing to port, but to swing so far to starboard as to strike the tug at nearly a right angle, although the tng herself swung only one point to port, it seems to me that if the tug had kept her helm and stopped her engine she would have swung clear of the propeller, and the disaster would have been averted. As the tow was proceeding against a current of two or three miles an hour with sails furled, there would have been little, if any, danger of fouling the tug or each other. I have not overlooked, in this connection, the many rulings which hold that an error of the master committed at the moment of collision is not a fault. Such an error is pardonable upon the theory that the master may resort to any maneuver to ease the blow. But I am not aware of any case which holds that a steamer may continue at full speed, unless she can show beyond a reasonable doubt that the collision vras then inevitable.
There must be a decree adjudging both vessels in fault, and referring it to the clerk as commissioner to assess the damages.