201 F. 428 | E.D. Va. | 1912
The collision between the steamship Kirnwood and the barge Florida, which is the subject of this litigation, occurred on the evening of the 29th of August, 1912, about 3:30 o’clock, in Hampton Roads, off Old Point Comfort, Va., about half a mile below the Ripraps, slightly to the southward of mid-channel.
The barge Florida, loaded with coal,' was the rear of two barges in tow of the tug Coastwise, proceeding to sea, and the Kirnwood was a tramp steamship, loaded with lumber, also bound out'of the Capes. The Coastwise was an ocean-going tug of 268 tons burden, 103 feet long, 25.5 feet beam, and 15 feet draft; and each of the barges were large ocean-going vessels, the forward barge, the I. H. Chapman being 237.5 feet long, 42.7 feet beam, and 19.2 feet draft, with a cargo of about 3,200 tons of coal, and the Florida, 220.4 feet long, 34.8 feet beam, and 25.4 feet draft, with a cargo of 2,100 tons of coal, and each being towed on hawsers, as claimed by the tows, of some 50 fathoms in length, and by the steamship to be considerably longer. The Kirnwood was a large steamer, 340 feet long, and 1,953 tons burden. At the time of the collision, the steam barge Jackson was coming in from Chesapeake Bay, on the port side of the tug, and in the immediate vicinity thereof. The tug Clark, with a tow, was coming up the channel some half mile away, bearing slightly on the port bow of the Coastwise; and the three-masted schooner Edward 'B. Smith was tacking across the Roads, having gone over on the port tack to the southward of the channel, and shortly before the collision
The libel was filed by the master of the Florida against the steamer Kirnwood,. and the latter answered, bringing in the Coastwise under the fifty-ninth admiralty rule. The allegations of fault by the parties, one against the other, are many and varied; but in substance, and in so far as is necessary and material to be stated under the facts and circumstances of the case, they may be summarized as follows:
On the part of the libelant and the Coastwise, that while the Coast-wise was on her regular course, proceeding down and slightly to the southward of mid-channel, with two barges following directly behind on hawsers of ábout 45 fathoms, and navigating with reference to the tug and tow coming in, and the schooner- Edward B. Smith tacking across their course, and having slightly ported, with a view of veering to starboard, and passing under the stern of the schooner, without having received any signals from the Kirnwood, or giving any reply to any signals from her, that the steamship approached from the rear, and to the starboard of the Florida, running apparently on parallel courses with them, and, when about lapping the stern of the rear barge, suddenly starboarded and ran into the Florida, and sank her; that no reverse, danger, or other signals were given by the Kirnwood at the time of the latter’s change of course.
On the part of the Kirnwood, that when in about five ship lengths of the rear barge, and running on parallel courses therewith, some two ■or three ship lengths to starboard, and when it was entirely safe and prudent for her so to do, she blew a signal of one blast of her whistle, indicating that she would pass the tug and tow 'to starboard; that she received no reply, and continued on her course, and when in two ship lengths from the barge gave a second! signal of one whistle to indicate the same purpose, to which also she received no reply; - that she continued upon her course, which was still considered safe, until the ship’s bow overlapped the stern of the Florida, when suddenly the tug changed her course to starboard, crossing the Kirnwood’s course, causing the collision; that thereupon the steamship immediately blew a signal of three blasts of her. whistle, put her engines full speed astern, and so continued until the collision, having almost entirely killed her headway at the time of impact, and having let go
On the case thus stated, the question is by whose fault were these two vessels brought into collision, whether the tug for starboarding and crossing the course of the outgoing ship, or the ship for coming into collision with the barge under the circumstances named. At a glance, it will be perceived that, in the absence of negligence on, the part of some one, there was no cause for the collision. The channel was about a mile wide, virtually unobstructed, save by the shipping above mentioned; it was broad daylight, the weather apparently perfect, neither wind nor tide to disturb the same; and, indeed, there was nothing to prevent vessels, prudently navigating, from avoiding accidents.
A great number of witnesses were examined — the officers and most of the crew of the tug and two barges and of the Kirnwood; the master and mate of the Jackson, the incoming steam barge, and a passenger thereon, and of the tug Clark, also coming in; the master and mate of the schooner Edward B. Smith; the master of a ferry steamer in the vicinity of the vessels, and officers of a battleship upstream, in full view of the accident, and persons on-the wharf at Old Point Comfort, most of whom saw and observed the movements of the two vessels at and about the time of the collision, and who gave their respective accounts of what occurred, some conflicting, but mostly coinciding as to the material points to be determined in the case.
The conclusion of the court, upon a full consideration of the entire testimony, is that it is established, by an overwhelming preponderance of the same,'that the collision was brought about as the result of the failure of the steamer Kirnwood, the overtaking vessel, to take timely and precautionary steps to avoid either the collision, or the risk of collision, with the tug and tow ahead of her, and especially in attempting to pass the overtaken tug and tow to starboard, without procuring their assent to such passing, after the Kirnwood had initiated the maneuver by giving proper signals so to do.
The impropriety of attempting to pass this tug and tow in such close proximity was accentuated in this case by the fact that, Grossing both the bow of the tug and the steamer, a three-masted schooner was tacking on the starboard tack, in such manner as to cross to the northward over their course, which necessitated, to make safe and possible the maneuver of the Kirnwood, that she should rush across the bow of the schooner, and' ahead of the tug boat, which, if successful,
This defense of the steamship respecting the presence of the schooner is not supported by the testimony; on the contrary, the evidence overwhelmingly establishes that the schooner passed on the port tack across to the southward, put about, and while on the starboard .tack crossed the bow of the tug, some short distance ahead of the same, estimated by most of. the witnesses at about 200 feet, and that it was well to the port of the tug and tow at the time of the collision. This portion of^the testimony is sustained by the witnesses on both sides, and, indeed, as the court recalls, Capt. Peak, the pilot navigating the Kirnwood at the time of the collision, alone testified that the schooner passed to the northward after the collision.
As viewed by the court, the pilot’s navigation of the Kirnwood can only be accounted for by the fact that he failed to take into account the probable movements of the schooner, which was tacking in the vicinity of his course, and which should have been anticipated by him ; that he noticed her while going to the southward on the port tack, and failed to timely observe that she had changed her tack, putting her in an opposite direction to which she was first going; and that his idea that she crossed behind the tug and tow arose from seeing her on that side of the channel after the collision, when, of course, the latter vessels, as well as the Kirnwood, had proceeded on their courses further down the channel. The presence of a tacking schooner ahead of and to the starboard of the tug and tow, in these waters and under these conditions, should have admonished the navigator of the Kirnwood that he should not have attempted to proceed to the starboard of the latter vessels, as it placed him necessarily between the same and the schooner; and the steamship’s navigator was charged with knowledge, and admits that he knew, that this schooner, proceeding on her port tack, would change her course as soon as the same ran out, and hence involved danger in bringing her across the bow of the tug, or into collision with the outgoing vessels.
The risk involved in this movement was clearly one condemned by the law, and contrary to the rules of good seamanship. The pilot’s view apparently was, as he in effect said, that safety consisted in ability to pass clear; and he on two occasions spoke of his ship being “sandwiched in” between the tug and tow and the schooner Smith. It was incumbent upon him, the navigator of an unincumbered vessel, not to have placed himself, in such relation to this sailing vessel and incumbered tugboat, and for injury arising as the result thereof his ship is liable in damages to those sustaining the same. Donald v. Guy (D. C.) 135 Fed. 429, 432.
. The pilot of the Kirnwood insists that the navigation of his ship was proper and prudent, and that the collision was only brought about by the improper maneuvers on the part of the Coastwise, in not keep
It is entirely true that ordinarily a vessel having the right of way owes the obligation to the other vessel to keep her course and speed; but this has no application to' the Coastwise on this occasion. She had neither heard -the' Kirnwood’s signals to pass to starboard nor assented to the same. She was at a distance that made it improbable under existing conditions (some 3,000 feet away), running in the face of the wind, that she would have heard the same, and had no right to assume or anticipate that the steamship would attempt to pass by in an open roadstead, in good weather, in the daytime, in such manner as to endanger, or involve the risk of collision with, her tow. The Coastwise owed the obligation to keep out of the way of the schooner, and to avoid crossing ahead of her, unless the circumstances so admitted. If she ported and went astern at the time she did, whether half a point as admitted by her, or 2% or 3 points as claimed by the schooner, it was what' she should have done, if necessary to keep out of the wáy óf'the schooner then navigating across her course, and with a view of passing under her stern, and not ahead of her, if the circumstances of the case admitted of her doing so (Inland Rules of Navigation, articles 20 and 22); and certainly she should not be condemned at the instance of the Kirnwood, the unincumbered vessel, which apparently was seeking to pass, not under the stern of the schooner, but ahead both of the tug and tow and of the schooner.
The Kirnwood’s claim that’she promptly reversed, and gave proper signals, and did all within her power to avoid the collision, after the Coastwise changed its course, is doubtless true; but it was too late to serve any good purpose, in the position in which- she had placed herself and the several vessels then were, having regard to the'burdens borne by them, respectively, one to the other. The Kirnwood, the overtaking ship, should not have crowded the tug and tow. Article 24, supra. She -had ample room to pass to port, there being
The Kirnwood having violated the plain and salutary rules prescribed for governing overtaking vessels (Inland Rules of Navigation, rule 8, art. 24, 30 Stat. 96), which in this case sufficiently accounts for the collision, all doubts should be solved against her; and she cannot escape liability by relying upon or suggesting the possible fault of others (The City of New York, 147 U. S. 72, 85, 13 Sup. Ct. 211, 37 L. Ed. 84; The Victory & The Plymothian, 168 U. S. 410, 423, 18 Sup. Ct. 149, 42 L. Ed. 519; Foster v. Merchants’ & Miners’ Transp. Co. [D. C.] 134 Fed. 964, 969).
It follows, from what has been said, that the Kirnwood is solely responsible for causing the collision in question, and a decree may be entered so ascertaining.