6 F. 918 | D. Maryland | 1881
These are cross-libels growing out of a collision between the British steam-ship Guiñare, 250 tons, and the schooner Charles Morford, 360 tons, in the Chesapeake bay, near the mouth of the Patapsco river, on March 5,1881. The Guiñare left Baltimore, bound for the West Indies, on the afternoon of March 5, 1881, and at 7:30 p. m. was about two-thirds the way down the Craighill channel, when she met the steam-tug Mary Shaw coming up the channel with the schooner Charles Morford in tow.
The case stated by the libel filed by the owners of the Guiñare is that those in charge of her first saw the lights of the tug and tow at the distance of about two miles, and continued to see both their side lights until they had approached to within about three-fourths of a mile, when they heard one whistle from the tug, indicating that she proposed that the vessels should pass each other on the port side; that the Guiñare at once responded with one whistle, and ported sufficiently to shut out the green lights of the tug and schooner, and proceeded, keeping their red lights half a point or more over the steamer’s port bow; that when the tug got within about three lengths of the steamer she blew two whistles and suddenly starboarded her helm, shut out her red light, showed her green light, and crossed the steamer’s bow; that the steamer immediately stopped, reversed her engines, and succeeded in clearing the tug, and, while going astern, endeavored, by starboarding her helm, to turn her head to starboard so as to avoid the schooner, but that the schooner ported her helm when nearly abreast of the steamer, and, being under the press of all her lower sails, struck the steamer near her port cat-head, and so injured her that it was found necessary to have her towed back to Baltimore for repairs.
The case stated by the answer of the owners of the tug is that she was coming up the Craighill channel, having the schooner in tow attached to her by a sixty-fathom hawser, and was near the western side of the channel, proceeding ai
The Brewerton and Craighill channels form a continuous water-way from the Chesapeake bay to the port of Baltimore, the first being in the Patapsco river proper, and the latter in the Chesapeake bay at the mouth of the river, and nearly at a right angle with the first. They are from 250 to 400 feet wide, and were made by dredging out the natural channel. The navigation of these channels requires careful seamanship and an exact observance of every rule intended to prevent collisions. Appleby v. Kate Irving, 2 Fed. Rep. 924.
The rule governing steamers, and the signals they shall give when about to pass each other in these channels, is expressed in the eighteenth rule of the act of congress: “If two vessels under steam are meeting end on or nearly end on, so as to involve risk of collision', the helms of both shall be put to port, so that each may pass on the port side of the other and also by the pilot rules for lake and seaboard navigation:
“Rule 1. When steamers are approaching each other * head and head,’ or nearly so, it shall be the duty of each steamer
“Rule 3. If, when steamers are approaching each other, the pilot of either vessel fails to understand the course or intention of the other, whether from the 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 proper signals are given, answered, and understood, or until the vessels shall have passed each other.”
The answer of the tug and the testimony of her officers attempts to set up a custom by which it is claimed the statutory rule is superseded. By this alleged custom they assert the rule to be that large steamers and heavy ships always take the easterly side of the channel, that being the side marked by buoys, and therefore the safest for them to keep to. There is no current or tide to contend with, and the only reason for such a custom would be that the depth is somewhat more uniform on the easterly side, and tfie buoys being on that side, furnish a guide for more exact steering by daylight, and that in making the turn from the Brewerton into
The most experienced Chesapeake Bay pilots, in the habit of daily piloting the largest steamers, testify that there is no such custom. The president of the board of pilots expressly denies its existence, and says that they understand that the vessel -desiring to proceed contrary to the statutory rule must get permission of the other vessel, and if the other vessel does not give it the rule must be obeyed.
No doubt the fact that heavy vessels do frequently ask for and obtain, by an interchange of signals, such permission, may have lead to an expectation that they will usually ask it, and smaller craft may, as a habit, hold themselves ready to accord it; but this is the extent to which the practice extends.. It seems to me that its further extension is to be deprecated. These channels are traversed by vessels of all nations, and any attempt to depart from the well-known rules of maritime law, and to substitute local customs, not founded upon actual necessity, but upon mere convenience, is likely to lead' to uncertainty and disaster. The dangers arising from a departure from settled rules of navigation have lead admiralty courts to hold that the local custom which is to justify such departure must be founded upon necessity arising from permanent local peculiarities, such as rocks, strong currents in crooked rivers, and the like, and that the exception should be as distinct and definite as the rule itself. Lowndes on Collisions, c. 3.
In the present case those in charge of the tug seem to have-mistaken the G-ulnare for a large steamer, and to have-expected that she would want the eastern side of the channel, and they gave her, at the distance of nearly a mile, two blasts of the whistle as a signal that they proposed to take-the western side. They received no reply, as they state, but they steered for the western side and proceeded without any further signal until the steamer was within three lengths of them, when they signalled again. The vessels had then got-into such proximity that a collision was imminent if not unavoidable.
Taking the case as made by the answer of the tug, and the testimony offered on her behalf, it plainly appears that those in charge of her relied on their expectation that the steamer would desire to take the eastern side of the channel, —that is to say, upon the custom which they allege to exist,— and paid no attention to the fact that their signal was not answered.
Dr. White, a passenger of the schooner who happened to be in the tug’s pilot-house, testifies that he saw the steamer’s green light when the tug’s first signal was given; that they received no answer, and then the steamer’s green light was shut out, and they saw her red and continued to see her red light until the steamer was within about the length of the court-room, when the second signal was given; that the steamer then answered with two whistles; that he was getting alarmed, and he said to the mate: “It is all right, now ho has answered;” and the mate replied: “Yes, but she is allowing her red light all tho time; she don’t change her course.”
Richardson, the mate, who was at the wheel, says, when he gave the first two whistles and starboarded his wheel the steamer was about three-quarters of a mile off, and ho expected she would want the east side of the channel, and he steered to bring himself on the western side; that he listened
The master of the tug, who was also in the pilot-house, tells substantially the same story. It is apparent, therefore, that those in charge of the tug, notwithstanding she received no answer to her first signal, persisted in going to the westward, and attempting to pass on the steamer’s starboard side, until the steamer, continuing to show her red light and obviously also going to starboard, was so close that a collision with either the tug or her tow was almost certain. Whether the two blasts of her whistle, then given by the tug, were answered by the two blasts, as they claim, or with one, as those on the steamer testify, does not seem to me to be, in itself, a matter of serious importance, for neither vessel then had it in her power to perform any maneuver which would, except by some lucky chance, have averted the disaster. It is clear that the tug was in fault. I have had difficulty in satisfying myself as to whether or not the steamer was also to blame. No one, I think, could take up the consideration of the steamer’s case without a leaning against her, and a predisposition to find her in fault. Her officers, although accustomed to the command of sailing vessels, were almost without experience in steamer navigation, and it was their first voyage in this steamer. They were not familiar with the channel, and they were running out in the night-time, — a very bold thing for them to undertake unassisted, and which reasonable prudence would seem to have forbidden. But because her officers were likely to fail in seamanship, I am not to take it for granted that they did, unless the evidence convicts them of it.
The steamer was, at the time of the collision, on that side of the channel on which she had a right to be; all her officers were at their posts of duty; they all testify that they heard the first signal of the tug, and that it was but one blast of the
It is not improbable that a pilot familiar with the navigation of the channel, and having some suspicion of the expectation which was in the mind of the master of the tug, might have discovered something in her movements which would have arrested his attention in time to have averted the consequences of the tug’s fault; but to undertake to hold the steamer legally blamable because her officers did not have this high degree of local experience would be, I think, unwise, as by a strict adherence to the statutory rules the navigation of the channel should be safe to mariners having the ordinary experience and capacity necessary to navigate vessels.
I had in the' case of' Appleby v. The Kate Irving, 2 Fed. Rep. 924, to consider the question of speed in these channels, and in that case held the steamer to blame for proceeding at eight miles an hour, which was her full speed. That, however, was a heavily-laden steamer of 1,500 tons, compelled by her draught of water to keep in the channel, and keeping up her full speed with an obstruction right ahead and in full view; and in that case -it appeared to me that the collision resulted in part from a sheer the steamer took arising in great part from her high speed and the difficulty of steering her in the channel, and that, as she had timely notice that the approaching vessels, must get out of her way in order to avoid a collision, she should have slackened her speed or have been going at a less rate to enable them to do it, and I divided the damages.
In the present case, upon all the testimony, I am brought to the conclusion, although I confess with some hesitation, that the steamer is not in fault, and that the tug must bear the whole damage. Nothing has appeared to lead me to think that the schooner committed any fault, or that any mismanagement is to be imputed to her.