43 F. 807 | E.D. Mich. | 1890
(orally.) . We are entirely agreed in our opinion of this ease, and feel so clear as to its proper disposition that we have not deemed it necessary to confer at any length, or to prepare a written opinion. Indeed, speaking for myself, I can say that I was prepared to decide the case upon the pleadings; but, out of deference to counsel and the probability of appeal, I deemed it my duty to listen to the testimony, and, although -without any doubts in my own mind, to obtain the advice of the gentlemen who have kindly consented to sit with me. I may say that in a practice of nearly 30 years in collision suits, I can hardly recall a case where the negligence seemed so gross and inexcusable, and none where the consequences were so disastrous. Indeed, judging from the frequent collisions which take place in thick weather, the hardest lesson which the masters of steam-vessels can learn seems to bo the proper method of passing each other in a fog. As was remarked by Mr. Justice Butt, in one of the last cases reported, (The Resolution,, 6 Asp. 363,) decided only a year ago:
“Masters can always carry out the maneuvers in that way, (that is, by stopping:) and l will not yield to what I know is the strong disinclination of the masters of these large vessels to stop their engines. They hate and abhor the very idea, but it is to my mind their duty to do so, if they cannot otherwise reduce their speed sufficiently.”
As illustrating the duty of masters under such circumstances, we will take The John McIntyre, 51 Law T. (N. S.) 185, 9 Prob. Div. 135, one of the earlier cases upon that subject, in which the master of the rolls said:
“If a steamer in a thick fog, so thick she can hardly see before her, hears another vessel in her neighborhood on either bow, not being able to see her, and she herself not going at her slowest pace, the question is whether, under those circumstances, the officer in charge of the steamer ought not to conclude that it is necessary, in order to avoid risk ol' collision, that he should stop and reverse. I do not hesitate to lay down the rule, not strictly as a matter of law, but as a matter of conduct, that the moment such circumstances as these happen, it is necessary, under the article, to stop and reverse.”
“Therefore, if a ship at sea in such a fog hears a whistle which would indicate that another vessel is a mile or a mile and a half off, she ought at once to reduce her speed to a more moderate speed, though moderate speed under these circumstances would be very different to moderate speed when the vessels came closer together. This case is not to be determined by what was done at the time the first whistle was heard. Here we have three, and perhaps more, successive whistles, all coming closer. What can be the conclusion to be derived from those whistles? We know that in fact these vessels were coming closer and closer to each other. We, however, have to judge of what ought to be the conclusion or suspicion of the officer in charge of the Dordogne. What would that succession of whistles tell him? Dor myself, I should have had no doubt, when you have a succession of whistles, each one coming closer, that each whistle would show him that the other vessel is coming nearer. * * * I do not think it signifies whether the signals get broader on the bow or not, if they show that the vessel is coming closer. If it is coming nearer and nearer in a dense fog, (and every one knows that in a dense fog you cannot tell where exactly a vessel is from the sound of her whistle,) and you cannot tell the direction in which it is coming, are not those such circumstances as should lead a prudent officer to suppose that if he went on as he was there would be danger? * * * That which is moderate speed when the vessels are two or three miles apart, is not moderate speed when the vessels are within half a mile of each other. As the vessels get nearer and nearer, he must bring his ship to as complete a standstill as possible, without putting himself out of command. If his vessel is a steamer, he must go at least dead slow. . If the other is coming anything like near to him, he ought to obey article eighteen, and stop and reverse.”
And here Mr. Justice Cotton adds:
‘:We have not to consider what was the conduct of the Dordogne when the first whistle was heard. It is clear that there was a succession of whistles; that the vessels were coming nearer- and nearer, and were, in fact, getting very near one another. Now it was the duty of the Dordogne to stop and reverse her engine if there was risk of collision-. . But it is said that, inasmuch as these whistles were getting broader and broader on the bow, the officer of the Dordogne might reasonably conclude there was no danger. However, that will not, in my opinion, excuse the Dordogne for disobedience to article 18. - In a fog in which a man can see nothing, he cannot form any safe opinion as to the direction of another vessel, and he should, in such circumstances, follow the course stated by the master of the rolls.”
But without quoting further from the language of the opinions, it is sufficient to say that the same rules have been since applied by the English courts in The Ebor, 11 Prob. Div. 25; The Resolution, 6 Asp. 363; and The Ceto, L. R. 14 App. Cas. 670. The American courts have also practically affirmed and reaffirmed this rule. I had occasion myself to do so in ,the case of The Alberta, 23 Fed. Rep. 807, where I held that the Osborne, which was proceeding at the rate of about five miles an hour, ought to have stopped ,when she heard the Alberta’s whistles, which indicated that she was approaching and crossing her bow, or at least drawing nearer to her.
Now, let us measure the conduct of these vessels by those rules, and within moderate limits I propose io enforce them in this court. I think it is the duty of a vessel hearing the signal of a steam-ship ahead in a fog (and by ahead T do not mean dead ahead necessarily, but within one or two points upon either bow) to reduce her speed; and, if she hears a second and third whistle nearer in the same direction, it is her duty to stop and wait until signals have passed between the two vessels which shall determine upon which side each shall go, and that both vessels should proceed at the most moderate speed, keeping themselves well in command, until they bring themselves off each other’s bow to such a distance as to make it absolutely certain that by continuing under cheek they will pass each other in safety. I do not think that they have any right to resume their full speed until they are directly or nearly abeam. There are certain disputed questions of fact in this case which we cannot settle, and we do not propose to discuss them. The best that counsel can ask of us is to take the facts as each side has sworn to them, and examine the case in the light of this testimony. I have tried too many collision cases to attempt to reconcile the testimony of the crows of different vessels where it is so conflicting as it is in this case. Nor arc wo at all embarrassed by that difficulty. Wo do not think it necessary to pay much regard to more numerical superiority in the witnesses upon one side or the other. We shall take the salient and uncontradicted facts as they are sworn to by each side, — the course of the vessels, (in regard to which there is little temptation to deflect from the truth,) their respective signals as testified by those who made them, (he angle at which the vessels came together, and the extent of the injury, — and determine, to the satisfaction of onr own minds, the probabilities of the case.
Let us take the case of the Sheffield. She was proceeding up the lake, hound from Whitefish point to Keweenaw point on a course W. N. W. She was blowing her usual fog-signals, her whistle being operated by an
Let us now examine the case of the North Star. Her course, and by this I mean her direction, is certainly open to much less criticism than that of the Sheffield. Indeed, I do not know that I have any fault to find with it, even though she may have starboarded a little when she heard the signal of the Sheffield on her port bow. She claims to have been running under a check from the time the fog set in; but we think that, comparing the time she left Mauitou light with the time and locality of this collision, her speed could not have been greatly reduced. Bearing in mind that she covered 66 miles in six hours and a half, her check could not have been a very slow one. Her speed must have been about 10 miles an hour. But lot us assume that she was running under a check of 5 miles an hour. IIow does the case stand then? Did she hear the fog-signal from the Sheffield? She claims she did not, and all the witnesses produced here by the respondent claim that she did not hear the single blast of the Sheffield, and that the first signal that she heard was a blast of two whistles, which did not exceed four and five minutes before the collision. Now, gentlemen, we do not believe that.. We think she must have heard the single blast of the Sheffield for some considerable time. It is true the wind was blowing over her stern, hut it was a light breeze, and not such a one as would prevent an ordinary fog-signal being heard for more than a mile. We think that she must have heal'd this fog-signal — First, because the mate says that he heard it; and, second, because the protest indicates that he heard it. The protest says: “Heard steamer blowing fog-signal on starboard bow about 5:10 p. ivr. Few minutes after, heard this steamer giving two blasts on the starboard bow.” Now, undoubtedly the whistle she heard on her starboard bow was the fog-signal of the Sheffield. These protests are, I think, very cogent evidence. They are made when the memory of the witnesses is fresh, and nothing is present in their minds but the facts of the collision. They are unadulterated by legal advice, and are made at a time when no temptation to deviate from the letter of truth has presented itself to them. But, in addition to the testimony of the mate, and of the protest, the witness King, who acted as porter, and who was lying in his berth, says that ho heard the single blast of this vessel three or lour times, and all of a sudden they changed to two blasts, and he jumped out of his berth and ran ahead, evidently thinking there was danger of a collision. We have no indication that the Star moderated her speed up to that time beyond the cheek at which she had been going since the fog set in. In fact, it was about that time that the master sent the mate to the engineer to tell him to hurry up a little, — to put on a little more steam, — while signals of two blasts were being blown at a dis
“As soon as this was blown, danger of collision was apprehended, and the North Star promptly answered this signal last blown by the Sheffield by adhering to her passing signal of two blasts, and her master immediately took the precaution to check down still further the speed of the North Star, which was then moderate. The Sheffield, however, again blew a signal of one blast of her whistle, still on the North Star’s starboard bow, but closer. The engine of the North Star was then immediately stopped, and, while this order was being obeyed, the Sheffield hove in sight, near to and heading across the North Star’s bow and course, from starboard to port. The vessels were then so close to each other that a collision seemed inevitable, but, notwithstanding this, the master of the North Star immediately ordered her wheel to port, so-that she might swing under the stern of the Sheffield, and possibly pass her, and ordered the engine to back, and immediately followed this order by an order to hack strong, and, in response to this order, every available pound of steam was given the engine.”
Now it is manifest that at the time this signal of two blasts was heard on the North Star the signals of the two steamers were conflicting, and the circumstances all indicate that they could not have been more than a mile apart. The vessels were approaching each other at a speed which would bring them together in five minutes, and it was the instant duty' of the North Star to stop and back. It is claimed that she did this, but it is also uncontradicted that she checked. Now, why did she check? There was no reason for it. Her duty was to stop, and her counsel have recognized this as her duty by saying that a cluster of signals to check, to stop, to hack, and to back strong were all given substantially at once, and as one order. In view of the allegations .of the answer, we cannot believe that. The protest does not indicate that any such celerity of movement was manifested. The mate went down to the engine room, and when he came back these orders were given, and they all say they were given successively, and not as if one order had been given. But there was at that time hanging up in the engine room a direction to this effect: “Where a vessel is going ahead, and a signal of two bells is given, that is an order to back and back strong.” That is the signal that should have been given beyond all possible question. My own view is, and in this the nautical assessors concur with me, that the first order given was to check; that they waited until they got another blast from the Sheffield, and then they stopped; that the Sheffield immediately hove in sight, when they reversed their engines, but too late to be of any
In further corroboration of this, we have the testimony of a large number of witnesses upon the Sheffield, who were looking for the Star as she hove in sight, and say that she came at them with “a largo bone in her teeth.” Upon the other hand, the witnesses upon the Star seem to have taken the precaution to look over her stem and say there was no hone there. We deem it extremely improbable, however, that the witnesses upon the Star should have been looking at her cut-water. They had undoubtedly taken the alarm, and were on the lookout for the appearance of the Sheffield. Wo are clearly of the opinion that the Star was at fault for not taking prompter measures to stop and reverse her engine.
There must he a decree dividing the damages, and referring the case to a commissioner to computo and report the same.