The officer in charge of the Mandal, at some time after he saw the lights and before the collision, blew two blasts and put his helm hard astarboard with the intention of passing across the bow of the Putney
The Putney Bridge neither gave nor answered any signal, and by the international rules was not required so to do. The officer in charge of her navigation kept her on her course and speed, as under ordinary circumstances the privileged vessel should be kept. There was no signal .which he could give that would indicate that that was what he proposed to do. His giving none indicated that his intention was to adhere to the rules. Until the vessels were close together, there was no reason for him to assume that the Mandal would not do what the laws of navigation required she should do. I think that, when she indicated by her two-blast signal that she proposed to do something else, the vessels were so close together that it was exceedingly doubtful whether anything which then could have been done by the Putney Bridge would have prevented the collision, and certainly it could not have been clear to the officer in charge of the Putney Bridge at that time that any possible course would have obviated, or even reduced, the risk of the ships coming together. In the exercise of his best judgment, the officer in command of the Putney Bridge believed that his best chance, even then, to escape an accident, was to maintain his course and speed. He was not far wrong in this. A quarter of a minute more would have carried him clear of danger.
