6 F. 906 | E.D.N.Y | 1881
The three canses above mentioned have been tried together. The first-named is brought by the owners of the steamship Niagara to recover of the schooner Samuel H. Crawford the amount of damages caused by a collision that occurred between those two vessels off the capes of Delaware on the thirtieth day of December, 1880. The second action is brought by the same libellants to recover salvage for services rendered by the steamer Niagara to the schooner Samuel H. Crawford, immediately after the collision referred to, in tewing her, when disabled by the collision, from the place of
The port side of the schooner showed no marks of the collision. No part of the schooner was loft upon the steamer, but the steamer sustained a severe injury upon her star-hoard bow, some distance from the stem, and showed marks
The weight of the testimony of those on board the steamer, who speak as to what they observed at the moment of collision, and immediately thereafter, is diminished by the fact that these observations were made in the confusion and excitement necessarily incident to such a serious collision, and by the further fact that it is difficult to reconcile the statement of several of the witnesses from the steamer that the port side of the schooner was presented to the steamer, as she swept past the steamer’s starboard side, with the nature of the blow, the absence at that time of head-sails on the schooner, the injury to the starboard side of the schooner, and the movements of the schooner after the blow, as testified to by those on board of her.
In opposition to this testimony from the steamer, there is from the schoonor the direct and positive testimony of six persons that both the red and green lights of the schooner were set and burning brightly at the time of the collision.
An effort has been made to maintain that the side lights of the schooner, placed as they were on the corners of the forward house, were in a situation to be obstructed by the
In .regard to the red light being at the time the windward light, it is not possible to contend that that light, if burning properly, would not be visible to the steamer approaching, as this steamer was, nearly bow to bow.
I therefore conclude that the schooner, as she approached ■the.steamer, was displaying lights which a watchful lookout' on the'steamer would have seen in time to avoid her, and that the cause of the failure on the part of the steamer to see 'the schooner, until it - was too late to avoid her, was tlie absence of such a lookout.
But it is contended in behalf of the steamer that, if it be 'found that the schooner had her side lights set and burning, -the schooner must nevertheless be held responsible for the collision, because of the admitted fact that her side lights were placed, inboard, on the corners of the forward house, instead of in the rigging. The difficulty with this contention is that the fact that the red light was a short distance further .inboard than it would have been if placed in the rigging, becomes immaterial in this case when it appears that, located 'as the light was, it showed a clear light ahead without obstruction. I do not approve of the location of the schooner’s ■lights, but I cannot find that the location in any way conduced to this collision, because it appears that there was nothing to obstruct those lights in the direction of the steamer. If is also, and with better reason, contended in behalf of the .steamer that the schooner'must be held in fault for omitting •to comply with the statute, which declares that “every sail-vessel shall, on the approach of any steam-vessel during the night-time, show a lighted torch upon the point or quarter to which such steam-vessel shall be approaching.” Bev. St. § 4234.
. .In regard to the statute, the .ground has been taken in
If the proof had been that there was no one on tho steamer located so as to be able to see a torch displayed from ahead, a different case would have been presented. Here, even if it be, as supposed by tho schooner, that tho lookouts on tho steamer were absent from their posts for a part of the time while the schooner was visible, still there remained one man at the wheel and another in the wheel-house who might have noticed tlie torch if it had been displayed. ' Where a failure to see an approaching vessel is the immediate cause oí a col-
Upon these grounds, therefore, I find that the collision in question was caused by fault on the part of both vessels, and accordingly the damages must be apportioned. The libel for salvage must, under such circumstances, necessarily be dismissed.
Note. In Farwell v. The Steam-boat John H. Starin, 2 Fed. Rep. 100, (S. D. N. Y.,) and Schooner Margaret v. Steamer O. Whiting, 3 Fed. Rep. 870, (E. D. Pa.,) it was held that a failure to comply with the statute did not render the vessel liable, unless the omission tended to produce the collision. In the first case it was deemed essential that the steamer should be approaching some particular “point ” on the sailing vessel in order to render the statute applicable. In Kennedy v. The Steamer Sarmatian, 2 Fed. Rep. 911, (D. Md.,) it was held that the statute was sufficiently broad to require a light to be exhibited to a steamer coming up astern; while in Brainard v. The Steamer Narragansett, 3 Fed. Rep. 251, (D. Conn.,) it was further held that the requirement of the statute was not confined merely to those cases where a steamer was thus approaching a sailing vessel from astern.
In the case of Kennedy v. The Steamar Sarmation, supra, Chief Justice Waite held that the rule contemplated the keeping of a sufficient watch over the stern to enable the vessel to perform her duty as to the lights ; and that it was negligence in a schooner, under the general rules of the sea, not to show a torch-light, or do something else calculated to give notice of her dangerous proximity to an approaching steam-vessel. — [Ed.