156 F. 838 | D. Del. | 1907
Charles P. A. Bright and William M. Bright as owners of the screw naphtha launch Ralph W. have libeled the steam tug Taurus to recover damages for injury sustained by the launch through a collision with the tug in the Christiana River in this district October 4, 1904, between ten and eleven o’clock at night. Just before giving the single blast hereinafter referred to the launch was coming up the river at a distance of between one third and one half a mile from and below the draw-bridge of the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company, and the tug was proceeding down the river having a barge in tow. The collision caused the launch to sink with its cargo and to suffer other damage. The libel alleges in substance, among other things, that the launch prior to the collision was coming up the river in a proper manner and gave “due and proper signal” to the tug to go to starboard or toward the southerly side of the river; that the tug gave no answer to the signal; that its engines were not stopped in due time to check its headway, nor was its course properly directed; that the tug was improperly and unskillfully managed and navigated; that when the tug was at the distance of about 100 feet from the launch the former vessel “without warning, suddenly and contrary to signal changed her course,” heading across the river toward its northerly side and across the bow of the launch, towing or swinging the barge around and causing it to strike with great force against the bow of the launch; and that the collision was wholly due to the negligence and want of proper skill on the part of the tug. The answer of the owner of the tug denies that the launch was prior to the collision coming up the river in a proper manner; and alleges in substance that the tug with its tow was “being navigated and directed in a careful and prudent manner,” and with proper lights; that the tug after passing through the draw-bridge was proceeding down the river a little to the northeastward of the centre of the channel; that the launch was coming up the river to the southwestward
The evidence is somewhat voluminous, and much of it, as is usual ''in cases of collision, is contradictory and unsatisfactory. I have found it necessary carefully to consider most of the testimony in the light of the undisputed or clearly established facts and the probabilities in order to ascertain the weight to which it is entitled. Some of the evidence in which points of the compass are mentioned is somewhat confusing, owing to the fact that several compass directions are expressed indifferently with respect to the same "thing. It may avoid misapprehension to state that whenever a side of the river or of its channel is referred to as northerly, easterly or northeasterly, the left hand side as one faces down stream is meant; and so whenever reference is made to the southerly, westerly or southwesterly side, the right hand side as one. so faces is meant. Articles 25 and 27 of the sailing regulations for inland waters of the United States (Act June 7, 1897, c. 4, 30 Stat. 101, 102 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, pp. 2883, 2884]), are as follows:
“Art. 25. In narrow channels every steam-vessel shall, when It is safe and practicable, keep to that side of the fair-way or mid-channel which lies on the starboard side of such vessel.
“Art 27. In obeying and construing these rules due regard shall be had to all dangers of navigation and collision, and to any special circumstances which may render a departure from the above rules necessary in order to avoid immediate danger.”
It clearly appears that the tug did not keep to that side of the mid-diannel which lay to starboard, when below the draw-bridge and while approaching the launch. The answer admits that “after passing through the railroad draw-bridge the said tug, with her tow ⅜ ⅜ * were going down the Christiana River a little to the eastward or northeastward of the centre of the channel,” and the evidence on both sides abundantly establishes the fact. The tug thus pursued a course on the side of the mid-channel lying to port, in violation of article 25, unless it was unsafe or impracticable to keep to the side of the mid-channel lying to starboard, or the dangers of navigation or collision or special circumstances required a departure from the course specified in the article. But the evidence wholly fails to disclose any such element of
The question remains whether or not the launch was also in fault, it is not disputed that from the time the tug with its tow passed through the" draw-bridge until the collision the lights of the vessels were visible to each other; and it clearly appears from the evidence that when the tug and the launch were approaching each other end on and were, as before slated, probably from 270 to 320 feet apart, the launch gave a single blast and immediately proceeded to starboard, and the tug practically at the same moment starboarded its helm and went to port; the vessels thus nearing each other on converging and intersecting courses, with the result that the tug crossed the bow of the launch, and the latter vessel and the barge collided. The master of the launch in describing the circumstances under which the vessels approached each other and came together, among other things, testifies:
*‘Q. 32. What did you do after she got through the draw? 'A. I stood there with my one hand on the wheel and the other hand X had my horn in, waiting for her to blow. I have always made it a practice to do that with all large boats. 1 wait until I get a signal from them so as to give them whichever side they want, because X know they draw more water than I do, and X can run nearer the shore than they can. Q. 38. Did she give yon any signal? A. She did not. Q. 34. What did you do? A. X waited until t thought she was near énough. Then seeing that she wasn’t going to blow, I blew to her, but she didn’t answer me. As soon as I blew I turned my wheel to port and run my boat to the starboard. If he had held his course I would have cleared her. X could have cleared her on either side if he had told me which way lie wanted to go. * * * Q. 37. What did she do after you blew your horn? A. She kept bearing off to the same side of the creek 1 was going on until she got close to me, then she cut across my bow and came down across the other side of me. That threw the barge quartering around, and it came quartering at me. As soon as I saw she wasn’t going to lot me get on that side, I told the men, ‘Men, we are in a collision. Kook out for yourselves.’ I gave my man the bell, and he had her on the back gear running hack when the barge fetched up into me. * * * Q. 82. At the time you saw the Taurus crossing your bow, did you make any efforts to avert a collision, and if so, just state what? A. Yes, sir. After she started to cross my bow, I saw I couldn’t get on the starboard side where the law told me to go, and so I gave the boy the bell to put her on the back gear Immediately. lie had her on the back gear by the time I got done pulling the bell. * * * X 158. Jn relation to you, which way was the Taurus headed when you blew the horn the first time? A. Coming direct at me. * * * X160. What did he do when you blew the horn? A. He hauled off a little on the north side of the creek. * * * X162. And that happened when yon were about five or six hundred feet away? A. Somewheres about that distance. * * * X184.*844 And you knew she liad a tow? A. Yes, sir ; I knew she had a tow. * * * X 190. When you gaye that signal you put your wheel to port. Hard to port? A. No, sir; not hard to port. I put it to port * * * X 204. You said when you gave your blow that he turned his wheel to starboard and went to port, too? A. I didn’t say which way he turned his wheel. X205. You said he changed his course? A. He did change his course, but some wheels turn one way and some turn another. X 206. He changed his course to the northern side oí the creek? A. He did, yes, sir. * * * X219. How far away from the boat were you when you reversed your gear? I don’t know the exact distance. I was several feet away. I should judge twice the length of my boat, perhaps. X220. Up to that time you kept your wheel hard to port? A. Yes, sir. X221. Port and hard to port? A. Yes, sir. * * * X225. Did the Taurus keep going towards the northern side of the creek all the time? A. Yes, sir; she did after she started that way. * * * X 236. Can’t you give us any idea as to how far away from your bow the side of the Taurus was when she went by you? A. She was not very far. * * * She was somewheres in the neighborhood of seventy live feet, somewheres thereabouts, more or less. * * * X 254. Where was the Taurus in relation to your boat when you reversed your propeller? Had she passed by you? A. No, sir; she had not. She was crossing my bow, or very near across, when I reversed my propeller.”
The witness Penington states that from the time the launch gave her single blast she bore to starboard — “when he blew the horn we sheered to the right.” He further testifies:
“X 91. When did you slow down? A. Just before the collision. X 92. How far were you off the barge when your engine was going full speed ahead? A. It wasn’t very far. * * * X94. The length of your boat? A. It may have been very near the length of the tow line, I can’t tell you positively; when the captain gave him the bells to'go back on her he hollered and says, look out, there is going to be a collision. * * * X 102. How far were you from the barge when you slowed your engine down for the first time? A. I judge as near as I can, as far as from here to that building over there, more or less. X103. Can’t you give it to us in feet? A. I judge about twenty yards or twenty five. X104. Then what happened, you say you gave her the bell to stop her? A. A bell to slow her down; one to stop her and two to go back on her.”
Bright, the engineer of the launch testifies in part as follows:
“Q. 22. What course did you take when you blew the whistle? A. We held to our right. * * * Q. 27. How much did the tug clear you, how far from you? A. She wasn’t very far. Q.28. How far? A. I can’t tell exactly. Q. 29. One yard or ten yards? A. I don’t think she was over two or three yards. * * * Q. 41. What signals were given and what did you do? A. He gave me one bell to slow her and one bell to take the wheel off of her and he gave me two to come back on her, and I did it. Q. 42. How far were you from the Taurus when the first signal was given to you? A. I should judge about fifty yards. * * * X 80. Did he give the signal to slow as soon as the horn blew? A. No, sir, not exactly.”
While for the reasons already given the tug was grossly at fault, I have been forced to the conclusion that the launch was not free from blame for the collision. It is true that' the latter vessel was on the northerly side of the channel where the tug had no right to be, and it is further true that the tug immediately on hearing the single blast from the launch, if not considerably earlier, should have directed her course to the southerly side of the channel. But the unlawful and negligent conduct of the tug did not justify persistence by the launch in a manoeuvre which, however proper under ordinary circumstances, was directly calculated to result in collision, nor the omission by the