1 Cliff. 93 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine | 1858
All the witnesses who were on board the schooner testify that she was going in stays when they first saw the steamer, and that the steamer was then just leaving the wharf, which is on the western side of the river. Prior to tacking, the schooner had been standing in the opposite direction, heading to the shore from which the steamer started. When she tacked she headed to the eastern shore; and the witnesses of the libellants say that the wind was northeast, and that the two vessels were about a mile and a half apart at the time the steamer left the wharf. Some fifteen minutes elapsed after the steamer started before the collision occurred; and the witnesses on both sides agree that she was standing on a course inclining in a diagonal direction towards the eastern shore. She never changed her course from the time she left the wharf until the collision took place, although her master admits that the schooner had sailed a quarter of a mile on the larboard tack, and that at the time it occurred she was two thirds of the way across the river from the western shore. Among other things, he also states* that the steamer left the wharf at six o’clock, that as she rounded the wharf he stepped forward into the pilothouse and saw the schooner midway the river, more than a mile distant, beating up against the wind. As he represents, the wind was then fresh from the north, and the schooner was on her starboard tack heading to the western shore.
Steamers, as it seems from the pleadings and evidence, usually pass down the western side of the channel; but the master testifies that, after seeing the position and course of the schooner, he made up his mind to go past her stern, and he complains, that after running a short distance, and before she had approached as near to the western shore as she might have done, she went about and headed in the opposite direction. Having tacked, he insists that she ought to have kept close to the wind, and he affirms, instead of doing so, her main sheet was eased, causing her to pay off. Other witnesses, examined by the claimants, testify to the effect •that the schooner paid off immediately after she came about near the western shore. But the master testifies, without qualification, that it was necessary for him to ease her mainsail sheet in consequence of her crippled condition, and that he kept her within five points of the wind, which was as near as she would conveniently lay. Before tacking, the schooner was heading towards the western shore near Trufant’s rock, and the weight of the testimony clearly shows that she proceeded as far on that tack as it was prudent for her to do. Most of the witnesses agree that she was going in stays when the steamer left the wharf; but even if the ac