Allen & Robinson, Ltd. v. Inter-Island Steam Nav. Co.

34 F.2d 83, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3195, 1929 A.M.C. 1329
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1929
DocketNo. 5615
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 83 (Allen & Robinson, Ltd. v. Inter-Island Steam Nav. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen & Robinson, Ltd. v. Inter-Island Steam Nav. Co., 34 F.2d 83, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3195, 1929 A.M.C. 1329 (9th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

DIETRICH, Circuit Judge.

Between 9 and 9:30 p. m., on April 20, 1923, the steamship Mauna Kea, east bound, rammed the wooden lumber schooner Mary E. Foster, west bound, off Diamond Head, Oahu Island, a few miles eastward of Honolulu Harbor. The Foster was fully laden with lumber both below and above deck; the deck load being approximately 14 feet high. In the collision the Mauna Kea cut through her starboard side just abaft her main rigging, the cut having a width of about 18 inches and extending through her bulwarks and for a distance of approximately 8 feet downward from the top of her waterway or covering board. Rushing in, the water gave her a heavy list to port. She filled in about an hour, and gradually righted herself, but it is doubtful whether she ever reached an even keel. With the hope of being able to tow her to Honolulu, the Mauna Kea stood by for over an hour, but, failing to reach her with a tow line, at 10:36 o’clock she proceeded to the harbor with the understanding that she would send out a tug. The Foster settled until the water covered part of her main deck and flooded her cabin, lazarette, and chain lockers. Her lights were extinguished, her charts were washed away, and both the gasoline and donkey engines were put out of service. A little after midnight, and shortly before the tug arrived, she -stranded on a coral reef a short distance offshore. The appellants, her owners, brought this suit to recover damages resulting directly from the collision and ultimately from the stranding as well. Answering, the owners of the Mauna Kea admitted liability for the collision, but affirmatively alleged that the stranding was occasioned wholly by the neglect and want of proper seamanship on the part of the Foster’s master and crew. This view was adopted by the court below, and accordingly there was a decree in libelants’ favor for only such damages as resulted immediately from the collision. A large part of the testimony was in the form of depositions.

From an extended examination of the voluminous record, we are convinced that the controlling and, indeed, the only substantial question is whether the appellants are debarred from recovering the stranding loss because of the failure of the Foster’s master and crew to make use of her anchors. That the anchors were not put into service is admitted, and, briefly as may be, we refer to the circumstances.

At the time of the collision the Foster was about seven miles southeast of Diamond Head, where there is a lighthouse, steering a westerly course, which would have taken her past the Head, about a mile off. The [84]*84moon was then shining; and, from the general testimony given by witnesses for both sides, it might fairly be concluded that the moonlight continued up to the time of the stranding. But by the tables of the “Nautical Almanac” it is conclusively shown that the moon set at 10:22 p. m., or about the time the Mauna Kea left the Foster for the harbor. The only way the apparently conflicting testimony upon the subject can be reconciled is by assuming that the witnesses who testified that it was a moonlight night bore recollection of the period prior to 10:22 p. m., and those who testified that the night was “very dark” had in mind the later period. The light from the lighthouse, of course, was visible, but, after the moon set, objects upon the land and the shore line, though not wholly invisible, were measurably vague and indistinct. The sea was not rough, but there was some swell. There was an offshore breeze, light, intermittent, and at times “puffy.” Having in mind the heavy on-deck load and the possibility of capsizing as the Foster filled and listed heavily to port, her master ordered the lowering of her main and mizzen sails, and with reduced sail forward he hoped to make headway slowly, toward the harbor and keep offshore. Such was the course pursued during the hour .or more the Mauna Kea was maneuvering about her in an attempt to take her in tow, and at no time did the latter suggest that she should seek anchorage. The same tactics were continued after the departure of the Mauna Kea. Heeled over to some extent and waterlogged, the Foster steered very, sluggishly. With the necessarily reduced sail, she made headway slowly, at best. When the wind died down, she did not respond to the wheel, and at such times, owing to the currents and other forces, her drift was shoreward; and with a rise of the wind she would come around two or three points offshore. The object of the master, of course, was by the use of as much sail pressure as was safe to employ to keep her moving slowly toward the harbor and to overcome the tendency of the shoreward drift. The problem confronting him was a delicate one, involving measurably the uncertainties of a fluctuating breeze and forces making for the shoreward drift. He could reasonably expect that the Mauna Kea would send out a tug without great delay. He also kept burning a flare-torch distress signal which sooner or later would be likely to bring assistance from some source. He was reasonably familiar with the locality, but, owing to the darkness, his precise position at any moment and his proximity to shore and reefs were measurably uncertain.

As we read the testimony, it was the opinion of even appellee’s experts, having the benefit of the wisdom which comes after the event, that up to a certain point at least the master exercised good judgment in thus attempting to move the disabled vessel under sail; that is, that anchorage was not to be sought until there was good reason to believe that she could not in that manner be kept offshore. They were, however, of the opinion that at some point before the Foster struck the anchors should have been used. And, considering the fact that the master knew that as a net result of her various movements she had a shoreward drift, the conclusion would seem to be legitimate, if it be assumed that he had knowledge of the depth of the water and his facilities for anchoring were normal. But such knowledge he did not have, and, as already noted, his charts were lost. Approximately an hour before the stranding, under his direction the second mate began to take soundings. The Foster had been equipped with two leads, hand and deep-sea, both of which were stowed in the lazarette, which was flooded. It was found that the tub in which the hand lead was carried had been upset, and, in short, the mate was unable to find this lead at all, and, on seeking to extricate the deep-sea lead, he found the line tangled so that it had to be cut at a length of between 30 and 40 fathoms. Because of its weight — about twenty pounds —this lead was handled with difficulty, but with it the mate attempted a sounding about every 10 or 15 minutes, at a depth of 20 fathoms. He failed to reach bottom until a few seconds before the vessel struck, at which time he called out that the lead had hooked on the bottom and was lost. Then, of course, it was too late to drop anchor with any effect. Asked why he did not let go her anchors before she struck, the master testified: “At the time we got the last sounding she (the schooner) was paying off to seaward and it was not very long before she hit. That is why. We had twenty fathoms and no bottom and she was paying off to seaward.”

Apparently, there is danger in dropping or letting go an anchor without knowing the depth of the water, and such a practice would not be good seamanship, but, in the most favorable view to appellee, the question is' open to a difference of opinion, and in the exercise of his judgment the master of the Foster could not be charged with negligence or ineompetency. Captain Peasley, a mari[85]

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34 F.2d 83, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3195, 1929 A.M.C. 1329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-robinson-ltd-v-inter-island-steam-nav-co-ca9-1929.