British Columbia Mills Tug & Barge Co. v. Mylroie

259 U.S. 1, 42 S. Ct. 430, 66 L. Ed. 807, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2455, 5 Alaska Fed. 110
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 15, 1922
Docket190
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 259 U.S. 1 (British Columbia Mills Tug & Barge Co. v. Mylroie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
British Columbia Mills Tug & Barge Co. v. Mylroie, 259 U.S. 1, 42 S. Ct. 430, 66 L. Ed. 807, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2455, 5 Alaska Fed. 110 (1922).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the court.

This'case was begun by a libel in rem filed by A. W. Mylroie, the respondent herein, as owner of the American barge “ Bangor ”, and lawful bailee of its cargo, against the British tug “ Commodore ”, in the District Court of Alaska. The libel, as later amended, charged, in substance, that the Commodore was engaged in towing the Bangor on a voyage from the international boundary between British Columbia and the State of Washington to Anchorage, Alaska; that the tug at 2 o’clock in the' morning on March 26,1917, being then in Alaskan waters, and out • of her course in heavy wind and sea and a snow; storm, sighting land immediately ahead, put her wheel hard over and under a full head' of steam suddenly changed her course to avoid the rocks and reefs on the shore of Mary Island; and that by reason of the snapping strain due to the sudden change of - the tug’s course, the barge’s shackle by which the towline was attached to the barge, was broken; that the barge drifted and *3 grounded on Mary Island, Alaska, with consequent damage to the barge and cargo, all through the negligence and carelessness and want of skill and want of knowledge of the waters on the part of those in charge of the tug, and also because of the lack of seaworthiness of the tug, in that it did not have a full complement of men sufficient to keep a proper lookout at the bow of the boat.

The petitioner joined issue upon these allegations by-denying negligence, lack of skill- and unseaworthiness, and charged the stranding of the barge, with the consequent loss, to the unseaworthiness of the shackle which had been furnished by the barge owner. The tug owner further set up the defense against recovery that he was exempted from liability for negligence because of a clause of the towing contract.

The District Court found for the owner of the -tug and dismissed the libel. It did not find it necessary to determine the effect of the exemption clause of the towing contract, because, from a preponderance of the evidence, it found that there was neither negligence nor lack of skill on the part of the tug, and that the accident arose from the breaking of the shackle, which was furnished by the barge owner, and that he had not sustained the claim that it was subject to unusual or unnecessary strain through the negligence of the tug. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the action of the District Court, and took an entirely different view of the effect of the evidence. It found that the tug was unseaworthy in that it did not have a large enough crew to station a lookout at the bow, and that, if it had done so at a time when the emergency required it, it could have avoided putting itself and the barge in the position of danger which resulted in the loss of the barge. It found further that the shackle was a new one with a year’s test and that its breaking was due to the strain caused by the sudden change of the course by the tug when it sighted *4 the rocks of Mary Island immediately ahead, and within dangerous proximity, and put its helm hard down without notice by whistle to the barge to enable the barge by putting its own helm hard down to save itself. It held, moreover, that the clause of the contract relied on by the tug owner exempting him from responsibility for loss to the barge, while in tow was void and could form no defense.

We have read the voluminous evidence in this record and have compared with care the findings of the two courts. After giving due weight to the findings of the court which heard the witnesses, the examination satisfies us that the District Court was influenced too much by the mere preponderance in number of the witnesses for the tug owner, and that it did not sufficiently consider the significance of certain conceded facts in sustaining the evidence of the fewer witnesses for the barge owner. It was established without contradiction that the night was a dirty one; that there) was a succession of snow squalls; that it was very dark; that the proper course of the vessel was from Tree Point Light to a point two' or three miles off Mary Island upon which there was a light having a wide radius of observation; that the distance from Tree Point Light to the place of the wreck was 18 miles, and that the actual course"of the vessel in going that 18 miles was more than two miles nearer to the shore of Mary Island than it should have been. There was a following wind of at least 30 miles an hour. In the distance which the navigators of the vessel calculated she had run, she would have picked up the Mary Island Light a considerable time before the accident, had she been on her right course. This delay in picking up the light should have advised them that she was out of her course and in dangerous proximity to the shore. Their calculations showed that they were only I6V2 miles from Tree Point Light when they had really made 18. *5 They did not put out a taffrail log, excusing this on the plea that it was not the custom and. would not aid them. They did not try echo signals because they said it would have done no good. They did not try the lead to feel the depth and, proximity to shore. No explanation is given of why they departed so far from their course. Suggestions are made of hidden currents, but none are shown to exist there. Several of the expert witnesses called by the tug owner in excusing the conduct of those in charge said that, they frequently had found difficulty in making this passage by Mary Island and were often out of their course. If that is true, and the place is a dangerous one, then it called for additional care on the part of the tug.

The tug had. a captain, a mate and a pilot, so-called, who had shipped as a purser. His name was Bjerre. The captain’s name was Johnson, and the mate’s name was Dawe. Bjerre was pecuniarily interested in the company which owned the tug, was its shore captain and went along to help the captain of the tug, as he explained, because the captain of the tug was not used to outside work — that is to'work in the open ocean, and part of the trip would be in the open ocean. On the stand, Bjerre praised the seamanship of Johnson somewhat extravagantly, and then on cross-examination was obliged to admit that, in a subsequent towage of the same barge, he had to discipline Johnson for getting drunk on shore and coming to the vessel drunk — an impeachment of his unstinted praise. It is difficult to avoid the impression that Bjerre went on the trip because the company was not certain of Johnson’s capacity to do the work safely. This seems to have beeri understood by the crew and explains why it was that the helmsman said that he obeyed the orders of Bjerre, and why the mate explained that he obeyed Bjerre’s orders, because he represented the owners. Indeed the vessel seems to have had two captains.

*6 The evidence shows that, on the night in question, Bjerre and Johnson were both in the wheelhouse; that the mate was there sometimes, and that a helmsman named Charles Croft was at the wheel. Johnson and Bjerre were constantly conferring as to the course and Bjerre professed to be the lookout. The wheelhouse was forty feet from the stem, and eighteen feet above the deck.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 U.S. 1, 42 S. Ct. 430, 66 L. Ed. 807, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2455, 5 Alaska Fed. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/british-columbia-mills-tug-barge-co-v-mylroie-scotus-1922.