Callahan v. The Cambusdoon

30 F. 704, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 14, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. 704 (Callahan v. The Cambusdoon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callahan v. The Cambusdoon, 30 F. 704, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57 (S.D.N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Bfiowií, J.

The above cross-libel? were filed to recover the damages sustained, respectively, by the. owners of the pilot-boat Charlotte Webb and the British hark Cambusdoon, through a collision that occurred about 1 o’clock in the morning of April 2, 1886, off the coast of New Jersey, about 15 miles S. S. E. of the highlands of Naves ink. The pilot-boat was intending to hail the bark in order to tender her services, but was run down by the bark while crossing the latter’s bows to the eastward; the bark’s bowsprit and stem striking the pilot-boat just abaft of the fore-rigging, carrying away her mast, and breaking in her side.

The night was dark, but clear and pleasant, with a moderate breeze from the south-west. The bark was 193 feet long, deeply laden, drawing 22 feet of water, and had already taken a pilot on hoard. On account of her great draught of water, her pilot did not wish to arrive at the bar at Sandv Hook until about high water, at 6 o’clock in the morn[706]*706ing. She was therefore proceeding slowly, at the rate of not over three and one-half knots, with her mainsail hauled up, her top-gallant sails down upon her caps, and her royals clewed up; and, the wind having shifted not long before, her yards had not been trimmed. The pilot-boat was under reefed foresail and mainsail, with her jib and staysail set.

The account of the collision, as stated in the libel of the pilot-boat, and as testified to by her witnesses, is, in brief, that, having first made the bark’s green light bearing about S. W. by S., the pilot-boat was put upon her port tack, heading W. I N.; that she kept on that course, after crossing the bows of the bark, until the latter bore S. E. by S. when the pilot-boat came about upon her starboard tack, heading S. S. E.,for the purpose of going down upon the windward side of the bark, as customary, to hail her; that, about the time she got upon her starboard tack, the bark was thought to’be luffing, and rounding to the westward, from which it was inferred that the bark desired to take a pilot aboard; that acting on that inference, in order to go upon the bark’s lee side, — that is, her starboard side, — where it was usual to take the pilot on board, the pilot-boat put her helm hard a-starboa'rd, after running only two or three lengths on the course of S. S. E., so as again to cross the bark’s bows to the eastward; and that she would have done so safely, had not the bark then ported her wheel so as to follow' up the pilot-boat in her turn, which brought about the collision. The faults charged upon the bark are that she misled the pilot-boat by first luffing to the westward, and thereby inducing the belief that a pilot was wanted on board, and leading the pilot-boat to cross the bark’s bow’s to the eastward; and, second, by afterwards porting her wrheel.

On the part of the bark it is claimed that she did nothing to mislead the pilot-boat, or to warrant any inference that she was luffing, or rounding to, or desired to take a pilot on board; that, though the pilot’s flashlight was twice seen, no signal in return wras given to indicate that a pilot was desired; and that the onljr changes in the bark’s course were that she first veered two points to the eastward, — that is, to N. N. E., — when the pilot-boat first crossed to the westward, in order the more effectually to keep away from the latter; and, after the pilot-boat had got three points on her port bow, — that is, bearing N. by W., — that the bark came back again to her proper course of N., swinging in the process not more than half a point to the westward of Ñ.; and that afterwards, just before the collision, when the pilot-boat was seen coming dangerously near on the bark’s port side, she again ported her wheel, for the purpose of keeping aw'ay from the pilot-boat, under which she also changed but two points, so as to head N. N. E., at the time of the collision.

The evidence shows that it is a very common practice, where a pilot has been previously taken on board, to indicate that fact by exhibiting, in answer to a pilot-boat’s signal offering her services, a white light two or three times in rapid succession. That was not done in this case. Had that answering signal been given by the bark, doubtless this collision would have been averted. It was not given, as the pilot of the bark' says, because, alter the pilot-boat had crossed to the westward, there was [707]*707not time to get the light, and exhibit it. There was time, however, had he directed it to be done when the pilot-boat’s flash-light was first seen on the starboard bow. The omission to give this answering signal is not charged as any fault in the libel. There is no regulation requiring such a signal. The practice, as appears from the testimony, does not amount to a fixed custom, and seems to be only a matter of conventional courtesy, optional among the pilots themselves, and not amounting to any legal obligation,chargeable upon the ship.

The primary cause of the collison was manifestly the last change of the pilot-boat in putting her helm hard a-starboard, and crossing the hows of the bark to the eastward. It was, in any view, a dangerous maneuver on the part of the pilot-boat. Her witnesses estimated the distance of the hark at that time to bo about one-quarter of a mile; but, from circumstances mentioned below, I have no doubt that the distance was not half so much. They claim that that maneuver was justifiable, on the ground that the hark was luffing, so as to warrant the inference that she was rounding to the westward in order to take on a pilot; and, second, that it was necessary for the pilot-boat to take that course, upon the bark’s luffing, in order to avoid the collision.

Upon careful consideration of the testimony, I am obliged to find adversely to the pilot-boat in both particulars; namely, that there was nothing done by the bark justly warranting any inference of her rounding to or luffing for the purpose of taking on a pilot; and that there was no necessity for the pilot-boat to starboard for her own safety. When the pilot-boat was seen designing to cross the bark’s bows to the westward, and was on the bark’s star-board side, it was clearly no fault on the part of the bark to hard two points to the eastward, — that is, to N. N. E.; for by the fourteenth rule, of navigation she was bound to keep out of the way of the pilot-boat, which was close-hauled; nor was it any fault that, after the pilot-boat had fully crossed the bark’s bows, and bore N. by W., the bark starboarded, and swung back to her proper course, though I think she did this before the pilot-boat bad readied three points on her port bow, and was not in fault therefor.

For the pilot-boat it is claimed that the bark swung much to the westward of her true course; namely, to N. W. by W. This contention rests on the evidence of Johnson, the wheelsman of the bark, called in behalf of the pilot-boat; and also upon the testimony of one of the pilots, that the masts of the hark wore seen nearly in line. But Johnson’s testimony is not only subject to suspicion, in consequence of his former difficulties with the master; hut his statements, taken together, are wholly incompatible with the other testimony on both sides, and are so plainly mistaken that no weight can be given to them. lie states explicitly and repeatedly that, the bark’s previous course being first north, the first order he received was not to port his wheel, but to starboard his wheel; that he did starboard accordingly, and the hark came up three points, i. e., to N. W. by N., so as to have the pilot-boat on his lee bow; that is, his starboard bow. This is his testimony as it stands.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. 704, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callahan-v-the-cambusdoon-nysd-1887.