Chamberlain v. Ward

62 U.S. 548, 16 L. Ed. 211, 21 How. 548, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by74 cases

This text of 62 U.S. 548 (Chamberlain v. Ward) 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
Chamberlain v. Ward, 62 U.S. 548, 16 L. Ed. 211, 21 How. 548, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 681 (1859).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court

; This'was a suit in personam, and comes before the court toy appeal from the- Circuit Court of'the United States for the southern district of Ohio, sitting in admiralty. It was commenced by the present appellees, as owners of the steamer At lantic, against the appellants as owners of the propeller Og , densburgh, and grew out of a collision which occurred on Lake'Erie; between those vessels on the 20th day of August, 1852, whereby the propeller received damage, and the steamer was run down and lost. Some change was made in the nature *554 and' character of the proceeding after the suit was instituted, ■'.making it necessary that a, brief explanation should be given, in- order that the present state of the pleadings may not be •misunderstood. According to the transcript, the original libel was filed in the clerk’s office of the District Court on the 27 th day of October, 1852, and on the same day a process of attachment against the propeller, and.monition to her owners, was taken out, and was subsequently served,' pursuant to its mandate, by attaching the vessel, publishing notice to those inter ested, and summoning the respondents. On the 11th day of November following, an amended libel was filed in court, setting forth more in detail the circumstances of the collision and the grounds of the claim as made by the libellants. As amended, however, the libel still retained in some of its aspects the form of a proceeding in rem against the vessel, and a . suit in personam, against her owners.

In the answer, which was not filed till after .the process was served, the appellants, as claimants of the propeller and respondents in this suit, excepted to the form of the libel, alleging that the two modes of proceeding were improperly joined, and prayed that the libel should be dismissed on that account. At the hearing in the District Court, the exception of the respondents for a misjoinder was sustained, and thereupon the libellants, on motion for leave, were permitted to amend and change'the proceeding to the form of a suit in personam against the appellants as owners of the propeller, and the cause was allowed to progress, and in that form of proceeding the parties were ultimately heard upon the merits of the controversy.Another explanation is also necessary, connected with the an swer of the respondents, as without it the subsequent proceed iugs in the cause would appear to have been irregular, and certainly would be incomprehensible. Oh the 26th day of' April, 1853, the parties entered into an agreement to the effect that the answer of the respondents in this suit should operate, as a cross-libel for the damage sustained by the propeller, and that the claims of both parties to damage' should be considered-by the: court in weighing the evidence, and be adjudicated upon in the' final decree; and in order to facilitate the investí *555 gation, it was admitted in the case that the damage sustained by the propeller amounted to the sum of three thousand dollars, and that the value of the steamer was seventy-five thousand' dollars. Other interlocutory proceedings were had in the cause which it is not important to notice, and testimony was taken on both sides, and at the final hearing on the 10th' day of May following a decree was entered, that the libel be dismissed with costs; and under the authority conferred by the agreement that the answer should operate as a cross-libel, it was further ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the libellants pay to the respondents, within thirty days, the sum of three thousand dollars, with interest, as the damage which the propeller sustained by the collision.

From that decree the libellants appealed.to the Circuit Court. Much additional testimony was taken in the Circuit Court, and after a full hearing on the 12th of November, 1856, upon the pleadings as modified, and the proofs adduced by the respective parties, it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the decree of the District Court be in all things reversed, and a final decree was entered, to the effect, that the damages occasioned by the collision, together with the costs in both courts, be equally divided, and that each party bear a moiety of the same; and that the respondents, pursuant to the admissions of the parties as to the amount of the damage, pay to the libellants the sum of thirty-six thousand dollars. "Whereupon the parties respectively appealed to this court, and the appeals have been separately docketed in conformity to the agreement of the parties, that the answer of the respondents should operate as á .cross-libel for the damage sustained by the propeller.

Some reference to the pleadings touching the merits of the cpntroversy now becomes necessary, before we proceed to the consideration of the matters of fact in dispute between the parties in this suit. ■

According to the allegations of the libel, the steamer Atlantic was duly enrolled and licensed, and was regularly employed in transporting passengers and freight, making semi-weekly trips each way, to and from Detroit, in the State of Michigan, and Buffalo, in the State of New York. She left Buffalo at *556 the usual hour in the .evening of the 19th of August, 1852, with freight and a large number of passengers on board, bound on-her regular trip to the port of Detroit. And the libellants allege that she was a tight, strong vessel,, and in every respect well manned, equipped and appointed for the voyage, with a full complement' of officers and men; and that those to whom the duty properly belonged were at the time of the disaster on the look-out for the safety and protection of the vessel. They also allege that after leaving Buffalo she proceeded on her voyage in the usual route across the lake, with all her signal-lights displayed as" required by law;' that while she was so proceeding, at about half past two o’clock in the morning of the fol- . lowing day, and when she was off Long Point, on the Canada shore, the propeller Ogdensburgh, then being on her way from Cleveland to the entrance of the Welland canal, came upon the steamer, and with great force and violence ran into her, the bow of the propeller striking the larboard side of the ■ steamer near the forward gangway, breaking and crushing by the force and violence of the ■ collision into and through the guard and hull of the vessel, so that she filled with water and ' sunk, and became wholly lost to the libellants.

Other matters of fact, material to the issue, are also set forth in the . libel, and among the number are the following: that the propeller, before and at the time of the collision, did not have burning, and properly displayed, the signal lights required by law;' that she was not then proceeding in the usual route from Cleveland to the entrance of the canal, and' that those in charge -of her when she came in sight of the lights of the steamer neither stopped her engines, nor slackened her speed, nor altered her course, nor took any other precaution to prevent or avoid a. collision; and the libellants aver that it was ¡otherwise with those in charge óf the'steamer; that as soon as they perceived the lights' of the propeller approaching, they put the wheel of the steamer first a-port, and then hard a-port, turning her course to the right, away from the propeller, as by law.

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Bluebook (online)
62 U.S. 548, 16 L. Ed. 211, 21 How. 548, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-ward-scotus-1859.