Clapp v. Young

5 F. Cas. 819, 1 Sprague 40
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 819 (Clapp v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clapp v. Young, 5 F. Cas. 819, 1 Sprague 40 (D. Mass. 1843).

Opinion

SPRAGUE, District Judge.

This is a libel by the owner of a schooner called the Eddington against the owners of a schooner called Lion, for damage by collision. The first question is whether the libellant was owner of the Eddington. He has produced the usuai muniments of title, a bill of sale, and an enrolment in his own name. It is insisted that the sale was without consideration, and for the purpose of defeating the creditors of Chandler Clapp, the former owner. But the respondents are not his creditors and are not in a position to raise that question. If Chandler Clapp chose to give the vessel to the libellant, it was no concern of the respondents; the sale would be good as to them as well as between the parties.

The next question is, whether there was any collision between those two vessels. On the morning of the third of October, 1S41, the Eddington went into Provincetown harbor as a place of refuge, as a gale had then commenced. She came to anchor, but was subsequently driven from her moorings to the flats or near them, where she was brought up by her small anchor, and lay head to the wind. In this position she was run foul of in the night by some vessel having no person on board. Was that vessel the Lion? The master, mate, and a seaman by the name of Brennan testify that they were on board the Eddington and saw the vessel which came in contact with her, and when she was cleared from her, and kept sight of that vessel until she had drifted ashore; and the captain and Brennan testify that on the next day they went on board the same vessel, and that it was the Lion. They all three testify to certain distinctive marks of the vessel which came in collision with them, as to some of which they concur, and others are stated by one or two, but not by all. And it is shown not only by the testimony of the captain and Brennan, but by Howard,, the mate of the Lion, that these marks belonged to that vessel, and there is no proof that they belonged to any other; and they were such that it cannot be supposed that any other vessel would bear, some of them being descriptive of injuries received. The Lion is proved to have been a pink-stemed schooner of about sixty or seventy tons, which had previously during the same night drifted against the Tarquín, where she received considerable injury, and among other things, her larboard bulwarks were carried away, and her anchors were left, one on board, and the other under the Tarquín, both her cables having been cut by one of the crew of the latter vessel. The vessel which drifted against the Eddington came broadside on, the bowsprit of the Eddington going between her masts, and it is testified by one at least on board of the Eddington that her waist was cut down. Now it is testified by Howard, the mate of the Lion, that when he went on board of her the next day she had her bulwarks on both sides knocked down nearly to the mainmast, which is most satisfactorily accounted for; if, after the larboard bulwarks were carried away by the Tarquín, as testified by Jefferson, she drifted broadside upon the Eddington, and there carried away her starboard bulwarks. There were several other marks testified to by those on board the Eddington which it is not-necessary to enumerate. It is sufficient to say that if they were in fact seen at the time of the collision they identify the Lion beyond any rational doubt. But it is insisted that such was the darkness of the night that it is impossible that those on board the Eddington should have seen what they testify they saw, or kept sight of the vessel until she reached the shore, nearly or quite half a mile distant. Six witnesses have been produced by the respondents, who testify strongly to this impossibility; while six other witnesses have been produced by the libel-lant, who testify that it was practicable to-see as stated by those on board the Eddington. Now, it is to be observed, in the first place, that these last, three in number, testify affirmatively and positively that they did see certain things, and that of the six witnesses in behalf of the respondents, five were on land, while the other six witnesses produced by the libellant were on board six different vessels in the harbor, and testify that the foaming and combing of the sea was such that k person could see better on the water than on the land, and they state certain things which they themselves saw and did. We cannot be certain that those on shore speak of the same point of time as those on board the Eddington, and we may well suppose that there was some variation in the degrees of light and darkness during the night; and as the moon was only three days from the full, I do not think it is shown [821]*821to be incredible that the witnesses for the libellant should have seen what they affirm.

It is further contended that from the position of the two vessels and the direction of the wind it was impossible that they should have come together, and a number of witnesses have expressed this opinion. But it is to be observed,

1. That some of them, at least, seem to refer to the position of the Eddington the morning after the gale, which was a considerable ■distance, and by the plan offered by the respondents, nearly a quarter of a mile from the edge of the flats where the collision is alleged to have taken place.

2. Some if not all assume, that the Lion went in a straight line, by a “dead drift” as it was expressed, from the place of her moorings to the point where she was found after the gale, which is founded on the supposition that the wind was all the time in one direction, whereas Cowan, one of the witnesses for the respondent, testifies that the wind changed about eleven o’clock to the north, and other witnesses also speak of a change of the wind. Now it appears, that the Lion dragged her anchors from the place of her moorings until she came in contact with the Tarquin, when her cables were cut and her anchors left. As there was no one on board the Lion, we cannot know how long she was in drifting, how often she brought up while her anchors were ahead, or how near she may have been to the Tarquin when she last brought up. She remained in collision with the Tarquin about half an hour. I am not aware that the relative positions of the Tar-quin and the Eddington have been stated, or that any witness has expressed an opinion that a vessel could not have been carried from the Tarquin to the Eddington. If the Tarquin was north of the Eddington and the Lion parted from the Tarquin after the wind had come to the north, as testified by Cowan, there would be no improbability in her striking the Eddington, and being afterward carried in a southerly direction to the point where she was found next morning.

3. Other witnesses who saw the position of the two vessels and had every opportunity to know the state of the wind, express the opinion that they did come in collision.

4. What other vessel could it have been that run foul of the Eddington? The captain of that vessel, before he left Province-town, and soon after the occurrence, charged it upon the Lion, and said he should claim compensation. The attention of the respondents was early called to this subject; and yet in all their testimony they have presented but one ground of probability that it was some other vessel, and that is that other vessels were found after the gale lying nearer to the Eddington. It so happens that all those vessels, as appears by the testimony cf Cowan, a witness for the respondents, who, from the proximity of his residence, seems to have had the best means of knowledge, were strangers with their crews on board. The only two that are named are the Vestal and the Amanda.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 819, 1 Sprague 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clapp-v-young-mad-1843.