Cleugh v. The Britannia

34 F. 546, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 21, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 F. 546 (Cleugh v. The Britannia) 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
Cleugh v. The Britannia, 34 F. 546, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53 (S.D.N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Brown, J.

On the 19th of November, 1886, between 9 and 10 o’clock in the forenoon, as the English steam-ship Beaeonsiield, outward bound from Dow’s Stores, Brooklyn, was going out of the East river, she came in collision off pier 1, with the French steam-ship Britannia, bound up the East river. The Beaeonsiield was 270 feet long, her gross tonnage 1,736 tons, and draft 211 feet. The Britannia was 837 feet long, her gross tonnage 2,442 tons, and draft 17 feet. The collision was at an angle of from five to seven points. The stem of the Britannia struck the port side of the Beaeonsiield, a little aft of amid-ships, and penetrated about five feet, doing damages to both ships and cargo, amounting as alleged to 8115,000.

The first two suits are cross-libels brought by the owners of the steamships to recover their respective damages, each alleging that the other was wholly in fault. The third libel was filed by the owners of tlie cargo to recover the sum of $45,000 damages against the Britannia alone. Lpon her petition, under the fifty-ninth supremo court rule in admiralty, the Beaeonsiield was brought in as a party defendant. The chief faults alleged against the Britannia are that she ran too near Governor’s island, and attempted to make too short a turn into the East river; and that she did not stop and back in time, nor keep out of the way of the Beaeonsiield, as she was bound to do. The Britannia alleges that she took all proper measures to keep out of the Beaconsfield’s way, and would have done so, by going safely astern of her, bad not the latter thwarted those measures by her own misconduct in unjustifiably stopping in the [548]*548line of tbe Britannia’s course, and thereby bringing about the collision. The two steamers first came within sight of each other when the Beacons-field was a little to the eastward of pier 4, East river. The Britannia had thenjustcome up pastFort William, on Governor’s island. Shehad previously shaped her course to go near to Governor’s island, and on approaching the fort she had come still further to the eastward in order to avoid a tug and tow which were coming down the river; and when a little to the westward or northward of the fort, and very near it, she grazed the bottom. The master testifies that his previous course had been about N. N. E., coming up under a slow bell, and that after star-boarding (porting) to clear the tug, he resumed his former course; and that he was on that course when he touched bottom; that he then rang the bell to go full speed ahead until the Britannia had cleared the ground, and that he then again slowed, and put his wheel hard a-port to round into the East river; and that the wheel remained hard a-port until the collision. When the vessels were first visible, and were first seen, they were about two-thirds of a mile apart. Very shortly after-wards the Beaconsfield, when opposite pier 4, gave a signal of one whistle, and heard what she understood to be an answer of one whistle; but seeing the Britannia swing a little to port, as was thought, instead of to starboard, she repeated her signal of one whistle, from one to two minutes after the first, and reversed her engines. The wind was high from the west, and neither of the Beaconsfield’s whistles were heard on the Britannia. The Britannia, however, gave three signals of one whistle each, the second and probably the third of which were heard upon the Beaconsfield. The pilots on both vessels understood the puipose of each to pass port to port, as the Britannia should turn around into the East river. The pilot and master of the latter say that she did not swing at all to port after their first signal, but swung all the time to starboard.

The tide was the last of the ebb, and the water lower than usual. There was, however, some current, estimated at the rate of about a knot an hour, which, as the Britannia drew above Fort William, struck her starboard bows and retarded somewhat her swing to starboard, under her port wheel. This was probably soon after one of the whistles of the Britannia had been heard on the Beaconsfield. The pilot and master of the latter, seeing that the Britannia was slow in changing her course to starboard, reversed, as above stated, when about 1,500 feet distant, and at the same dime gave a second signal of one blast of the whistle. “Directly after the order to reverse,” as the master testifies, “he saw that the Britannia was swinging more to starboard. She was then about four points on his port bow.” The Beaconsfield’s engines were, however, kept reversed until her motion in the water was nearly or quite stopped, running, as her master estimates, about two lengths, and occupying, as he thinks, about two minutes; and from that time till the collision, i. e., from one to two minutes more, she remained nearly still. When the Beaconsfield was seen to have stopped in the water, or nearly so, about five or six hundred feet distant, the Britannia’s engines were reversed, and from that time they were kept reversed until the collision, when the [549]*549Britannia was nearly, but not quite, stopped. The high west wind neutralized the effect of slight ebb tide on the Beaconsfield’s course. The estimates of the two masters as to the distance at which the Britannia reversed agree at 500 to 600 i'eet; and the engineer of the Beaconslield says that after he had stopped reversing his "engine he came out on deck and saw the Britannia about a length away. When the two vessels sighted each other, they were going at very moderate speed. Careful attention to the testimony of the engineers, and the number of revolutions of the engines, satisfies me that the two differed not more than about one or two knots in speed; the Beaconsfield going about four or four and one-half knots, and the Britannia from live to six. The full speed of the former was about nine to ten knots; of the latter, about ton or eleven. From the time each sighted the oilier to the collision was probably less than live minutes, though the aggregate of the estimates of the various intervals would exceed that. It is not probable that the Beaconsfield was backing over a minute or a minute and a half, running some 800 or 400 foot. The Britannia claims that by porting she took timely and sufficient measures to go to port of the Beaconsfield, and astern of her, and that no collision would have happened except for her unexpected and unjustifiable slopping, which brought her under the bows of the Britannia.

As respects the Beaconsfield the main controversy has been whether she was, under the circumstances, legally justified in slopping as she did. The Beaconsfield invokes rule 21, § 4233, Itev. St., which provides that “every steam-vossoi, when approaching another vessel so as to involve risk of collision, shall slacken her speed, or, if necessary, stop and reverse.” This rule does not require a, vessel to stop or reverse unless (1) the vessel is approaching another so as to involve risk of collision; nor (2) unless stopping and reversing are necessary. The word “reverse,” used in connection with the word “stop,” shows that both words have reference to the engine, and that oven stopping the engine is not required unless that be apparently necessary. The words “if necessary,”" as they stand in this rule, do not grammatically qualify? the direction to “slacken speed.” In article 18 of the new rules the words “if necessary” are transposed to the end of the sentence, -presumably for the purpose of qualifying both the previous clauses; and as no reason is apparent why a vessel should bo required to “slacken speed” when it is not necessary, or apparently necessary, to do so, the change of phraseology? in the new rule might well be regarded as showing the intention of the former rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 F. 546, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleugh-v-the-britannia-nysd-1888.