Dampskibs Aktieselskabet Phœnix v. Osaka Shosen Kabushiki Kaisha

16 F.2d 483, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1603, 1926 A.M.C. 1556
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 3, 1926
DocketNos. A. 6989, 6990
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F.2d 483 (Dampskibs Aktieselskabet Phœnix v. Osaka Shosen Kabushiki Kaisha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dampskibs Aktieselskabet Phœnix v. Osaka Shosen Kabushiki Kaisha, 16 F.2d 483, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1603, 1926 A.M.C. 1556 (E.D.N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

These are cross suits for damages caused by a collision which occurred in the Harbor of Kobe, Japan, between the Norwegian steamship Hallgrim and the Japanese steamship Havre Maru.

An intervening petition was filed by the owners of some of the lumber cargo alleged to have been damaged in the collision.

On slightly conflicting testimony, I find the facts to be as follows:

The inner harbor of Kobe is protected by a breakwater known as the east breakwater. This breakwater runs in a curve to north and east and has a lighthouse at each end. Inside of the breakwater there is open water, about 1,200 feet in width, between the breakwater and a series of mooring buoys, placed at various points in the anchorage grounds to the west of the open water, which is referred to by the Hallgrim’s advocate as the channel.

Early in the morning of July 16, 1924, both the steamship Hallgrim and the steamship Havre Maru arrived at Kobe, but, because of the gale, were prevented from entering inside the breakwater, and anchored outside; the Hallgrim at a point south of the southern breakwater, and the Havre Maru some distance east of the “breakwater in course of construction.”

Both vessels were bound for mooring buoys, the Hallgrim for buoy No. 18, which is north of the northern end of the east breakwater, and the Havre Maru for buoy No. 9, which is about southwest of the lighthouse at the southern end of the east breakwater.

The Hallgrim was a steel cargo steamship, 420 feet long, 54 feet beam, 34 feet 3 inches in depth, 6,630 tons gross, built in 1921. She was fully loaded, including a 10-foot deck load of lumber, and her draft at the time of the collision was 24 feet forward and 25 feet aft.

The Havre Maru was a steel cargo steamship, about 407 feet long, 51 feet beam, 32% feet in depth, 5,652 tons gross, built in 1920. She was partly loaded with 1,500 tons of general merchandise and 680 tons of bean oil aboard, and her draft at the time of the collision was 11 feet 6 inches forward and 17 feet 6 inches aft.

There was a difference in the clocks of the two vessels; the clock of the Havre Maru being five minutes faster than the clock of the Hallgrim.

The weather was cloudy but the visibility was clear. It was the middle of the flood tide, which was not strong, and was running northerly along the breakwater, and the wind, which had been blowing a strong gale from the east earlier in the day, had shifted to the southeast and dropped to a very light breeze.

The Hallgrim, with a Japanese pilot in charge, weighed her anchor at 4:22 p. m. and left her anchorage, entered the inner harbor, passing the south end of the east breakwater, and directed her course up the open water between the breakwater and the mooring buoys towards her destination, running parallel with the'' eastern breakwater, and at a distance of about 500 to 600 feet inshore from it.

The Havre Maru weighed anchor at 4:29 p. m. by her time, which, allowing for the difference of 5 minutes in time between the Havre Maru and the Hallgrim, made it about 2 minutes after the Hallgrim had weighed anchor. The port anchor of the Havre Maru was lashed and its chain unshackled so that the chain could be used for mooring at No. 9 buoy; it being customary so to do in Kobe Harbor. The starboard anchor was in readiness to let go in case of necessity.

Eor some unexplained reason, the Havre Maru did not enter at the southern end of the east breakwater, just inside of which entrance buoy No. 9 is located, but went up outside and around the northern end of the breakwater, and undertook to pass the Hall-grim in the open water between the breakwater and the mooring buoys.

[485]*485As the vessels were approaching, at first the Havre Maru was on the Hallgrim’s starboard bow, and both were on steady courses. . The Havre Maru began to swing around the northern end of the breakwater, and, at 4:46 p. m. the Havre Maru time, blew a signal of two whistles.

The Hallgrim’s engines had been stopped shortly before this, when she was off the middle of the breakwater, and she was running out her headway, being then 500 to 600 feet off the breakwater and a little to the west of the middle thereof. She replied with a signal of two whistles, starboarded her helm, and began to swing over to the left side of the open water between the breakwater and the mooring buoys.

The Havre Maru twice repeated her signal of two whistles, at 4:48 p. m. and 4:50 p. m., and the Hallgrim each time answered with two.

The Hallgrim’s helm was put hard astarboard on the second signal, and her engines were put slow ahead to facilitate her swing, and she continued until she swung so far over to port that buoy No. 17 was hearing a trifle on her starboard bow.

The Annam, a vessel of about 400 feet in length, was moored to buoy No. 17 and tailing to the northwest; thus being broadside to the Hallgrim.

As the Hallgrim approached, she straightened up enough to pass just clear of the buoy in order to avoid collision with the Annam, but did not make a sudden turn to starboard, and in so doing left about 1,000 feet of the 1,150 feet of the clear water, between the breakwater and mooring buoy open for the Havre Maru’s navigation.

The Havre Maru did nothing more than put her helm “easy” starboard, and took the whole width of the clear water for her swing. She did not put her helm hard over until just before the vessels came, together, and did not reverse her engines until too late to cheek her way.

The Hallgrim could not go further west without running into the Annam, and, as it was, she came so close that the Annam, fearing that the Hallgrim was going to run into her, prepared to slip her moorings and ordered the engineers to stand by.

The Havre Maru, with her engines reversed too late to do any substantial good, continued ahead, dropping her starboard anchor when within half a length of the Hall-grim, and at 4:47 p. m. by the Hallgrim’s time, struck the Hallgrim on the starboard side forward of amidships, at No. 3 hatch, tearing a hole about four feet wide from far below the water line up to the Hallgrim’s deck.

The Hallgrim was thrown over to port by the shock of the Havre Maru’s momentum, and then took a correspondingly heavy list back to starboard. The water poured in through the hole, and her officers beached her without delay at the nearest available point, preventing her from sinking in the open water. The ship and cargo sustained damage. The Havre Maru suffered some damage to her stem.

The collision was on a line between buoy No. 17 and the north end of the breakwater and about 50 feet off the buoy.

That, when the vessels first sighted each other, the Hallgrim had the Havre Maru on her starboard bow is conceded, and from this fact the respondents contend that this was a ease of crossing courses.

With this contention I am not in accord, because the open water between the breakwater and the buoys in which the Hallgrim was proceeding curved the same as a river might bend, and it seems to me that the fact that the Havre Maru was on the Hallgrim’s starboard bow when the vessels first sighted each other does not make it a ease of crossing courses, any more than it would if they were following the bends of a river.

The Hallgrim was hound for buoy No.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 483, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1603, 1926 A.M.C. 1556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dampskibs-aktieselskabet-phnix-v-osaka-shosen-kabushiki-kaisha-nyed-1926.