Den Norske Amerikalinje v. United New York Sandy Hook Pilots Ass'n

35 F. Supp. 150, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2493
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 24, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 F. Supp. 150 (Den Norske Amerikalinje v. United New York Sandy Hook Pilots Ass'n) 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
Den Norske Amerikalinje v. United New York Sandy Hook Pilots Ass'n, 35 F. Supp. 150, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2493 (S.D.N.Y. 1940).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

This is a libel and, cross-libel for a collision between the Norwegian motor ship Oslofjord and the pilot boat Sandy Hook, which occurred at about 6:24 A.M. on April 27, 1939, at a point bearing about 150 degrees true, and distant about a quarter to half a mile, from Ambrose lightship at the entrance to New York harbor.

The collision took place in a dense fog, with a visibility variously estimated at from 200 to 250 feet. The Oslofjord was inbound from Norway with a large number of passengers, including the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Norway, and a general cargo. The tide was ebb but it played no part in the movements of •either vessel. The bow of the Oslofjord cut into" the port side of the Sandy Hook a little aft of amidships, and the Sandy Hook sank at about 7:17 A.M. The Oslo-fjord also sustained some damage on the starboard side of her stem.

The Oslofjord is a passenger and cargo vessel 587 feet long, 73% feet beam, and has a loaded draft of 26 feet. The draft at the time of the collision was 21 feet forward and 24 feet aft. Her gross- tonnage [151]*151is 18,672, her indicated horse power 20,000, and she has four motors and twin screws. The vessel was built in Bremen in 1937, and Captain Bull, the master, testified that at slow speed she makes between 8 and 9 knots with 35 to 40 revolutions, and at dead slow between 5 and 6 knots with 20 to 25 revolutions.

The Sandy Hook was a single screw vessel of 361 gross tons, and had been a fishing vessel prior to her acquisition by the Pilots’ Association. She was 168.6 feet long, 24.4 feet beam, and had a depth of hold of 12.6 feet. Her half speed was about 6 or 7 knots, and her slow speed about 3% knots.

Both vessels were blowing single blast fog whistles at regular intervals prior to the collision. The Sandy Hook was also sounding her pilot signal of one long, two short and one long. Goetz, the mate, and Sullivan, the pilot, of the Sandy Hook, testified that before the collision they heard a two-whistle signal from the Oslofjord. The evidence was, however, clear that the Oslofjord blew only single blasts prior to the collision. I, therefore, find as a fact that no signal of two whistles was blown by the Oslofjord before the collision.

The Oslofjord insists that the collision was caused solely by the navigation of the Sandy Hook directly across the Oslofjord’s bow. For the Sandy Hook it is contended that the Oslofjord was not proceeding at “moderate speed” as required by Article 16 of the International and Inland Rules, 33 U.S.C.A. § 92 and § 192; that she should have reversed her engines sooner than she did; and that her course was improperly altered to starboard prior to the collision.

The Oslofjord was running at slow speed up -to 5:45 A.M.; the speed was then reduced to dead slow, and continued- at that rate until 6:02 when there was a slight clearing with a visibility of half to three-quarters of a mile. The speed was thereupon increased to slow of 8 to, 9 knots. At about the same time, the whistle of the pilot boat was heard from the vicinity of Ambrose lightship. The Oslofjord was then on a course of 269 degrees true.

The Oslofjord continued at slow speed from 6:02 to 6:10, when the fog again shut down, and at 6:10 the engines were stopped. They remained stopped until 6:19. During this period of 9 minutes the whistles of a tug with a tow, blowing one long and two short, were heard on the port bow, and the course was accordingly altered step by step to starboard until it reached 297 degrees true. The tug, with a tow of three dump scows on hawsers, was outbound to the dumping grounds, and passed the-Oslofjord port to port. When the tug was about abreast of the Oslofjord it blew a dumping signal of four blasts. Captain Ulrich, master of the tug, testified that this dumping signal was given at 6:18.

Captain Bull of the Oslofjord testified that at 6:19 the headway of the vessel was about 1 knot. I think that this is a fair estimate of the speed at that time, in view of the fact that the engines had been stopped since 6:10. At 6:19 the bearing of the Ambrose lightship was 324 degrees true, and that of the pilot boat 315 degrees true. The engines were then (i. e., at 6:19) started again at dead slow, and stayed that way until 6:22. Captain Bull thought that the speed at the end of this 3-minute period was 3% or 4 knots.

During the period from 6:19 to 6:22, when the engines of the Oslofjord were at dead slow, the whistles of the pilot boat, which, at 6:19, appeared west of the lightship, seemed first to be coming from east of the lightship, and then to be drawing aft of the Oslofjord. Captain Bull figured that the pilot boat would take a parallel course to that of the Oslofjord, and round the stern in the usual way in order to put the pilot on board on the port side. At 6:22 the bearing of the whistles of the pilot boat appeared to change, and no longer were drawing aft. The engines of the Oslofjord were then stopped.

The engines remained stopped for about a minute, or until 6:23, when the cut water and masts of the Sandy Hook were seen on the starboard bow “heading right across or towards” the Oslofjord. The Oslofjord was then making 2 to 2y2 knots. Captain Bull at once jumped for the telegraph, and placed the engines full speed astern. The Oslofjord was equipped with a new device which only required the slight turning of a wheel to put the engines in reverse at full speed; and Captain Bull said it only took 3 or 4 seconds to start the full speed revolutions. The engines continued at full speed astern for about 20 seconds before the collision; the speed at the time of contact was stated to be 1 or 1% knots.

All of the Oslofjord’s witnesses testified that the pilot boat proceeded directly across the Oslofjord’s bow. Captain Bull said [152]*152that the angle of approach was 4 points; Langstad, the quartermaster, said that it was 45 degrees; Bergesen and Jorgensen, the stewardesses, that the vessel was at an angle and swinging to the right; and Ouvre, the third officer, that the vessel was first at an angle and then appeared to swing 3 or more points to starboard. The diagrams of the different witnesses show the collision at nearly a right angle. The photograph of the pilot boat, taken after the collision, shows a triangular cut in the port side opposite the after rigging, with a penetration at the deck of about 6 feet, and only a slight opening below the water line.

I turn now to the evidence relating to the navigation of the Sandy Hook. She had placed pilots on five inbound vessels before going out to the Oslofjord, and in each instance the pilot had been taken inside or abreast of the lightship. At 6:05 a pilot was placed on the Monarch of Bermuda. The Sandy Hook was at the time west of the lightship. After the yawl returned, the vessel headed towards the lightship, stopped her engines, and drifted for 4 or 5 minutes. It was then that the mistaken two-blast whistle from the Oslofjord was heard; and Goetz, the mate who was navigating, turned to Sullivan, the pilot, who was in charge, and asked him if he wanted to run down to her. The pilot responded in the affirmative, and the vessel started on a course of S.S.E. magnetic, which is about 146 degrees true.

It is not clear when the Sandy Hook started, but I do not believe that it could have been much before 6:20. She proceeded with her engines slow ahead, which would give her a speed of about 3% knots. Both Goetz and Sullivan testified that during the run they heard the one-blast whistles of the Oslofjord on the port bow.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F. Supp. 150, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/den-norske-amerikalinje-v-united-new-york-sandy-hook-pilots-assn-nysd-1940.