Grand Island S. S. Co. v. Canada S. S. Lines, Ltd.

270 F. 114, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1921
DocketNo. 3405
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 F. 114 (Grand Island S. S. Co. v. Canada S. S. Lines, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Island S. S. Co. v. Canada S. S. Lines, Ltd., 270 F. 114, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402 (6th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] 'The contention chiefly urged by the Choctaw is that the trial court had no right to resort to these logs, or to draw from them the inference which he did, or to give to that inference the effect which he gave it, to overturn' the direct testimony of the witnesses. We are not prepared to say that there was error in resorting to these logs. It is, of course, to be conceded that, as bearing on the truth of a master's testimony that he had checked in a fog at a particular time, it would be irrelevant to show that he did not check in a certain fog on some certain previous trip, and that a ship cannot be condemned for former reckless speed, if she has been running carefully during the critical period. The Ludvig Holberg, 157 U. S. 61, 15 Sup. Ct. 477, 39 L. Ed. 620). That is quite another question. Whether a boat, when on the open lake and in no apparent danger, should run at full speed in a fog, or should obey the rules by running under check and carefully, admits of no doubt, under the law; but it has a practical aspect, as a matter of economic policy, which is to be determined, in the first instance, by the master, and eventually by the owners.

It is entirely possible, as was stated by the master of the Wahcondah, and as was assumed by the trial judge to be a matter of common knowledge by all familiar with lake traffic, that the masters would be glad to run slowly in fog, were it not that the owner generally expected them to make time, which they could not make if they strictly obeyed the rules. Proof tending to show an established and long-continued custom on the part of a steamer never to check merely for fog, no matter how dense, but to continue at full speed, we think would be distinctly relevant toward determining an otherwise doubtful issue of fact, whether the boat on a particular occasion, while under the same management and the same master, did depart from that custom and for the first time show caution, instead of utter recklessness.

Nor can we say that there was error by the trial court in taking up such an inquest on his own motion. The public danger arising from violation of these navigation rules is so extreme that the court, in the public interest, should be vigilant to visit any violations with due penalty.

[2] However, in the present case, we are compelled to think that the vigilance and earnestness of the trial judge in this respect carried him too far. He assumed that every entry of fog on the log indicated fog of sufficient density so that there should be a check. The captain assumed that no such entry showed a fog thick enough to require checking, unless the engine revolutions showed that he had checked. Very likely neither conclusion is inevitable. For some time before the collision the captain had. been below, and as to the speed or checking at that time he was not a witness; the ship was in charge of a mate, [117]*117■who had been upon the ship only during the previous five trips of this season, and who was sailing only the early part of his second trip as first mate, so as to carry the responsibility of navigating the ship during alternate watches. The effect of the old logs to discredit his testimony could not be convincing, and nothing was shown from the log of the previous trip (his only former one as first mate), save one instance of running without check in a fog when he was apparently in charge. This was in the open lake in Rake Superior. It is denied that the fog was dense enough to require checking, and it seems certain that at least for part of the time it was not, since the entry of fog and the attendant showing of full-speed revolutions cover the time when they were getting out of a harbor, where full speed would have been impossible, unless they could see fairly well.

There is nothing in the record of the ship making it seriously improbable that this mate, just promoted and naturally feeling his responsibility, running into a dense fog bank, should have checked and continued to check for 20 minutes, just as he says he did; nor is the ship’s record, in our judgment, sufficient in itself to justify a finding that the several witnesses invented the whole story, including falsification by the acting engineer of his temporary slate record. There was nothing in the appearance or demeanor of the witnesses to discredit them, as the trial judge found upon the first hearing. Their story was confirmed by the conduct of the Wahcondah people, who on that hearing made no proof that the Choctaw maintained undue speed. Such testimony as was given on the second hearing from the Wahcondah, indicating the speed of the Choctaw, is not very forceful, particularly after failure of the same witnesses to testify on the first hearing, although present in court. We conclude, therefore, that the record does not contain sufficient basis for condemning the Choctaw for undue speed.

[3] There remains the matter of lookout. The Choctaw was about 270 feet long on deck, of the whaleback type, and with a standard steamer bow. The deck structure, containing the bridge and upper and lower pilot house, was near the stern, more than 200 feet from the bow. On the deck at the bow was what the witness called a turret, and in smooth weather the lookout might have stood upon this, although in a sea it would be otherwise. After they entered the fog at 4 o’clock, the mate and the wheelsman were in the upper pilot house with the windows open, and the lookout, who was an experienced and competent man, stood on the bridge just outside the lower pilot house.

By way of answer to the complaint that there was no lookout at the proper place on the bow, it is said, first, that in this type of boat it is usual and right to have the lookout where this one was. His absence from the ordinary and proper location at the bow cannot be justified for these reasons. We find no evidence of such custom; nor is the ship’s type a sufficient excuse. The sea was smooth, and there would have been no difficulty in standing on the bow turret, and that location, seemingly, would not have been beyond calling distance for making reports. In The Manchioneal (C. C. A. 2) 243 Fed. 801, 156 C. C. A. 313, on a ship 150 feet long, her lookout was standing at the [118]*118pilot house because the forecastle head was' turtle-backed and was slippery when wet. The court said (243 Fed. 805, 156 C. C. A. 317):

“By the overwhelming weight of authority it is settled that the proper place for a lookout is, under ordinary circumstances, on the bow” (citing cases).

The ■ conditions existing in the present case — a smooth sea and a fog — made it both feasible and especially important that he should be at the conventional station.

By way of further answer as to the lookout’s position, it is said that he could see and hear where he was as well or better than at the bow, so that his faulty location could not have made any difference in the result. There is grave doubt whether the absence of a properly posted lookout ought ever to be held inconsequential in a fog case. There is too much inherent uncertainty as to what he might have seen and heard if he had been in the right place.

“The denser the fog and the worse the weather, the greater the cause for vigilance. A ship cannot be heard to say that the lookout was of no use, because the weather was so thick that another ship could not be seen until actually in collision. Marsden on Collisions at Sea (6th Ed.) 472, 474,” as quoted in The Sagamore (C. C. A. 1) 247 Fed. 743, 755, 159 C. C. A.

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Bluebook (online)
270 F. 114, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-island-s-s-co-v-canada-s-s-lines-ltd-ca6-1921.