Hatch v. The Newport

28 F. 658, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 17, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 F. 658 (Hatch v. The Newport) 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
Hatch v. The Newport, 28 F. 658, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133 (S.D.N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Brown, J.

In February, 1884, the libelants’ three-masted schooner John K. Shaw, while on a voyage from Newport News to New Haven, and when some four or five miles off the Jersey coast, and about opposite Deal beach, was sunk, and all on board perished. She left Newport News between 12 and 1 o’clock p. M. of Thursday the 21st. In the afternoon of the 24th the spars of a wreck were seen projecting above water off Deal beach. The pilot of the tug-boat Maggie Moran, upon going near, found the afterpart of the deck afloat, and [659]*659took olí a boll having the name John K. Shaw upon it. Other parts of the wreck which came ashore, or were brought ashore afterwards, woro identified as belonging to the John 1L Shaw.

There is no certain proof how the schooner was lost. She was deeply loaded, and had 19 tons of iron on deck. The wind on tho night of the 23d was high from N. W., blowing about 50 miles per hour, with a considerable lumpy sea; and the weather during the afternoon previous was snowy. But the schooner is proved to have been staunch and sound, and her captain an experienced and capable officer, well acquainted with the coast; and” the appearance of the wreck, from the breaking of the planks on the sides of the deck, indicated collision as the cause of the loss.

The steamer Newport, bound from New York to Havana, when about opposite Deal beach, and at about 7 p. at. on the evening of the 23d, had a collision with a three-masted schooner. The libel charged that this schooner was the John K. Shaw, and that she was sunk by the steamer’s fault, and claims $21,062 damages. The answer avers that tho schooner with which the steamer collided was not the John K. Shaw, but some other schooner unknown to the claimants; and that the steamer’s collision was a slight one, her starboard bow grazing the schooner’s starboard quarter without injury to cither vessel.

Assuming that the John K. Shaw was sunk by a collision, the principal question in tho case is whether the indentity of these collisions has been satisfactorily established; in other words, whether, during the 24 hours preceding the afternoon of the 24th, when the wreck of the Shaw was first discovered, there were two collisions in that vicinity, or but one.

As there is no direct proof identifying tho John K. Shaw as tho schooner with which the steamer collided, the evidence on the libel-ants’ part is necessarily circumstantial only. The chief circumstances relied on to show that the schooners were one and the same are the following: (1) Both were three-masted schooners bound up the coast; (2) the John K. Shaw, from the time she left Newport News, might easily have been off Deal beach at the time of the Newport’s collision, since only an average speed of four and one-half miles would have been requisite to bring her there at 7 p. m. of the 23d; (3) tho site of the wreck when discovered in the afternoon of the 24th, was not far — certainly not over two or three miles — from the admitted place of the Newport’s collision, and the latter place is but approximately fixed by estimates only; (4) one witness, the mess-boy of the Newport, testifies that he saw the schooner list and sink a few minutes alter the collision, and when from a quarter to a half mile distant; and two others of her seamen, who watched the schooner from the steamer’s port side, though they do not swear to seeing the schooner sink or capsize, think she must have sunk, because she vanished or disappeared suddenly when a half mile or thereabouts distant; (5) [660]*660there was no other known wreck of a schooner at that time and place; (6) if the two schooners were not the same, then there were two collisions at about the same time and place, and hence two other colliding vessels to be accounted for; but there is no evidence of any other collision, — no other was reported, and no other vessel colliding with the Newport is proved. The Newport has not shown what other vessel it was, if any other, that collided with her or with the John K. Shaw.

These circumstances present a pretty strong prima facie presumption and probability that it was the John K. Shaw with which the Newport collided. But the most important circumstance of all, if true, is that the schooner that collided with the Newport sank shortly after. If that could be deemed proved, it would have great weight in discrediting the opposing testimony; for, if another three-masted schooner had been sunk and lost there on the 23d, that fact would in all probability have become known and reported; although this, even, would not be certain, since it might be a schooner returning from a long voyage, and her wreck might have wholly disappeared. But one of the weakest parts of the libelants’testimony is the alleged sinking of the schooner with which the Newport collided. If, on the other hand, that schooner did not sink at the time, or is not known to have sunk; and, still more, if the direction and the kind of the colliding blow were not such as were likely to cause a schooner to sink; and if the schooner, after passing the steamer, showed no signs of sinking, and gave no signal for assistance, though means of doing so were at hand, — then the other circumstances relied on by the libel-ants are obviously wholly inconclusive.

Careful consideration of the particulars, as regards each of the circumstances relied on by the libelants, has satisfied me not only that they are insufficient to establish their case by a preponderance of proof; but that, notwithstanding my first impressions to the contrary, the probabilities, upon the facts and circumstances proved by the claimants, are that, however the John K. Shaw may have been sunk, it was not through the Newport, but that the schooner colliding with the latter was another vessel. I shall state some of the chief reasons only for this conclusion, without going into all the details of the testimony.

(1) There is no satisfactory proof that the schooner that collided with the Newport was- substantially injured. The weight of direct proof, and the probabilities of the case, are to the contrary. The mess-boy is not supported by Murphy, who stood by him watching the schooner. The latter says she sailed away into the darkness, as usual, apparently uninjured. The testimony of the other two seamen for the libelants, that they thought she sank, is based upon her disappearing suddenly some five or ten minutes after the collision, and a half mile or so distant, whereas they thought she should have fceen seen longer; but their credibility and good judgment are cer[661]*661tainly not sustained by their further testimony that a schooner on that night could be seen, as the one says, seven miles, the other twenty miles, off. Four other witnesses who were watching the schooner from a better post of observation say that she gradually disappeared, sailing away, as usual, into the darkness, without apparent injury. The night was dark, being still clouded and thick to the south and east from the previous snow, but clearing to the westward.

(2) Most of the witnesses say that the schooner, before the collision, was sailing close-hauled, and therefore heading about N. by E.; that her sails at the collision were shaking from an apparent luff to avoid the Newport; and all say that after raking past the steamer she sailed away, or filled away, upon her previous course, until she disappeared from sight. This would not be natural or probable if she had been so seriously injured as to sink within 10 or 15 minutes after the collision.

(8) The schooner gave no call for help, nor signal of any kind indicating disaster or need of assistance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. 658, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-the-newport-nysd-1886.