Larco v. The Martha & Elizabeth

14 F. Cas. 1146, 1 Sawy. 129, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 216
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of California
DecidedApril 13, 1870
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F. Cas. 1146 (Larco v. The Martha & Elizabeth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larco v. The Martha & Elizabeth, 14 F. Cas. 1146, 1 Sawy. 129, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 216 (circtdca 1870).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

On the night of the eighteenth January, the schooner Au-lalia. which had that evening come in from sea, while at anchor in the strait which connects the Bay of Bodega with the ocean, was run into and damaged by the schooner Martha and Elizabeth, then entering the harbor to avoid an impending southeaster.

On the easterly side of the strait, by which the Bay of Bodega is reached, is a high bluff projecting into the sea, and known as Bodega Head. On the westerly side is a low sand spit. Between these is a narrow and sinuous passage, varying in width from fifty to one hundred yards. At the immediate entrance of this passage, and opposite to the sand spit the shore line of the bluff is curved, and an indentation or bight is formed, but of no considerable depth. The formation of the harbor is such that vessels approaching' it, especially from the southward and westward, are compelled to hug closely the shore of the bluff, and it is only after they have rounded its easternmost point that the bight is opened, and vessels lying there become visible. From this point to the place where the Aulalia lay, the distance is about two hundred yards. On the night in question the Martha and Elizabeth was entering the harbor by the customary route. She had on either side the light required by law. The mate and a seaman were forward as lookouts, and the master was at the helm.

It is admitted that neither the Aulalia, the Ocean Spray, which lay near her, and to the stern line of which she was attached, nor the Otsego, which lay a little further up, had any lights or lookouts. The master, mate, and the seaman of the Maltha and Elizabeth testify that neither the Aulalia nor the ■Ocean Spray were discovered until the schooner had approached them within a distance of one hundred yards. Her helm was immediately put to port, her main sheet hauled in, and every effort made to avoid a collision. But the nearness of the vessels and the force of the ebb tide, rendered their efforts abortive, and the bows of the schooner-struck the Aulalia amidships, carried her from her moorings, and past the Ocean Spray, and up to the vicinity of the Otsego. The claimants contend that the absence of lights on the Aulalia and the other vessels near her was the real cause of the accident, and was also such a violation of the act of congress as will bar any claim for its consequences. On the part of the Aulalia it is-urged that she was anchored on the beach, out of the channel, and where she was not required to show a light, and where no collision could occur, except through the gross-fault and mismanagement of the colliding vessel. The place where the Aulalia lay is fixed by the witnesses with tolerable precision; but there is some discrepancy in the testimony as to whether she lay in the channel at the edge, or some ten or fifteen yards, or, as one witness says,, thirty or forty yards-inside of it.

The Aulalia came in at about eleven at night, when she was moored by an anchor and a stern line to the kedge of the Ocean Spray. The persons who were on board the latter vessel, or who were on shore, were unable to state the precise position. The testimony has, therefore, been chiefly directed to the establishment of the position of the Ocean Spray; and it clearly discloses as the fact, that the Aulalia and not the Ocean [1147]*1147Spray was struck by tbe schooner, and proves that tbe former must bave been, at least, as far out from the shore as the latter —she was probably a little further.

Hays, a seaman on board the Aulalia, testifies that she was more than thirty or forty yards from the channel. Cole, the master of the Otsego, and a witness for the libel-lant states that the Ocean Spray lay just inside the edge of the channel — “the bow was just at its edge, certainly not in it — her bow was about one hundred and fifty feet from the beach.”

Hale, a seaman on the Otsego, testifies, that the Ocean Spray was seventy-five yards from the dry beach — she was not in the channel. “The fishing vessel was away inside the channel.” This latter statement is contradicted by the libellant, the master of the Aulalia, who states that the Ocean Spray lay fifteen yards inside tbe channel, but that the Aulalia was two or three yards nearer to it than the Ocean Spray.

Miller, a seaman on the Otsego, testifies, that the Ocean Spray’s stem was about six or seven feet from the edge of the channel; that the distance from the edge of the channel to high water-mark was about twenty yards.

From these statements of the libellant’s witnesses, it may be fairly concluded that the Ocean Spray and the Aulalia were moored at, or very near to the edge of the channel, if not actually in it And this conclusion is corroborated by other circumstances.

The libellant’s witnesses state that the Ocean Spray was high and dry at low tide. But ¿his, though confidently asserted, seems hardly reconcilable with other facts in the case.

She drew six feet. If she was high and dry at low water, at high water she would have at most six feet — scarcely enough to float her. In that case she must have gone in <at the very top of the tide, and yet the witnesses all state that she went in at least half an hour before high water.

The collision occurred at half tide. The boom of the Martha and Elizabeth struck her rigging. The Aulalia, said to have been even further in than the Spray, was struck by the schooner’s bow; the latter drew four and a half feet There must have been, therefore, at least that depth of water where the Spray lay at the time of collision. But if she was high and dry at low tide she would have been in only three feet of water at half tide, and the schooner, drawing four and a half feet, could not have reached either her or the Aulalia.

Again, she was hauled into the channel on the following morning about 9 or 9% o’clock —high water occurred at about 12. She was hauled off, therefore, some hours at least before high water, and must at that time have been in at least six feet of water, otherwise she could not have been moved.

These considerations, and the testimony which has been cited, establish that the Ocean Spray and Aulalia were not upon the beach, out of the channel, and removed from the ordinary track of vessels entering or-leaving the harbor. They lay, I am satisfied, either partly in, or very close to the edge of the channel, and in a position where, without lights, they were exposed to the danger of collision.

The question thus presents itself: Was her position such as to excuse the Aulalia from complying with the requirements of the act of congress, art 9, of the regulations for preventing collisions on the water? Act April 29, 1804 (18 Stat 60), provides that “Fishing vessels and open boats when at anchor, or attached to their nets and stationary, shall exhibit a bright white light. Fishing vessels and open boats, however, shall not be prevented from using a flare-up, in addition, if considered expedient.”

The language of this regulation is positive and general. I know not by what authority a court can in any case excuse a failure to obey it It certainly cannot in a case like the present

The “channel” referred to by the witnesses is, as all agree, not more than fifty yards wide at the point where the Aulalia was moored. The harbor is a frequent resort of coasting craft as a sort of refuge. In entering it these vessels are under no obligation or necessity to scrupulously observe the limits of the channel, even if it were at all times practicable to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 1146, 1 Sawy. 129, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larco-v-the-martha-elizabeth-circtdca-1870.