Leonard v. Whitwill

15 F. Cas. 340, 10 Ben. 638
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 340 (Leonard v. Whitwill) 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
Leonard v. Whitwill, 15 F. Cas. 340, 10 Ben. 638 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a suit in personam brought by the owners of the American schooner J. M. Leonard of Fall River, and her master and crew, against the owner of the British steamship Arragon, to recover the value of said schooner and her cargo and freight, and the personal effects of the master and crew, alleged to have been totally lost in consequence of a collision between the schooner and the steamship on the 17th of April, 1877, the total value as stated in the libel being $30,686.25. The schooner, which was of 408 tons register, was bound on a voyage ■from Philadelphia to Providence, R. I., with a cargo of 549 tons of coal. The steamship, a propeller of 837 tons register, was bound on a voyage from the port of New York to the port of Bristol, England. The collision happened a few minutes after eight o’clock in the evening. The libel puts the place of the collision “in the Atlantic ocean, off the eastern end of Long Island and distant about fifteen miles therefrom.” The answer denies this and avers that it was “about fifty-one miles east from Sandy Hook and south of the Long Island shore between Fire Island light and Shinnecock light and about eighteen or twenty miles southeast by east of Fire Island light.” This question of the place of the collision is chiefly important, if at all, as bearing on the question of the speed at which the steamer was running. It is admitted by the pleadings that the schooner was heading N. E. by E. on her starboard tack, the wind being E. S. E. The schooner was sailing by the wind with all sail set except the main-top sail and mizzen stay sail, which had been furled upon the setting in of the fog about two hours before. The wind was light but steady. The parties do not differ substantially as to its force. Those on the steamer estimated it. to be a 2y2 to 3 knot breeze, and the mate of the schooner, the officer of the deck at the time of the collision, at about 2% knots. Prior to any change by reason of hearing the fog horn of the schooner, the steamer - had kept a true east course from the light-ship; by her compass, as testified to by her master, E. by S. % S. A fog set in soon after six o’clock which grew quite dense and continued till a few minutes after the collision, when it cleared up. How dense this fog was and how far it obscured the sight of objects on the water and lights at the time of the collision, is a question seriously contested in the case. Be.fore the collision the fog horn of the schooner was heard on the steamer once only, a little on the starboard bow, and, in consequence thereof, the wheel was starboarded and the engine slowed and afterwards stopped and reversed. Before the collision the whistle of the steamer was heard on the schooner, and her masthead and starboard lights were seen, and after the whistle was heard the fog horn of the schooner was several times blown. It is conceded that the schooner kept her course till the instant of collision. Of course it was the duty of the steamer to keep out of the way of the schooner and, prima facie, the responsibility for the collision rests on the steameL Each party, however, charges the other with faults as causing or contributing to cause the disaster.

The libel charges against the steamer “that the collision occurred solely through the negligence and want of care and improper conduct of those in charge of said steamer Arra-gon, in that the said steamer was run at a dangerous and excessive speed in said fog, and was improperly and carelessly navigated, and without sounding her whistle at proper intervals, and no sufficient lookout was kept on said steamer. n~r proper measures taken to avoid said collision by stopping and backing the said steamer, or avoiding the said schooner.” The answer, after denying all these alleged faults or acts of negligence and alleging that so far as the steamer was concerned, the collision was the result of unavoidable accident, charges against the schooner that “she was short handed and over laden, and that when the whistle of said steamer was heard by those on board of said schooner it was their duty immediately to have shown a lighted torch upon the part of said schooner towards which the said steamer was approaching; that as the vessels were approaching each other the side light of the said schooner could not be seen from the steamer before the collision, nor could said schooner herself be seen until she was within a few feet of the steamer; that if said torch had been so exhibited it would have been visible to those on board of said steamer, even before [342]*342the said fog horn was heard, and would have shown to them that said schooner was crossing the bows of said steamer from starboard to port, and would have been seen in time so that said steamer’s helm could have been ported and her head swung off to starboard, or her swing to port under the starboarding of her helm could have been stopped so that the vessels would have gone clear of each other.”

It is very evident from the testimony that at the time the vessels came together the headway of the steamer was nearly stopped. Although, as she approached, she seemed to those on the schooner to be moving rapidly, yet the most satisfactory evidence on this point is the effect of the blow on the schooner. The schooner was passing the steamer’s bow nearly at right angles and the stem of the steamer struck the schooner just forward of the mizzen rigging, yet did not strike with force enough to sink her instantly or cut her in two as has happened in some collisions. The steamer seemed to those on the schooner to strike more than once. The vessels brushed by each other, the steamer passing under the schooner’s stern as the schooner, still moving forward, came up before the wind on the port side of the steamer after she was struck. The man at the wheel of the schooner remained at his post till the collision. He observed that the blow slewed the schooner so that she headed N. E. % E. thus changing her heading a half point to the northward. Most of the crew of the schooner got into her boat which was hanging at the davits. They had time to get into the boat and get her in the water and pull a little way off before she sank. They had no time to save anything. It appears also that the steamer did not get far off from the schooner, and after the collision the schooner was lying on her port quarter a little astern of her. These circumstances show, I think, that while the blow was enough to crush in her port side, so that she rapidly filled with water, it was not delivered with any great velocity. Both vessels were shown to have their side lights properly placed and brightly burning. On the schooner it had struck eight bells when the whistle of the steamer was heard, but the watch had not been changed. It had been the mate’s watch and he was still on deck on duty. There was a lookout forward who had charge of the fog horn and there was an able seaman at the wheel. Before the collision the rest of the crew got on deck.

On the steamer it had been the second mate’s watch from six to eight o’clock and he was' still on the bridge up to the time of the collision. The captain had been with him until a few minutes before eight o’clock, when he went below, but was recalled by a signal by whistle before the collision, given after the fog horn of the schooner was reported, and he returned to the bridge and took charge of the movements of the vessel before the collision. The lookout forward in the second mate’s watch had been relieved by the new lookout before the fog horn was reported, but they were both forward, close to the stem, up to the time of the collision. There was, also, a man stationed as lookout just forward of the bridge, on the deck.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hardy v. Fulda
52 F. 400 (S.D. New York, 1892)
Woolonghan v. The Bristol
29 F. 867 (S.D. New York, 1887)
Philadelphia & R. R. Co. v. Warren Foundry & Machine Co.
20 F. 205 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1884)
Leonard v. Whitwill
19 F. 547 (S.D. New York, 1884)
Alabama
17 F. 847 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1883)
The Canima
17 F. 271 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1883)
Murtagh
17 F. 259 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1883)
Atlantic Mut. Ins. v. Alexandre
16 F. 279 (S.D. New York, 1883)
In re Leonard
14 F. 53 (S.D. New York, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 340, 10 Ben. 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-whitwill-nysd-1879.