Lind v. United States

156 F.2d 231, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3221, 1946 A.M.C. 971
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 1946
Docket274
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 156 F.2d 231 (Lind v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lind v. United States, 156 F.2d 231, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3221, 1946 A.M.C. 971 (2d Cir. 1946).

Opinions

L. FIAND, Circuit Judge.

The libellants appeal from a decree in the admiralty, granting them only half damages for the loss of the fishing vessel, “Mary,” with the crew’s personal effects, in a collision with the respondent’s ship, “Abner Doubleday,” on the night of April 18, 1944. The jurisdiction is under the Suits in Admiralty Act, § 741 et seq. of Title 46 U.S.C.A., and the Public Vessels Act, § 781 et seq. of Title 46 U.S.C.A. The “Mary,” seventy feet long and driven by a diesel engine, was in command of one Olsen, one of the libellants; she had a crew of five besides him; and for half an hour before the collision she had been on a steady course southwest by south, about one hundred miles southeast of Ambrose light, dragging her fishing gear and nets from her starboard side at a speed over the ground of between two and one half and three miles an hour. She carried a white masthead light thirty-five feet above the water, the customary red and green running lights in the forward rigging about fifteen feet above the water, and working lights at the same height, at the forwarend of her pilot house, with reflectors which cast their light down upon the deck. In addition to these she carried two more white working lights on the under side of her “beam,” a starboard white light “at the gallows” to which the fishing nets were attached, and a white light at her stern, a few feet above which was still another white light. She did not however carry the lights required by 79(d) (First) of Title 33 U.S.C.A. of a vessel engaged in trawling; that is to say, in place of a masthead light “a tri-colored lantern so con[232]*232Etructed and fixed as to show a white light from right ahead to two 'points on each bow, and a green light and a red light over an arc of the horizon from two points on each bow to two points abaft the beam on the starboard and port sides, respectively; and not less than six nor more than twelve feet below the tri-colored lantern a white light in a lantern, so constructed as to show a clear, uniform, and unbroken light all around the horizon.” It was a clear but dark night, and the “Mary” had been bound in a general easterly direction until about 9 p. m., when she went about on a right rudder and at about 9:15 was on the course we have mentioned, southwest by south, from which she did not change until the collision at about 10 o’clock. Some twenty minutes before then Olsen, who had been in the pilot house, left it to go aft and look at the wires of his trawl. Before leaving — in accordance with a practice common to wheelsmen in such vessels — he put a rope on the wheel to hold the rudder in such position that it would offset the drag of the trawl on the starboard side and keep the ship on her course. All five of the crew were engaged either in cleaning or icing the fish, or in some other duty not connected with navigation; there was no look-out and no man on the wheel; the “Mary” was running blind.

The “Doubleday” was a single-screw “Liberty” ship about 420 feet long, in a convoy, which was bound on an easterly course at a speed of between nine and nine and one-half knots. She carried no lights, was completely blacked out, and was painted gray, still better to escape detection; she was in the fifth row of the tenth col.umn of the convoy, counting from the port. The officer on the bridge was the third mate, who had received his papers in the preceding January, and was twenty-two years old; besides him was the look-out, on the gun platform at the bow, forward of the midship housing, and a quartermaster on the bridge with the mate. The master had turned in, thinking that the convoy had cleared the fishing banks. The mate said that about half an hour before the collision at a distance of three miles, he saw a cluster of white lights, two and one-half or three points off his port bow, which later “broadened slightly.” The look-out told substantially the same story, except that he thought the lights became finer upon the port bow, as the vessels approached. In any event the “Doubleday” kept her course and speed, for both the mate and the look-out thought that the “Mary” would pass safely under the “Doubleday’s” stern. So indeed she would have done, they said, except that she suddenly swung to starboard across their bows when close aboard. Before the actual contact, the mate had called the master to the bridge, but it was then too late to do anything and the ship struck the “Mary” almost at right angles on her starboard side and sank her shortly thereafter. The judge disbelieved the story that the “Mary” had made the sudden swing to starboard, but he nevertheless held her at fault for failing to carry the regulation lights, and for having no look-out. He held the “Doubleday” also for failing to keep out of the way, and therefore he divided the damages. The respondent does not seek to disturb the decree, and the “Doubleday’s” faults were indeed inexcusable. To run down a vessel brilliantly lighted, crawling along at less than three miles an hour, which does not change her course or speed, while one is oneself completely blacked out: that was so gross and strange an aberration of seamanship as to warrant no discussion. The whole case turns upon the “Mary’s” faults.

Concededly she was guilty of two: she did not carry the proper lights, and she had no look-out for some twenty minutes before collision. In spite of the extreme disproportion between the faults of the two vessels, the situation is not one in which the “Mary” can avail herself of the doctrine of the City of New York, 147 U.S. 72, 13 S.Ct. 211, 37 L.Ed. 84, and The Victory and The Plymothian, 168 U.S. 410, 18 S.Ct. 149, 42 L.Ed. 519, that the fault of the less guilty of the two vessels shall not be jealously scrutinized. That is indeed a proper canon when, the facts are in doubt; but here they are not, and we agree with the judge that the libellants stand charged for half damages under the doctrine of The Pennsylvania, 19 Wall. 125, 22 L.Ed. 148, unless they can show beyond reasonable [233]*233doubt that the “Mary’s” faults had nothing to do with the collision. These must be considered from two different aspects: the failure to carry the regulation light was relevant only so far as its presence misled, or could have misled, those aboard the “Doubleday” as to the “Mary’s” future positions ; the failure to maintain a look-out was relevant only in so far as a proper look-out could have changed the “Mary’s” actual navigation for the better.

The “Mary” was as brightly lighted as a Christmas tree; there were lights all over her. The “Doubleday’s” mate and look-out made her out at least thirty minutes before the collision when she must have been, not, as they said, three miles, but more than four miles, away. She could be, and actually was, seen to be on a steady course, and to be barely moving. She drew ever nearer, and her bearing must have been constant, for the collision occurred without any substantial change of course or speed by either vessel. Indeed, it is significant that the mate thought she broadened on the “Doubleday’s” bows, and the look-out thought she grew finer. In view of all this it appears to us to press scepticism beyond all reasonable bounds to suppose that the presence of a green light on the “Mary’s” mast-head could possibly have changed the navigation of the “Doubleday.” The green light would have added nothing until, overtaking her, they had come less than two points abaft her beam; and then it would only have told them that she was moving in the same general direction as they.

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Bluebook (online)
156 F.2d 231, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3221, 1946 A.M.C. 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lind-v-united-states-ca2-1946.