Mitchell Transp. Co. v. Chisholm

52 F. 403, 3 C.C.A. 165, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1412
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1892
DocketNo. 25
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 52 F. 403 (Mitchell Transp. Co. v. Chisholm) 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
Mitchell Transp. Co. v. Chisholm, 52 F. 403, 3 C.C.A. 165, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1412 (6th Cir. 1892).

Opinion

Jackson, Circuit Judge.

The collision which gave rise to and forms the subject of inquiry in this suit took place in the natural or middle channel of Lake George, at or about 7:30 o’clock a. m., on August 13, 1890, between the propeller Devereaux and the schooner Mary B. Mitchell, which was the first of two schooners in tow of the steam barge Alex[404]*404ander Folsom, and resulted in damage to both of the colliding vessels The owners of the Devereaux libeled both the Folsom and the Mitchell, and, after stating their version of the facts preceding and attending the collision, alleged as faults against said vessels that they were not in charge of a proper complement of competent officers and men; that those in charge were incompetent, and inattentive to their navigation; that they maintained no proper lookout; that they did not check down; that they improperly carried sail in proceeding through the said channel; that the Folsom met and passed the Devereaux at too great speed, causing her to sheer, under the influence of suction; that the Mitchell came up to windward while the Devereaux was on such sheer; that said schooner failed to keep her own proper side of the channel; and that she failed to observe the sheer of the Devereaux, and steer out to the westward. The respondent the Mitchell Transportation Company, as the sole owner of said steam barge and schooner, in its answer, after admitting the collision, and giving its version of the facts relating thereto and causing the same, denied each and all of said alleged faults. The district court found the Folsom and Mitchell in fault for carrying sail and proceeding at too great speed, which caused the Devereaux, in meeting and passing the Folsom, to suddenly sheer, under the influence of what is called “suction;” that the Mitchell suddenly changed her course by sheering to starboard; that the tendency of the Devereaux to sheer, under the circumstances, “being well known to skillful seamen, the master of the Mitchell should have considered it possible, if not probable, on the part of the Devereaux, and have so far guarded against it as to have his own vessel in perfect control, and his wheel on the starboard, so as to have headed his vessel to port, and have been able to put her in that course promptly when the emergency made it necessary.” A decree was accordingly rendered in libelant’s favor for the damage sustained by the Devereaux, which was fixed at the sum of $15,143.88, with interest. From this judgment respondent has appealed, and has assigned as error therein several matters which need not be especially noticed; the principal grounds relied on for reversal being that the Folsom and Mitchell were not guilty of any fault or negligence which caused, or contributed to cause, the collision, and that the district court erred in condemning them.

The appeal involves mainly questions of fact, to be determined, under the settled rules of evidence, from the testimony, which, as set forth in the record, presents the full average of conflict usually found in collision cases, especially in respect to matters of opinion and theory. To review the evidence in detail, or attempt to reconcile the testimony on many points, would be a useless labor. We have given the respective theories of the parties, and the proof on both sides, full and careful consideration and examination, and deem it sufficient to state briefly the material facts of the case, which, in our opinion, are established by the testimony, and the conclusions properly deducible therefrom, as read in the light of the surrounding circumstances.

[405]*405The middle channel of Lake George is about two and five eighths miles in length, with its general course or direction nearly north and south. It has a current of about one mile an hour. The view from one end to the other of the channel is open and unobstructed. At the southern and northern entrances of the channels there are red can or nun buoys, numbered 26 and 46, respectively, on the government’s official list of buoys and stakes. The line of the navigable channel is marked by red spar buoys on the east bank, and by black spar buoys on the west bank, thereof. The first black spar or stake buoy on the west bank, numbered 27, is about 660 feet above, and in a northwesterly direction from, the southern or lower red can buoy. The other marginal red and black spar buoys are about 1,290 feet apart, and nearly opposite each other. The northern portion of the channel, called the “cut,” extending from the northern entrance, at or near the red can or nun buoy No. 46, down to the second elbow between red spar buoy No. 34 and black buoy No. 35, is artificial, having been formed or constructed by dredging, and has a navigable width of 300 feet. From said elbow, or the end of said cut, southward, the channel is natural, with a navigable width of about 180 feet. The waters of the lake on either side of the channel, both artificial and natural, vary in depth from 5 to 9 feet, presenting a broad sheet or surface of water, with the navigable channel extending through the same defined by the lines of said red and black spar buoys on either side, and which are generally located where the depth of water ranges from 9 to 12 feet. The navigable water of the natural channel accordingly varies in depth from 9 to 12 feet on the outer or buoy line to about 25 feet in the center of the channel at or near the point at which the collision took place, thereby indicating, as stated by one or more of the witnesses, that the channel bank slants off towards the center of the channel where the greatest average depth of water is found. The collision occurred between the third and fourth black spar buoys, counting from the red can buoy at the southern entrance of the channel, or between the second and third black spar buoys, counting from the second elbow south of the northern entrance, and was about three quarters of a mile northward from said red nun buoy at the lower entrance of the channel.

It is alleged in the libel, and the proof clearly establishes the fact, that, owing to its narrow width and moderate depth of water, this natural channel presents a dangerous place for vessels proceeding in opposite directions to pass each other, and required the exercise of great care and vigilance to avoid the danger of collision. This dangerous character of the channel, and the liability of meeting vessels to collide therein, was well known to the officers of both the Devereaux and the Folsom. The Devereaux is 270 feet in length and 37 feet beam. She was proceeding southward through the channel, carrying a cargo of 2,060 tons of iron ore. Her gross tonnage was about 1,618 tons. Her draft was about 15 feet (14 feet, 11 inches) fore and aft. Her speed down the channel was about four miles per hour, and was maintained until a few seconds before the actual collision. The Folsom is 185 feet long and [406]*40635 feet beam. She was proceeding northward, and had no cargo. Her draft was 3 feet forward and 11 feet aft, and her gross tonnage was about 940 tons. The Mary B. Mitchell, the first of the schooners in tow, is 212 feet long and 40 feet beam. The Nelson, the second schooner in tow, is 199 feet long and 33 feet beam. These schooners, like the Folsom, had no cargoes, and were both light. The towline between the Folsom and Mitchell was about 500 feet in length; that between the Mitchell and the Nelson was about 400 feet long,—making the entire length of the tow, including the Folsom, about 1,500 feet. The Mitchell’s tow line was on her port side, and ran through the chock, which was about five feet from her stem. The Nelson’s towline was on the starboard side of her bow. The Folsom carried her foresail and mainsail.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F. 403, 3 C.C.A. 165, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-transp-co-v-chisholm-ca6-1892.