Nassau Ferry Co. v. The Nereus

23 F. 448, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 5, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 23 F. 448 (Nassau Ferry Co. v. The Nereus) 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
Nassau Ferry Co. v. The Nereus, 23 F. 448, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43 (S.D.N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The direct cause of this collision was, doubtless, the confusion and misunderstanding of whistles. Taking all the evidence together, I have no doubt that the pilot of the Nereus gave one whistle only to the Jamaica when she started from her slip, and heard one, and only one, blast in supposed reply; thereby understanding that the Jamaica would go to the right and astern of him. Neither have I any doubt that this signal of one blast from the Nereus was not hoard on the Jamaica; nor that tho Jamaica, on starting, did give two blasts of her whistle, indicating that she would pass ahead and not astern, and that she almost immediately afterwards heard two whistles from the Nereus apparently in reply, which she had a right to understand as an assent and agreement to this mode of passing each other. Thus the whistles, as heard by each, and supposed to be in reply, were in fact directly contrary to those actually given and intended by each for the other; and this mistake, as I have said, was evidently the principal cause of the collision. That this mistake actually occurred on both sides does not rest upon the naked statements of the witnesses as to the whistles given and heard. The navigation of each vessel at the time was clearly in accordance with the signals as heard from the other; while, on the other hand, it is not credible that either vessel would have maneuvered in the way she did, had the signals of the other been heard and understood as given and intended.

As this mistake in the whistles led to the collision, it is necessary to inquire by whose fault tho mistake arose. If it arose through any negligence of the pilot of either in attending to the whistles of the other, or in managing his own whistles, such negligence would be necessarily held a fault. In a crowded harbor like this the use of signals is indispensable. They constitute a language by which navigation is controlled. They are one of the chief means adopted in order to avoid collisions. Necessarily, they control and supersede, in some degree, the general rules applicable in the absence of signals; and, considering what is at stake in life and property, it is manifest that due care, attention, and skill are as necessary in the use of signals as in the use of the helm, engine, or sails; and any negligence as to the former is as perilous and as blamable as negligence in regard to the latter. The Jamaica had no lookout forward, but her pilot in the pilot-house above had the Nereus in full view from the start. He was giving attention to her, and heard her two whistles directly after his own; so that there is no reason for supposing that the single whistle of the Nereus, which was given after he started, was not heard in consequence of any want of a lookout forward, or of any inatten[452]*452tion on his part. On the Nereus there was a proper lookout, both forward and in the pilot-house, and yet only one blast of the Jamaica’s whistle was heard, although two were given. The failure of each to hear one of the blasts of the other was doubtless the result of a single cause, all the requisite conditions of which here existed, and which may be explained as follows:

The Nereus was at that time probably about opposite North'Fourth street, or between that and North Fifth street, and from 1,000 to 1,200 feet distant from the Jamaica. Bound will traverse this distance in a second or a little over. The ordinary signal blasts are about a second long; and where more than one is given, they are separated by about a second’s interval. Each pilot testifies that his own first signal to the other was given as the Jamaica was just leaving her slip; the Jamaica’s being given when her colored lights were just outside the rack. If the Jamaica’s signal of two whistles was given one second before the" signal of the Nereus, the Jamaica’s first blast would reach the Nereus at the same moment with the one blast of the Nereus, and would therefore be drowned by it so as not to be heard. In the same way the single blast of the Nereus would reach the Jamaica so as to be exactly contemporaneous with the second blast of the latter, and therefore not heard at all on board the Jamaica; while the second blast of the Jamaica would reach the Nereus one second after her own single blast, and accord with the testimony of the Nereus that only one blast from the Jamaica was heard in reply. The two whistles immediately afterwards given by the Nereus, but designed for the Commodore and a tow half a mile down the river, would naturally be understood as a reply of the Nereus assenting to the Jamaica’s signal of two whistles. I think the weight of evidence is that it was so near dark that puffs of steam accompanying the whistles could not be seen, and were not seen by either vessel. It seems impossible, therefore, to ascribe the mistake as to the signals heard to any negligence or inattention in the pilots. If this account of the failure to hear the whistles as given be correct, and no other has been suggested as possible, it necessarily follows that the second blast of the Jamaica’s first signal must have been heard on the Nereus only about a second after her own single whistle. This was too soon to have been a possible reply to the signal of the Nereus, at the distance the two vessels were then apart. The time necessary to give signals and obtain a reply must have been perfectly familiar to the pilot of the Nereus, as a practical fact of constant observation ; and it ought, therefore, to have been observed and noted by the pilot of the Nereus that the Jamaica’s whistle could not possibly have been given in reply to his own; and if not given in reply to his own whistle, he had no right to accept it, or to act upon it as a reply_

It is immaterial, however, whether the explanation above given of the failure of each to hear the other’s signal as actually given, be strictly correct or not. The evidence leaves no reasonable doubt of [453]*453the fact that one blast from each was drowned, so as to prevent tho hearing of it by the other pilot, by his own whistle. Neither signal was, therefore, a reply to the other. Each was an independent, signal given to the other; and in that sense they must bo treated as contemporaneous signals. The two blasts from the Jamaica, given in the ordinary way, were so near together that the first blast being drowned by the single blast of tho Nereus, her pilot, as I have said, must have known, or ought to have known, that the second blast, that came immediately after, could not possibly be an answer to the signal of tho Nereus, but must have been an original, contemporaneous whistle of the Jamaica. The most simple illustration, such as two taps a second apart, will show even to ono unfamiliar with such observations that a second whistle, so soon after the first, could not possibly have come as an answer to the first, a fifth of a mile distant. The fact, which the pilot of tho Nereus must therefore be taken to have known, that tho Jamaica’s whistle was an independent signal, contemporaneous with his own, ought to have suggested to him, in the night-time, when no puffs of steam could be seen, that his own whistle might not have been heard at all, and that the Jamaica’s signal might have been imperfectly heard by him. Ordinary prudence, therefore, required him to repeat his signal, and also carefully to avoid giving any different whistles to other boats at the same time that might mislead the Jamaica. Buie 2 of the inspectors’ regulations expressly requires that steamers approaching, like these, in an oblique direction “shall pass to the right, and that the signals by whistle shall be given and ans'wered

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. 448, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nassau-ferry-co-v-the-nereus-nysd-1885.