Nederlandsche Indische Tankstoomboot Maats v. Standard Oil Co.

66 F.2d 113, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2561, 1933 A.M.C. 1211
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNos. 6835, 6845
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 113 (Nederlandsche Indische Tankstoomboot Maats v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nederlandsche Indische Tankstoomboot Maats v. Standard Oil Co., 66 F.2d 113, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2561, 1933 A.M.C. 1211 (5th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

By those two appeals it is sought to reverse the decree of the District Court entered in a cause of eollisiop between the steamships Silvanus, appellants owners, and the Wheeler, appellee owner, which occurred on the night of April 8, in the Mississippi river, about forty miles below New Orleans. They present for decision the correctness of the finding of the District Judge that the Wheeler is entitled to eoimplete exemption from liability as wholly without fault.

In support of his findings the District Judge filed a comprehensive and thoughtful opinion, in which the conflicting claims and the testimony in support of them were analyzed and appraised, and the conclusions that he reached, the reasons he had for reaching them, were set down with clearness and precision. Fully recognizing the burden they carry to overcome the effect of these findings, counsel for appellants Nederlandsehe et al. have, with commendable diligence, resourcefulness, and insight, put forward an analysis of the testimony and of its effect, and a vigorous summary of the situation, which have entirely stripped this appeal of all appearance of perfunctoriness. With industry and vigor to match, those for appellee have met analysis with analysis, conclusion with conclusion, buffet with blow. The result has been to make ns feel that only upon a painstaking and careful thumbing of the thousand pages of the record can we safely rest our own determination.

The outstanding impression a first reading of the record makes is that here is no ease of damage without fault. Here is a case the contrary of that, of! inexcusably faulty navigation, on the part of one or both of the ships involved. V^ith a half mile wide river to themselves, and with no apparent reason for it, except the want of care, two ships, one ascending, the other descending, come together, with resulting destruction of life and property, appalling in its nature and extent. The ascending vessel, damaged indeed, hut with no loss of officers or men, comes to anchor near the place of collision. The other, helpless, a mass of llames, without officers or crow, swings now tó the one, now to the other side of the river, until it fetches up on the bank some miles further down.

Because of the heavy loss of life on the Silvanus, of those on the deck, only the master was available to tell its side of the actual [114]*114happenings, while for the Wheeler the pilot, master, officers, and crew were all available, and many of them testified. In aid of its side of the ease, the Silvanus offered the testimony of some six witnesses, who, because they saw the occurrence from the bank, have been referred to in the argument as “shore witnesses.” In addition to these witnesses to the accident, there was testimony from the pilot and seamen on- another ship, the Topa Topa, a descending vessel which had overtaken and passed the Silvanus shortly before and had met and passed the Wheeler just before the accident. There was, too, the testimony of the master of the Baja California, also a descending vessel, which following the Silvanus came upon the scene" of the collision shortly after it had occurred. He testified that there was a thick fog, and that when he arrived on the scene just after the collision, the Silvanus “was in the river alongside of the East bank.” .

Appellants are very critical of the Wheeler’s testimony, which the trial court adopted, that when the collision occurred she was preparing to anchor near the east bank. They are especially critical of the testimony of her pilot. They profess to see inconsistencies and improbabilities running through it all, which, considered in the light of the interest they had to exonerate themselves, give to the testimony of the Wheeler’s witnesses a east of unreliability disentitling it to credence.. They oppose to the Wheeler’s version of the occurrence a theory which they claim to circumstantially deduce from the facts in evidence, that whether for the purpose of anchoring, or in running the points, the Wheeler was at the time of the collision coming over from the east to the west bank, and that either getting out of control, or not seeing the Silvanus until too late, rammed her.

Upon the matter most testified to, where in the river the collision occurred, they scout as unreliable and inconsistent the testimony of the Wheeler’s witnesses .that it occurred near the east bank, and place their reliance upon the testimony of Visser, master of the Silvanus, that the collision occurred in the middle of the river, and of some of the shore witnesses, that it occurred there, or a little to the west of it. They minimize the effect of the testimony of those on the Topa Topa that just before the collision the Silvanus was coming on a slanting course across the river toward the Favret Light, by pointing to other testimony of those witnesses, that such a course was proper, and a-ppraising that testimony as limited to the course of the Silvanus and not at all fixing the place in the river where the collision occurred.

We have endeavored to give their due weight to all of these considerations. We realize that though it is perfectly obvious that some one blundered, it is natural that for results so dire, consequences so grievous, no one will be found willingly taking the blame. We realize also that though periods of excitement do tend to make upon the minds of ordinary untrained observers direct impressions of great vividness, they also tend to interrupt continuity of thought, and suspending the exercise of the faculty of reflection through which comparisons are made, and relations established, result in the creation of a series of isolated and independent impressions lacking sequence, continuity, and completeness. When later such observers are called upon to give a consecutive account of what occurred, it is almost inevitable that in their endeavors to piece together into an ordered whole having sequence and continuity, the isolated impressions which at the time the moving scene made, they will make this sequence up in part of things actually seen, in part of things not seen.

Just as truly as interest in a result, making thought wishful, tends to weave into the continuity of a complete narrative the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen, so untrained persons, who though having no interest whatever to serve, seeing things under excitement, have gotten only disconnected flashes of impressions wanting in continuity, when later called upon to give a connected story of what they saw, will almost'inevitably use materials furnished by reflection upon the event, a blend of what they actually saw, with what in the light of what others have said about it, they imagine that they saw.

Fully conscious of these tendencies, we have, in our study of the ease, and in an effort to appraise the testimony of those on the ships and those on shore to re-create the scene as it was in fact acted out, keeping these things in mind, checked and recheeked the story, each witness tells of the occurrence, against what emerges from the record as a whole, in the light of the inherent probabilities, as the whole record reflects them. In this view, if the case had to turn entirely on the testimony of those on the Wheeler that» they were about to come to anchor when the collision occurred, we would not feel that in the light of the engine room records and of the testimony of those on her as to what was [115]*115then actually being done, this testimony could be fully accepted on its face.

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66 F.2d 113, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2561, 1933 A.M.C. 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nederlandsche-indische-tankstoomboot-maats-v-standard-oil-co-ca5-1933.