Ocean S. S. Co. of Savannah v. United States

38 F.2d 782, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402, 1930 A.M.C. 524
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1930
Docket53-66
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 38 F.2d 782 (Ocean S. S. Co. of Savannah 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
Ocean S. S. Co. of Savannah v. United States, 38 F.2d 782, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402, 1930 A.M.C. 524 (2d Cir. 1930).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

At just ten twenty-four p. m. on the night of September 25, 1925, the steamer, City of Rome, bound from Savannah to Boston, collided with and sank the submarine S.51, then engaged upon an "availability” test, with the loss of all but three of her officers and crew of thirty-six men. This occurred about twelve miles east of Block Island on a clear night, the vessels being within sight of each other for over twenty minutes. The City of Rome had been off the South Light of Block Island at nine eighteen, and the distance between her position at that time and the spot where the wreck was found was eleven and six-tenths miles. Her average speed may thus be determined exactly; it was ten and forty-five hundredths miles an hour; her course was east, northeast. The survivors of the submarine, being below and asleep, could not say what was her course and speed, so that these must be determined wholly by inference.

At two minutes after ten the Rome’s lookout reported a white light four points on her starboard bow which he estimated to be at a distance of between five and six miles; the third officer, who was on the bridge, also saw it and thought it about three or four miles off. The master came upon duty shortly thereafter, looked at it through his night glasses and estimated it at five or six. The Rome kept the light under observation and soon saw that its bearing did not change. After fifteen minutes they concluded that it had become brighter, its wake being seen upon the water. Thereupon the master, supposing that he was overtaking a vessel bound in the same general direction, eased his course to port without signal. At this time he was about two hundred yards away and a very short time thereafter, whieh he puts at only twenty seconds,' a red light appeared close beside the white. The Rome at once hard aported, blew a backing signal, and gave the order full speed astern, but so close to collision that it was not executed until after the vessels struck. The angle of collision was variously estimated at between fifty degrees and seventy-two degrees; the stem of the Rome *784 struck the port side of the submarine about thirty feet forward of her bridge and did such damage that she sank two minutes later.

The submarine carried her mast light at the forward end of her “chariot” bridge, eleven feet above her hull; though she had a beam of over twenty-five feet. About three feet abaft this light and seven and a half above the hull was her port running light. - It had no proper fore and aft screen, but was apparently so screened as to be shut off, like the mast light, at an angle of two points abaft the beam. She also carried a stern light set in the after part of the bridge more than a hundred feet from the stem. The evidence as to the screening of this light is not clear, but it is probable, if not certain, that it showed over an are of more than twelve points, though by how much it is impossible to say. If so, there was a zone, less than two points abaft her beam, where all three lights were visible at the same time. The submarine had a maximum speed of between eleven and twelve miles an hour; she would, unless some engine trouble had developed, keep at that speed during her surface test of twelve hours. Nothing is known of her movements for some time before the collision; the drowned officers whose representatives are claimants in .the limitation proceeding were not however on duty.

When the Rome saw the white light four points on her starboard bow, we agree that she was justified, indeed required, to understand that it was the stem light of a vessel ■under way. As the bearing remained constant, her only conclusion must be that this vessel was either on a course .converging upon her own by two points or less, that she was on a parallel course at the same speed, or that she was diverging at greater speed. By proper attention she should have observed the approach of the light,- as indeed she eventually did, though not in season as it turned out. Being an overtaking vessel her duty was to keep out of the way and to avoid the risk of collision. If in doubt as to whether the other ship was converging or parallel, she was bound to assume the first; ambiguities must be resolved in favor of safety.

It is undoubtedly a difficult matter to ascertain the distance of a light upon the water, but that very difficulty should be the measure of the necessary caution. The Rome had twenty minutes within which to observe the light, which was in fact all the time coming nearer; we do not see how she can be absolved from responsibility for failing to notice its approach before she in fact did so.

The only question open is whether she delayed action too long. Two masters of very wide experience testified that in such a situation they would give such a light a berth of a full mile, and that it was hazardous to get so elose that you eould see the wake of the light upon the water. A third said that he considered a berth of a hundred yards enough and that it was safe to wait till you could see the wake of the light. Without necessarily accepting the larger estimate as essential to safety, it seems to us not only that the smaller is far too little, but that the Rome approached too near. A master in such a position may indeed assume that the other vessel’s lights are in order, but he must also consider that she may be upon the most converging course permissible, two points. In the case at bar the Rome was to suppose that her own speed was greater, because she was apparently overhauling the other ship. If both chanced to be in fact upon courses converging at two points, the Rome was only therefore about five hundred yards from collision when the ships were two hundred yards apart.' As her speed was more than fifteen feet a second, she had only about a minute and a half to avoid collision. A hard over helm does not at once affect the bow, but at first throws the stem in upon the course on the side which the vessel is to leave; it is only after she has advanced from two to three lengths that her stem finally leaves her original course. The Rome was three hundred and fifty feet long and even under a hard astarboard helm her stem would have been within say six or seven hundred feet of contact with the other vessel before it left the course. She had the open sea upon either hand and she accepted an unnecessary risk of collision in getting so near. Indeed, she did not even hard astarboard when she did act, so that for about half a minute more she was bearing down upon the other with -only a slight change of course. This left her still less lee.way; how much no one can say. A constant bearing is a sure.sign of danger, made so by the rules at their very outset; a danger signal which should put every mariner on guard. To be .sure, it may.not call for an immediate change of course or speed, but it must always be remembered that it is the .risk of collision, , not the collision itself, that masters must avoid. The Maverick, 84 F. 906 (C. C. A. 2); Wilder’s S. S. Co. v. Low, 112 F. 161 (C. C. A. 9); Le Boyteaux, Rules of the Road at Sea, 106. We cannot absolve the Rome from shaving the submarine too-close.

A second,' though a lesser'fault, was her failure to blow when she starboarded. It is *785 indeed very doubtful whether this would have altogether avoided collision, but the result might have been very different. We are to suppose that the submarine must have seen the Rome steadily bearing down upon her and have been waiting as the holding on vessel for some action by her.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F.2d 782, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2402, 1930 A.M.C. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-s-s-co-of-savannah-v-united-states-ca2-1930.