Pelt v. The Alaska

33 F. 107
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 F. 107 (Pelt v. The Alaska) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pelt v. The Alaska, 33 F. 107 (circtsdny 1887).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

This libel was filed to recover damages for the loss of the pilot-boat Columbia, and the personal effects of her crew, in consequence of a collision of the steamer Alaska on the night of December 2, 1888, by which the pilot-boat was sunk, and all the men on board were drowned. A supplemental libel was filed to recover damages for the death of the persons lost, on behalf of their respective widows. The district court condemned the steamer lor one-half the damages for the loss of the pilot-boat, her furniture, etc., and the effects of the crew; and dismissed the supplemental libel filed by the widow's of the deceased soa.[108]*108,men. Both' parties have appealed to this court. Further proofs have .been,taken by both parties upon this appeal; but the new testimony is principally that of expert witnesses upon matters of usage and opinion, and does not contribute much new light upon the merits of the controversy.

The following facts are found upon the evidence:

The niglifc was dark, but not thick, good for seeing lights, but not for cal.culating distances; the wind was blowing a gale from the north-west, and the sea was rough. When about 12 miles south-east from Fire Island Light, the Alaska, then heading about west by north, observed the Hash light of the pilot-boat bearing about south-west; at that time there were three officers including the master upon the bridge of the steamer, and two look-outs, the latter being stationed there because of the heavy sea which broke on the starboard bow of the steam-ship; the steamer answered the flash light of the pilot-boat by burning a blue light, and starboarded her helm to approach the pilot-boat, going at a speed of about 14 knots an hour, on a course west by south one-half south for 12 minutes; at 11:52 her engines were slowed, and she proceeded at half speed, at the rate of about 8 knots an hour. The pilot-boat shaped her course to the northward and eastward, gradually hauling to the westward to intercept the steamer. After the steamer starboarded her helm the pilot-boat bore two points off her port bow, and the master ordered the man at the wheel to keep the pilot-boat at that bearing; and, as the pilot-boat bore to the westward, the steamer’s course was accordingly gradually changed somewhat to the northward; and at 11:57 her speed was slackened from half speed to slow. The steamer proceeded at slow speed, going at the rate of about ..four knots an hour for nine minutes, when at 12:06 her engines were stopped, and she was then heading to the west one-half south, and the pilot-boat’s light bore about south-west by west one-half west. At this time the master of the steamer supposed the vessels had approached sufficiently near to enable the pilot-boat to run down and maneuver to dispatch her yawl, and in order to hold the steamer against the wind, lie kept her somewhat under a port helm. In the mean time the gangway had been manned, and a light hung at that place on the port side of the steamer to indicate where the pilot would be fe- , ceived. "When the steamer’s engines had been stopped two minutes, the mast head-light of the pilot-boat was observed to close in rapidly on the steamer, as-though the pilot-boat had hauled to windward to cross the steamer’s bow, and had come up into the wind; those in charge of the steamer deemed a collision imminent, and the steamer’s engines were put full speed astern immediately. The vessels came into collision; the pilot-boat drifted along the starboard quarter of the steamer, and went down forward of the bridge; the capsized yawl of the pilot-boat, with two or three men clinging to it, crying for help, passed along the port side of the steamer, and went down. The engines were kept at full speed astern for three minutes, and were then stopped. Every exertion was made by the steamer to rescue the crew of the pilot-boat, but without avail, and all the members perished.
The speed of the pilot-boat while approaching the steamer was seven or eight knots, and she was about four knots from the place of collision at the time the steamer starboarded her helm to approach her. At the time the steamer stopped her engines the pilot-boat and the steamer were less than half a mile apart, and were less than a quarter of a mile distant from the place of collision. It was the purpose of those in charge of the pilot-boat to approach across the bows of the steamer, and when ahead to luff and launch her yawl, in order to let the yawl pass along the port side of the steamer, in the lee, while she herself would pass around to the windward by the steamer's stern, and pick up the.yawl after the pilot had been put on board. This maneuver [109]*109could have been safely accomplished if she had been able to launch her yawl at a sufficient distance ahead of the steamer; but such an attempt was hazardous, unless the steamer was practically at a dead stop and also unless the pilot-boat had sufficient room ahead of tho steamer to luff in the wind to launch the yawl when fully 500 feet away; and if she had any less room under the circumstances of the night in question, or if tho steamer was under headway, the attempt involved grave risk, and was unjustifiable. The pilot-boat either mistook the distance away of the steamer, or supposed the steamer’s headway to he practically stopped, and, crossing the steamer’s bow, luffed when within 500 feet, and, probably, considerably less than that distance of the steamer. There were but four seamen on the pilot-boat and a cook, and usually five men are detailed from the crew of a pilot-boat to assist in launching a yawl, although sometimes three, and even two men, are sufficient. Some misadventure attended the attempt to launch the yawl, and in the consequent confusion and excitement the control of the pilot-boat was lost; and before it could be regained she drifted rapidly before the force of the wind, towards and against the steamer’s stem. Tho vessels came together in about three minutes after the steamer had stopped her engines, that is, about a minute after the order to reverse at full speed had been given, and when the vessels came together the steamer’s hoadway had not been materially lessened below a speed of two knots an hour.
At the time of the collision, Mr. S. 13. Guión was the owner of the steamer, and he continued to bo such owner until the eleventh day of October, 1884, when he transferred her to the present claimant. The libel was not filed until more than 11 months after the day of the collision, and the steamer in the mean time had made 10 trips between the ports of New York and Liverpool. The present claimant held a mortgage on tho steamer for £95,811, which had originally been £108,811. At the time of the transfer from Guión the claimant took the steamer at the price of £120,000, paying to Guión in money the difference between that amount and the amount of the mortgage. He had no notice or information of the collision between the steamer and the pilot-boat, until after ho had acquired his title. The report of the commissioner in the district court as to the damages sustained by the libelant, is adopted as a correct statement of the amount.

These conclusions of fact have been reached after an anxious consideration of the testimony. If they are erroneous, they are the result of a painstaking effort to reconcile the testimony of the witnesses to the reasonable probabilities of the case; and as. they must be accepted as final for the purposes of an appeal, no useful purpose will bo served.by an extended review of the evidence, or by giving the processor reasoning which has led to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 F. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelt-v-the-alaska-circtsdny-1887.