Perry v. The Nessmore

41 F. 437, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJanuary 20, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 41 F. 437 (Perry v. The Nessmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. The Nessmore, 41 F. 437, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95 (D. Md. 1890).

Opinion

Morris, J.

This libel is filed by the owners of the schooner to recover damages resulting from a collision which happened about midnight on the 25th of August, 1889, in the Chesapeake bay, just inside of Cape Henry light, between the steam-ship Nessmore, a large iron-screw steamship of over 2,200 tons, and the three-masted schooner Joseph Wilde, of about 300 tons. The schooner was cut into on her starboard side, between her main and mizzcn rigging, nearly to her keel, and was a total loss, with all the property on board. The schooner was loaded with ice, and was on a voyage from Bangor, Me., to Richmond, Va. She came in port from the sea past Cape Henry between 10 and 11 o’clock that night. The wind was a good stiff sailing breeze, from N. N. E., and her course was W. N. W.; and she had reached a point three or four miles inside Cape Henry light when she was struck. It was the master’s watch; and he was on deck, with one seaman at the wheel and one on the lookout. About half-past 11 o’clock the master went below, and called the mate to assist in getting up the spanker, which had been lowered .during the afternoon on account of the wind and sea outside. The schooner was making five or six knots an hour through the water. Just as the master came on deck again, the lookout reported a light; and, going forward, the master saw what he took to be the mast-head and green light of a steamer three or four points on his starboard-bow. After looking at it, he came back aft, and. called to the mate .to bring the torch, which the mate did, exhibiting it on the schooner’s starboard side, just aft of the fore rigging. After the torch had been exhibited and extinguished, the master took the wheel; and the mate and all the seamen,-including the [439]*439lookout, went to work to loose the spanker, and get it up. They had got the peak of the sail about half-way up, and were going across to the port side to get at the throat halliards, when they saw that the steamer was close upon them, on their starboard side; and immediately after-wards the vessels struck. All the men on the schooner at once climbed up, some on her main and some on her mizzen rigging, and got onto the steamer’s bow, and were saved. The cut made by the stem of the steamer entered aft of the schooner’s main rigging, and penetrated obliquely towards her mizzen mast; and the blow was of such force as to cut well into the center of the vessel, and cause her to sink.

The master of the schooner testifies that soon after he took the wheel he looked, and saw both the steamer’s lights, and saw that she was coming-towards him, but he was not alarmed, as he supposed it was the steam pilot-boat intending to run across his stern close enough to speak him; and, to enable those in charge of her to see just where his stern was, he held up a lantern, which he had by him at the w-heel, and waved it.

The testimony of the master and lookout, and. of other witnesses from the schooner, is very positive that just before the collision the schooner’s side lights were properly set and burning brightly, and also that the schooner’s green light was seen by them and others from the steamer’s deck after they got aboard of her, and before the schooner disappeared. They testify also, very positively, that no bhange was made in the schooner’s course.

It appears from the testimony of the Chesapeake Bay pilot, in charge of the steamer, and of her master, that she had left Baltimore in the morning on a voyage to Liverpool, and that when about six miles below York Spit light, she was headed for Cape Henry light, on a course about S. S. E. She ran that course, for about an hour, at a speed of about 10 knots, which brought her off the tail of the Horseshoe, to about the place where, usually, pilots slow down the speed of steamers they are taking to sea, and signal for the pilot-boat to take the pilot off. The pilot and master were on the steering bridge, with a quartermaster at the wheel; and there was a lookout on the forward or lookout bridge. These officers were looking for the light of the steam pilot-boat, which they expected to find somewhere near the Cape Henry light, when they made out the lights of a long tow, consisting of two steamers and a vessel of some kind, coming in from the sea, and crossing their course from port to starboard. In order to give this tow plenty of room, the engines were slowed, and the helm starboarded a little, until the tow passed about a mile and a half ahead of them. The steamer was again headed for Cape Henry light, and her engines were continued slow, as they wished to gradually lessen her speed, in order to discharge the pilot. After the tow had passed, they made out a white light three or four points on the steamer’s port bow, which they took to be the steam pilot’s mast-head light, about four miles off. They then burned a blue light over the steamer’s-port bow, as a signal to the pilot-boat; and soon after they saw a flare-up light or torch in that direction, [440]*440which they took to be the answering signal from the pilot-boat, which they were expecting. The pilot-boat did in fact answer with such a torch; and it seems probable that what they saw was, as they took it to be, the pilot-boat’s answering signal. After seeing the torch, and while looking in that direction, the pilot and master presently saw through their glasses a small white light, which was moved up and down once or twice.. This was no doubt the lantern held up by the master of the schooner, and waved by him. Both the pilot and the master of the steamer testify positively that, although they carefully looked, they could see no side lights on the vessel, which afterwards proved to be the schooner; and, as they saw no side lights, they took her to be a sailing vessel with her stern towards them, going in the same direction with them, — showing her binnacle light, or some stern light. The pilot'ordered the steamer’s wheel aport, and presently, discovering that she was a sailing vessel, coming towards the steamer, and apparently changing her course across the steamer’s bow, he ordered the engines full speed astern, to which the master replied that they were going astern. The pilot states that when the schooner was getting across the steamer’s bow, and was about 100. yards off, he discovered for the first time, through his glasses, a small green light in the schooner’s starboard rigging. The pilot and master of the steamer express themselves with some hesitation as to whether, at the moment of collision, the steamer’s headway had been overcome. The master is inclined to think it. was, and that she had begun to go astern; but from all the testimony, from the violence of the blow, and from the engineer’s log, I conclude that the steamer must have been moving forward at least five miles an hour at the timé of the collision. The pilot-boat remained stationary where she was laying when her mast-head light was first seen; and the working of the engines after the collision, as evidenced by the engineer’s log, would hardly have brought the steamer to the pilot-boat, if she had lost her headway at the time of the collision.

There is an explanation of the statement made by those on the schooner that they saw the steamer’s green light off their starboard bow, which I think is very obvious, and which assists in .fixing the sequence of occurrences preceding the collision; and that explanation is that it was the blue signal light which was burned over the steamer’s port bow which the lookout and master of the schooner saw, and which they not unnaturally took for her green starboard side light. It would appear from the testimony of the schooner’s lookout that after he went on the top-gallant forecastle, at 10 o’clock, he made three reports of lights

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Bluebook (online)
41 F. 437, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-the-nessmore-mdd-1890.