Pope v. The R. B. Forbes

19 F. Cas. 1036, 1 Cliff. 331
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Cas. 1036 (Pope v. The R. B. Forbes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pope v. The R. B. Forbes, 19 F. Cas. 1036, 1 Cliff. 331 (circtdma 1859).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Some of the circumstances and incidents of the disaster, as well as many of those immediately preceding it, are either admitted or so fully proved, that they cannot be regarded as the subjects of dispute. It is certain that a collision took place between the schooner and the ship, and there is no reason to doubt that it occurred at the time and near the place set forth in the libel, probably about midway between the Long Island light and the place where it is alleged that the steamer was when her lights were first discovered by the master, mate, and crew of. the schooner. Damage was done to the schooner by the collision, and to such an extent that, within an hour after, she sank to the water’s level. She was a topsail schooner of about one hundred and twenty tons, with a full, square, bluff bow. and was heavily laden with lumber. Unlike the schooner, the ship was sharp built, being, according to the testimony of the master, two hundred and forty-one feet long on her deck, and about sixty from the knight heads to the end of the flying jibboom, and measuring more than seventeen hundred tons. Her sails were furled, and the steamer was lashed to her starboard side, and fastened, forward and aft, to the bits of the ship by a line, so that the bows of the steamer reached only to the forerigging of the ship, and they were both moved by the steamer, which was the only motive-power. When the lights of the steamer were first discovered by the master and crew of the schooner, it is clearly proved that the steamer was about a mile distant, and nearly opposite “the Castle," and it is equally well established that the schooner was then sailing close hauled upon the wind, with her starboard tacks aboard, heading probably about northwest by west, and going about five miles an hour. It is alleged in the libel, and admitted in the answer, that the wind was about north by east, and the weight of the evidence clearly shows that the schooner would lay within five or six points of the wind; and Thomas Milans, a seaman on board the schooner. testified that she was then sailing on the wind, about west-northwest, as near as she would lay. Enoch Wasgett testified that a square-rigged vessel will lay within about six points, and that this schooner would lay about as near as a square-rigged vessel. Mathew Hunt testified that a common coasting schooner will stand within five or five and a half points, and many of them will lay within five points. Henry Rose, Jr., was of the opinion that “a blunt, full, flat vessel” would have to haul nearer to the wind, to make her course, than one of a sharp model. Thomas Rogers said, that some vessels would lay within five points of the wind, and some will not lay so near. The mate of the schooner testified that, at the time of the accident, the schooner was close hauled on the wind, as near as she would lay, within about five points, and that she could lay within five points. Both parties agree in the pleadings that the schooner was close hauled, and. as before remarked, that the wind was north by east; and the evidence clearly shows that it was not more eastward. Assuming that the wind was north by east, or north, and that the schooner was sailing up the harbor, close hauled, on the wind, her course must have been, according to the evidence, either northwest by west, or northwest; and whether it was the one or the other, cannot materially affect the merits of the case. In respect to the steamer, it appears, from the testimony of the master, that she was sailing down the harbor, on a course of east by south, or east half south, against the tide, and at the rate of three or four miles an hour, though' the pilot, who was standing on the ship, says that some three minutes before the collision, he altered the course a little more to the eastward. How much alteration was made in the course at that time the witness does not state; but it must have been very inconsiderable, as the master of the steamer makes no mention of it at all, and, what is more, the mate, who was at the wheel all the time, testified without any qualification whatever, that they were steering about east by south, and such it is believed was the course of the ship and steamer at the time the collision occurred; and so it is alleged in the answer; and there is nothing in the testimony of any other witness in the case that conflicts in the least with this conclusion, or that furnishes any countenance whatever to the supposition that any material change was made until the moment the collision took place.

Both sides refer to the condition of the schooner after the collision, and rely upon the particulars of the damage done to her, to support their respective theories as to the manner in which the ship and schooner came in contact; and here there is one important circumstance, which, according to the evidence in the ease, is placed beyond the reach of doubt, and that is. that the ship first struck the bowsprit of the schooner on the larboard side. That fact is so fully proved, that no theory inconsistent with it can be sustained (unless it can be reconciled, in some way, with that hypothesis), as the [1039]*1039fact is affirmed by several witnesses, and the marks still visible on that side of the bowsprit, tend strohgly to verify their statements into absolute certainty.

Another circumstance in the same connection is satisfactorily established. Immediately after the collision, and almost at the same instant, the stern of the schooner swung round to the westward, which brought her alongside of the steadier. Douglas Fu-gan, one of the lookouts on the ship, says, “She slewed mighty quick,” and her stern came round towards the steamer; that when he first saw her, he thought he saw her bows; and the next he saw, after the collision, was her stern slewing round. The mate of the steamer says, “that her stern, after the collision, swung to the westward with the tide, and she came alongside, and the steamer hit her a thump, and broke off a piece of her stanchion, behind the forerig-ging.” When the vessels came together, the larboard side of the bowsprit of the schooner was first struck, and at a point about two feet behind the cap, and the appearance of the indentation, occasioned by the collision, tends strongly to confirm the testimony of the witnesses for the libellants, that the course of the ship must have been at a very acute angle with the line of the bowsprit, as the indentation is deeper on the side next the cap than on the opposite side toward the stem, and it also affords support to the opinion,' expressed by several witnesses, that it was a “glancing blow.” Many of the particulars of the damage done to the schooner are also clearly shown, and in respect to some of them there does not appear to be any dispute. It is not questioned that the bowsprit was broken off and carried away, but the parties disagree as to the precise manner in which it was done. On the part of the respondents, it is insisted that the ship and schooner came together at nearly right angles, and that it was broken and carried away by the immediate collision. According to the theory of the libellants, the vessels came together nearly head on, and the ship grazed along on the larboard side of the bowsprit, six or eight feet, towards the stem of the schooner, before it was broken off, leaving marks of black paint from the ship or rigging on the side of the bowsprit, and bending down the gasket staples and inclining them over towards the starboard bow of the schooner.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 1036, 1 Cliff. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-the-r-b-forbes-circtdma-1859.