Rapp v. Wittwer

255 F.2d 628, 1959 A.M.C. 1144, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5310
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1958
DocketNo. 12170
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 255 F.2d 628 (Rapp v. Wittwer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rapp v. Wittwer, 255 F.2d 628, 1959 A.M.C. 1144, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5310 (7th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

From a decree in admiralty entered in a consolidated action, Mason G. Rapp and Watson Harbaugh, appellants, have appealed to this court.1

On August 17, 1952, a collision occurred between two vessels, one being Foo III (also referred to herein as “Foo”), owned by Rapp and Harbaugh, and the other, Fantome, owned by Arthur G. Ebeling and Richard T. Wittwer, ap-pellees.2

The vessels were pleasure sailing yachts, and the collision occurred on the Chicago waterfront on Lake Michigan.3

Stanley C. Kolba had filed in a state court a suit against Rapp and Harbaugh, as well as Wittwer and Ebeling, for injuries sustained in the collision involved in this case. The district court enjoined the state court proceeding.

The owners of each vessel involved in the collision filed a claim against the other vessel and its owners. The respective owners in amended petitions asked that, if it should be found that there was negligence on the part of both vessels, or of both owners, each should be required to contribute to any damages that might be allowed to Kolba. He had filed a claim against Rapp and Harbaugh and another against Wittwer and Ebeling, and their respective vessels. Wittwer and Ebeling filed a claim against Rapp and Harbaugh, who filed a claim against Wittwer and Ebeling.4

Following a hearing, without a jury, the district court found for claimants Wittwer, Ebeling and Kolba and against the vessel Foo and its owners Rapp and Harbaugh, and granted the amended petition of Wittwer and Ebeling for exoneration as owners of the Fantome. Rapp and Harbaugh filed objections and exceptions to proposed findings of facts and conclusions of law submitted by the attorneys for Kolba, Wittwer, and Ebeling, all of which were overruled, and the court entered the judgment order.

There is substantial evidence in the record to establish the following statement of facts.

Each vessel was a sailing boat, a one-masted racing yacht (a sloop), about 40 feet long. The helmsmen and crew members were sportsmen, unpaid, and not subject to discipline.

The collision occurred in the early afternoon under conditions of unlimited visibility. The wind was, in general, off the shore and variable, blowing from 2 or 3 to 9 or 10 miles per hour, approximately. The waves were very light.

The Foo was sailing in a northerly direction on a port tack and running on a broad reach. The Fantome was sailing close-hauled in a southwesterly direction on a starboard tack. The Fantome was sailing faster than the Foo.

Rapp was at the tiller of the Foo. Haring was assigned as forward lookout and light canvas man. In a cockpit aft of the mast and close to the middle of the Foo, were crew members Clare and Atwood, and Rapp. Haring’s station was a small forward cockpit, in the bow and forward of the mast. The sails, which were out to the right or starboard, cut off the view over a considerable arc of the horizon for the men in the main cockpit behind the mast. Haring had, pursuant to Rapp’s order, raised the jib about five minutes prior to the collision. Haring sat on the [630]*630deck at the port side of the forward cockpit, with his feet and legs down in the cockpit. While sitting there he could have looked around his jib without difficulty. Rapp could not see Haring when both men were at their normal stations and in their usual positions. Rapp did not specifically instruct Haring to act as lookout. It was understood that everybody on the boat, as a part of his regular duties, would do so.

The Fantome weighed more than twice as much as the Foo. Ebeling was at the tiller, crewmen Choate and Doyle being in the cockpit. Kolba was designated as forward lookout on the Fantome and his station was at the bow to cover the arc of the horizon cut off by the sails of that vessel from the view of the men in the cockpit. The men in the cockpit had their views obstructed by these sails from the quarter in which the Foo was navigating. Kolba left his station and went aft of the mainmast 5 or 10 minutes before the collision and remained away from his station during that time, then making no observation to port.

The Fantome was carrying a general but shifting southwesterly course coming off the lake toward the shore. During the five minutes prior to the impact the motion of the Fantome was causing it to swing from about 230 to 250 degrees. In describing its action, Ebeling testified, “the compass precesses and lags.” He further testified: “It was in a southwesterly direction; * * * It was swinging. * * * The motion of the vessel causes it to lag and precess. * * * There was a slight luff in the jenny about two minutes prior to the accident.” Ebel-ing fell off in the wind, because it was varying slightly. Then he was hardening up in the wind, taking the Fantome to around 240 degrees, and his sail was luffing, “trying to get an idea of where the wind was actually coming from”, and varying around 230 degrees.5

Although Ebeling knew that Kolba had left his post, he did not order him to return, during a 5 to 10 minute period, until almost the instant of the collision at which time he did tell him. Kolba was still aft of the mast when the collision occurred. No one aboard knew collision with the Foo was imminent, although both Ebeling and Kolba knew a vessel was navigating in their blind quarter.

The Fantome passed ahead of the Foo so that the bow of the Foo came into contact with the port side of Fantome at the latter’s chain plates just aft of the shrouds that support the mast.

The amount of damages sustained by the two vessels and the value of each following the collision were stipulated, as were Kolba’s medical expenses.

It is argued by appellees Wittwer and Ebeling that the “Fantome was sailing in a southwesterly direction and there-was a wind coming from the west and varying between two and ten miles per hour in velocity.” They further arguet

“ * * * In order to sail in this direction with such a wind, there necessarily had to be a hardening up of the sails followed by a luffing, followed by a hardening up, with these-movements of the sails repeated. That is the only way a vessel sailing-southwesterly could make progress, with the wind as it was. Naturally, there was a relatively slight swing-to the bow of the Fantome during-such sailing. This swinging motion of the bow of the Fantome was a. necessary, usual and well known-movement of the bow of a sailboat, under the circumstances, and certainly all sailors would be familiar-with it. While this motion was occurring, the Fantome was proceeding on her southwesterly course. To-describe such motion of the bow of the Fantome as a change in course,, as appellant Rapp has done, it is. submitted, is incorrect. It is more-truly described, as Ebeling described [631]*631it, as a swinging of the bow of the Fantome caused by the motion of the boat, which is a change of heading only and not a change of course. It is submitted that there was no change in course by the Fantome while on her southwesterly course prior to collision.”

The district court evidently accorded validity to this argument, because it made this finding of fact:

“17.

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Related

Rapp v. Wittwer
255 F.2d 628 (Seventh Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
255 F.2d 628, 1959 A.M.C. 1144, 1958 U.S. App. LEXIS 5310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rapp-v-wittwer-ca7-1958.