Schenck v. Fremont

21 F. Cas. 661, 1 Bond 57
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 21 F. Cas. 661 (Schenck v. Fremont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schenck v. Fremont, 21 F. Cas. 661, 1 Bond 57 (S.D. Ohio 1856).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

The case set out in the libel is, substantially, that before daylight, in the morning of January 5, 1853, the steamer Switzerland, with a cargo on board, and a loaded barge in tow on the larboard side, was proceeding on a voyage from Cincinnati to New Orleans, and that a short distance above the town of Ghent, in Kentucky, and when near the Kentucky side of the river, the steamboat J. C. Fremont was seen to leave the wharf-boat at the town of Vevay, on the Indiana side, and soon after, instead of passing up near the shore of Yevay Island, crossed the river toward the Kentucky side, and in thus crossing, came in contact with the barge of the Switzerland, striking it on its starboard quarter, carrying away the forward part of its bow, causing it to take in water rapidly, injuring its lading, disabling it from proceeding, and thereby occasioning great injury to the libellants, in the expense incurred in repairs, damage to the cargo, and the detention of their boat. It is averred in the libel that the loss and injury thus sustained, was caused wholly by the fault, negligence, and want of skill of those in charge of the said steamer Fremont, and that no fault is imputable to those intrusted with the management of the Switzerland and the barge connected with it. The respondents aver, in their answer, that the Fremont was proceeding from Louisville to Pittsburg; and, that having landed at the town of Vevay, for the transaction of its business there, started out from the wharf-boat of said town, and crossed the river, to near the Kentucky side, and then proceeded up the river, near the shore, the usual place of an ascending boat, at that stage' of water; and that while thus going up, the Switzerland, with a barge in tow on the larboard side, was seen coming down on the larboard side of the Fremont, and continued that course till within one hundred and fifty yards of the said boat, when the Switzerland changed its direction toward the Kentucky shore, and thus proceeding, the barge struck the larboard bow of the Fremont, thereby breaking its planks, timbers, etc. The answer alleges that the collision took place about half a mile above said town of Ghent, the Fremont then being in the proper place of an ascending boat, and that it was due wholly to the improper navigation of the Switzerland, without any fault on the part of the said Fremont.

This brief statement of the material allegations of the libel and answer is sufficient to show the matter in controversy in this case. It also shows that the claims of these parties, as to the facts involved, are so directly in conflict that they can not be reconciled, and wholly exclude the supposition that both are consistent with truth; and, as is almost proverbially common in suits growing out of marine collisions, each party has been successful in sustaining by evidence the assumptions set up respectively in the pleadings. Thus the court is presented with a ease, in which the evidence, as to the more essential facts, is palpably contradictory and discrepant. Under such circumstances, the duty devolving on a court of fixing on a satisfactory basis for a decree is not always easy or pleasant.

It may be premised, that in the consi deration of the facts of this ease, the conclusion is read[662]*662ily reached that the collision in question could not possibly - have occurred without fault of one or both of these boats. On whatever other ground it may be placed, it is certain it can not be attributed to inevitable or unavoidable accident. Indeed, it is hardly possible to conceive of circumstances in which a collision was less necessary, or less excusable. This conclusion fairly follows from facts not in controversy in the case. The libellants’ boat, coming in at the head of Vevay Island, -was distinctly seen by the pilot of the Fremont; and the latter boat was as distinctly seen by the pilot of the Switzerland, being then in the act of putting out from the wharf-boat, at Vevay. The boats were first mutually seen a little after five o’clock in the morning. The night had been light and fair, but it had become somewhat cloudy toward morning, still it was not so dark but that the boats could be easily seen. The distance between the points where the boats became mutually visible did not exceed two miles, and was probably not more than a mile and a half. An island, the lower end of which is nearlj- half a mile from the Vevay wharf-boat, stretches up close to the Indiana side of the river, and is something more than one mile in length. The shores, both on the island and the Kentucky side, are nearly straight, so that there is hardly any noticeable bend in the river, and nothing to intercept the view from the Vevay wharf-boat to the point where the Switzerland came in view, at the head of the island. About one-third the distance down, from the head of the island, the river is, by actual measurement, four hundred and fifteen yards in width, and gradually widens, till, at the lower end of the island, it is four hundred and ninety-two yards. At the time of this collision there was nine or ten feet of water in the river; and from the Vevay wharf to the head of the island, there was but little variation in the depth across from near the island shore to the Kentucky side. The proof is conclusive, that along either shore, or in the middle of the river, there was sufficient depth of water for the safe navigation of these boats. And it is equally clear, that between the points indicated, there is no obstruction or impediment of any kind. The channel, or that part of the river between the island and the Kentucky shore, having the swiftest water, is one-third or one-fourth the width of the river from the latter shore, or, measured by yards, the distance varies from something upward of one hundred to one hundred and fifty. But, as before noticed, the water is deep on either side of the channel, along and near to both the island and Kentucky shores.

Yet, under circumstances so favorable to the safe passage of boats on this part of the river, and which would seem almost to exclude the possibility of a collision between a descending and an ascending boat, the Switzerland’s barge and the Fremont were ! brought into violent contact, and injury, di- ! rect and incidental, has been sustained to 1 a considerable amount. And now the in- j quiry which presents itself is, whether this injury is attributable solely to the faulty management of one of- these boats, or do the facts warrant the conclusion that both are in fault. As already stated, the claim of the libellants is for compensation for 1he whole of the injury sustained by them, and this claim is based on the theory that their boat was not in fault, but that the injury resulted wholly from the careless and unskillful navigation of the Fremont; and, if the evidence sustains this position, the maritime law will afford the redress sought for. But, to justify a decree on this basis, it is not enough that the libellants prove a want of caution, vigilance, and skill in the management of the respondents’ boat. It must appear that those intrusted with the management of the libellants’ boat are free from censure, and have done nothing which may be supposed to have contributed essentially to the disaster. As promotive of the great interests of navigation and commerce, the maritime law is stringent in its requirements of caution and skill in the management of boats and vessels. And a party who has failed to comply with these exac-tions presents no sufficient ground to recover the entire damages resulting from a collision.

In the consideration of this case, I do not propose to notice minutely, the great mass of evidence which has been introduced.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 661, 1 Bond 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schenck-v-fremont-ohsd-1856.