Sewall v. The La Champagne

43 F. 444, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 214
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 F. 444 (Sewall v. The La Champagne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sewall v. The La Champagne, 43 F. 444, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 214 (S.D.N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The above libels grow out of a collision which occurred a little after 5 o’clock of the morning of tlie 25th of February, 1889, in the Atlantic ocean, about 25 miles south of Shinnecock light, between the French steamer La Champagne, and the three-masted schooner Belle Higgins. The stem of the steamer struck the schooner on her starboard side forward of the forerigging, and cut off the starboard bow, so that she filled in a few minutes. Being loaded with lumber, the schooner did not sink; and was left adrift until a tug was sent by the steamer to her assistance, by her master’s request, as the steam-ship claims, for whose towage service the steam-ship company afterwards paid. The third libel is to recover for this payment. The other libels are for damages to the respective vessels, the owners of the schooner claiming §40,000 for the schooner, cargo, freight, personal effects, and the salvage expenses; the steam-ship company claiming damages to the amount of $35,000. At the time ol' the collision the weather was tolerably clear. It had been foggy during the night previous, and the steamer was going at a somewhat reduced speed,- — about 13*1 knots, under 45 revolutions, instead of 54, her full speed. She was on one of her regular trips from Havre to New York; and, on taking soundings off Long island, while on a course of west true, about 3 o’clock a. M.,the instrument having unexpectedly indicated but 16 fathoms of water, her commander ordered her headed one point moro to port until half past 5. The schooner was bound from Darien, Ga., to Bath, Me., and was sailing N. N. E. magnetic; the wind, as she claims, being light from the S. W., giving her a speed of about three knots.- Her contention is that the steamer’s white light was first seen well off on the starboard how, several miles distant; afterwards the steamer’s red light, nearly on her starboard beam; that, as the steamer continued to approach, showing no change, the mate in charge of the schooner, being in doubt whether the steamer was in range of his green light, exhibited a torcli-liglit on the starboard side of the mainsail, which illuminated all her sails; that, the steamer’s red and green lights having become visible, and no change appearing in her course, the master was called on [446]*446•deck, and another torch-light shown, both colored lights of the steamer being then visible, and alleged to be aft of the range of the schooner’s green light; and that a gun was soon afterwards fired, but that the steamer continued following up the schooner apparently under a port helm, and, very soon after the firing of the gun, struck her as above stated; that the schooner made no change in her course, and that her side lights were properly burning; and that the collision was caused by the negligence of the steamer in not properly observing the schooner, and keeping out of her way. The case made by the steamer is that, while going as above stated, with competent officers on the bridge, and three competent and attentive persons on the lookout, the first notice of the schooner was a torch-light, seen either ahead or a little on the port bow, and at times an intermittent white light a little above the torch-light; that no green light on the schooner was seen or was visible; that the officers of the steamer supposed the torch-light shown to be that of a pilot-boat, and, being in want of a pilot, they exhibited a torch-light in reply, which was followed by another torch-light shown by the schooner, which was interpreted by the steamer as an agreement that the pilot would come aboard; that the white light, being seen not much above the torch-light, and intermittent, was supposed to be a considerable distance off; and that the steamer’s head, in order to facilitate the pilot in boarding her on her port side, was put one point more to starboard, but without slackening speed. A while afterwards the discharge of the gun was heard, the flash of which showed the schooner very near, and about the same time a faint glimmer of a green light was seen. When the gun was heard the engine was reversed full speed, and the helm put hard a-port. The collision occurred soon thereafter, the steam-ship changing her head meantime two or three points to starboard. The distance of the vessels apart, when the gun was fired and the engine reversed, is variously estimated by the witnesses at from 100 meters to half a nlile. From the amount of the steamer’s change to starboard, the distance, I think, could not be less than from 1,000 to 1,500 feet. The weight of testimony is that at the moment of collision the steamer was heading towards the bow of the schooner, and forwards, at an angle of from 3& to 6 points.

1. In my judgment the evidence does not show facts on the steamer’s part sufficient to justify her in taking the Belle Higgins to be a pilot-boat at a long distance off, and in therefore continuing on at the unabated speed of 13$- knots until she was so near as to render collision unavoidable. If the bearing of the pilot-boat when the torch-light was seen was a point on the steamer’s port bow, as the steamer’s officers say, no doubt the schooner’s green light ought to have been seen distinctly. But a torch-light without any colored light was not sufficient to indicate a pilot-boat. In the absence of a white mast-head light, the torch would mean only that the steamer was overtaking another vessel astern of the range of her colored lights. There was no light on the schooner that could possibly present the appearance of the white mast-head light required of pilot-boats by the rules of navigation. [447]*447The low, faint, and intermittent light said to have boon seen by some of the steamer’s witnesses a little above the torch-light was so different in brightness and in position from the light required to be carried by pilots at the mast-head that it was itself an indication of the need of caution in approaching, instead of a justification for continuing on at almost full speed. The only white light possible to have been seen by the steamer was the cabin light, visible, if at all, through the schooner’s skylight. The low, faint glimmer of such a light, familiar to seamen, cannot be deemed to have been justifiably confounded with a pilot’s masthead light, without a total discredit of the prppriety of the eleventh and nineteenth rules of navigation,- — a discredit which I am not prepared to admit. But if the schooner was justly mistaken for a pilot-boat, the steamer cannot he justified for her continued high speed. As I have said, the absence of the usual high bright light was of itself an indication of the need of caution. Her distance could not be exactly known. The pilot-boat might desire to cross the steamer’s bow, and come up round her stern, as is sometimes done; and it was the duty of the steamer to check her head wav nearly to a stop, and let the pilot-boat do the rest. The City of Washington, 92 U. S. 38-41, 11 Blatchf. 487, 6 Ben. 140 ; The Columbia, 27 Fed. Rep. 704, 708. It was this failure to check her speed that directly brought about Hie collision. In the Case of the Wisconsin, where a similar mistake was made in regard to a supposed pilotboal, it was found by the court (25 Fed. Rep. 284) that, “when the steamship was at a safe distance from the bark, her engines were stopped, and her headway was substantially overcome while waiting for the pilot to come along-side in his boat.” Had the Champagne’s engines.in this instance been “ stopped when at a safe distance, and her headway substantially overcome,” there would certainly have been no collision with the Belle Higgins.

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Bluebook (online)
43 F. 444, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sewall-v-the-la-champagne-nysd-1890.