Stainback v. Rae

55 U.S. 532, 14 L. Ed. 530, 14 How. 532, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 466
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 55 U.S. 532 (Stainback v. Rae) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stainback v. Rae, 55 U.S. 532, 14 L. Ed. 530, 14 How. 532, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 466 (1853).

Opinion

ML Justice. NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an .appeal from'the Circuit Court of the United Statea for the' Dir rict of Massachusetts, in admiralty.

*535 The libel charges, that-the ship Mary Frances, laden -with ice, was on a voyage from Boston to New. Orleans, and that on the 11th December, 1847, at about' half-past threé o’clock in the morning, while on her starboard tack, im-the prosecution of the voyage,-she was struck by the ship 'Washington, nearly midships' on her larboard sidé, breaking in her bulwarks and stanchibns, and starting her planks and timbers, so that in a few horns she filled with water, and the master and ■ hands were obliged to abandon her, and she went to the bottom.-

. The respondents, in their answer, state, that the ship' Washington, at the time mentioned in the libel, was upon the high seas between George’s Shoals and the south shore of Nantucket Island, at a distance of about sixty miles from land; - that the wind was blowing a moderate breeze from the south-south-west, and the Washington,'with all her reefs out, .with courses free, and main-topgallant sails, jib, and flying-jib,' and fore and main-topmast-stay-sails set, was sailing full and by, upon her larboard tack, and steering dxxe west by the compass, and as near the wind as possible; that she had a competent, watch on deck, keeping a good look-out, the weather being dark and hazy towards the horizon, especially to the leeward of the ship, but the stars visible above. That while she was thus pursuing her course, at about half-past three o’clock in the morning, the Mary Frances was seen about four points on the le'e bow of the Washington, and was then in the act o&running up, and did immediately run up into the wind athwart the hawse of the Washington; and, that instantly, on the discovery of the Mary Frances, and of the course she was pursuing, the helm of the Washington was put hard up, and every endeavor made by the - hands on-deck to pxxt her before the wind, and to avoid a collision.

The facts, as proved on the part of the libellants, are substantially as follows:

That about half-past three o’clock, on the morning of the 11th December, 1847, the hands on board the Mary Frances, while she was standing to the eastward, on her starboard tack, the wind from the south-south-west, closehauled, descried the Washington something less than a quarter of a mile distant, about a point and a half forward of the Mary Frances’s larboard beam, some of the hands say, on the larboard bow two or three points. The Washington was standing to the westward when first'seen, and orders were immediately given to put the helm hard down, and, at the same time, the hands cried out to those on board-, the Washington, to keep off. The collision took place, as estimated, from five to seven minutes after the Washington was first discovered. The Mary Frances was struck midships, on the lar *536 board side, her bulwarks stove in, and her planks below the white streak on the opposite side were broken, and all her fore-rigging carried away. The ship was abandoned with' thirteen feet of water in her hold, being a wreck, and. wholly unmanageable,. The Washington was not at first seen plainly, as the Weathbr was hazy. The second mate of the Mary Frances, who had charge of -the watch, and .one of the first to descry the Washington, says the weather was hazy find thick, the sky was overcast, no moon or • stars visible. The Mary Frances was about 320 tons burden; the Washington about 500 tons

The.evidence, on behalf of the respondents, is substantially as follows

The Washington was bound from Liverpool, to Virginia by the; way of New York, and had On board a cárgo of salt, and some 170 steerage passengers. She was on her larboard tack, .closehauled; the wind about south-south-west. The man. at the wheel states, that an order was " given from the. deck, “ put the' helm hard up, there is a ship iuto us;” that the order was obeyed instantly, but the collision immediately followed.. Simmons, one of the hands, states; that he was on the weather side of the Washington’s windlass on the look-out; that the weather-was dark, cloudy, and hazy; that he descried the Mary Frances abput a minuté and a half or two minutes' before the collision; that she. was on the lee bow of. the Washington, between •three and four ppjnts; that at first-he could not determine her course on account of the thick weather. ' When he first saw her he. sang out to the man at the wheel to put helm hard up. The witness heard' a noise or hail about half a minute before he descried, the Mary Frances, but could not ’determine whence it came; supposed it might be from some of the passengers, as they were in the habit of making a noise.

This witness is substantially corroborated by several others on board the Washington. Part of. the watch were at the pumps at the time the collision took place.

The testimony on both sides agree, that each vessel was going at the rate of five and a half knots Jhe hour.

The court below decreed in favOr of the libellants.

Upon a careful' perusal of the evidence in behalf of the libellants and the. respondents, if is appaient that there is much less discrepancy, and/contradiction among the witnesses called .by the respective parties, as to the material facts, than are usually found in these collision casos.

'.All agree as to. the state of the weather — thick, hazy and dark; as to the direction of the wind — =-from the south-southwest;, the course of the vessels —the Mary .Frances on the starboard tack, standing south-east, and the Washington on the *537 larboard, standing nearly due west; the rate of speed — five and a half knots the hour. Arid' even as it respects the distance the vessels were from -each other when first descried, there is v.ery little, if any difference.

According to the witnesses on. board the Mary Frances, the Washington was less -than a quarter of a mile distant, when she was first seen. The distance of the former vessel, when first seen by the hands on board the Washington, is not stated directly; but- Simmons, the look-out, testifies, she was seen from one and a half to two minutes before the collision, which, regarding the cdmbined speed of the two vessels, must have been at about the same distance. The probability is, that the two vessels were much nearer each other -than a quarter of a mile, when first seen. The chief mate -of the Mary Francés, who was asleep in his berth at the time, but immediately^ afterwards on deck, fixes the distance the vessel could be seen in that -state of the weather at about two hundred yards; and this, corresponds with the opinion1 expressed by the master of the Washington, where he says, the Mary Frances might have been seen at a distance of about four times her length. The answer of the experts is that the distance a vessel could be seen in such weather would be uncertain. The course the two vessels 'were steering was calculated to increase the difficulty, and embarrass the look-out in descrying- the vessel ahead, for, as they were approaching each other by the wind, they presented,to the eye the edge's of the sails, and not the breadth of them, as in other positions.

There is some apparent discrepancy between the witnesses of the two vessels in respect to their relative position at the time they were first seen.

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Bluebook (online)
55 U.S. 532, 14 L. Ed. 530, 14 How. 532, 1852 U.S. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stainback-v-rae-scotus-1853.