The" Annie Lindsley"

104 U.S. 185, 26 L. Ed. 716, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1988
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1881
Docket97
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 185 (The" Annie Lindsley") 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
The" Annie Lindsley", 104 U.S. 185, 26 L. Ed. 716, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1988 (1881).

Opinion

Me. Justice Woods,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The assignments of error, which are sixteen in number, may be fairly condensed as- follows : —

1. The court erred in refusing to find the facts as requested by the claimant.

2. The'"court erred in refusing to find the conclusions of law as requested by the claimant.

8.' The court erred in certain of its findings of fact.

4. The court erred in finding as matter of law that the brig was in fault for putting her wheel to starboard.

5. The court erred in finding as ‘matter of law that the libellants were entitled to a decree.

The first and third assignments are disposed of by The Abbotsford (98 U. S. 440), and The Benefactor, 102 id. 214., In these cases it was held that, under the act of Feb. 16, 1875, c. 77, entitled “An Act to facilitate the disposition of cases in the Supreme Court of the United States, and for other purposes ” (18 Stat., pt. 3, p. 315), the finding, of facts by the Circuit Court in admiralty is conclusive. Upon an appeal from a decree in admiralty rendered since May 1, 1875, when the act went into effect, we cannot look into the evidence, or the *188 opinion of tlie court, to ascertain the facts. The evidence" is not properly in the record, and, by an amendment to rule'8, promulgated May 2, 1881, it is excluded from the transcript. The Adriatic, 108 U. S. 730.. Where-the Circuit Court has. passed on all the issues, we cannot listen to complaints that it has refused to find certain facts which it was asked to find, or has found certain other facts which the weight o£...the testimony did not warrant.-

N This; disposes, also, of the1-Second ground of - error, as the conclusions of law which the court was asked to declare were ■ based on the findings of fact proposed by the claimant, which the Circuit Court refused to adopt.

. .The question, and the only question which we.can.consider, ■is, whether the,facts found support the conclusions of .law and the decree, and it is raised by the fourth and fifth assignments. ’

The Circuit Court finds, in its conclusions of fact and of law, .that putting the brig’s helm to starboard was the cause of the collision. It also finds, as a conclusion of law, that the brig was in fault for putting her wheel to starboard.

We are required, therefore, to consider whether the brig, under the facts found, was so in fault.

From the findings it appears that the wind was east of south; that the schooner, just before the collision, was'heading west by south, bound from the Connecticut River to New York, and had her port tacks on board. The brig was bound east from. New York to. New Brunswick. She was steering by the'wind ; her general direction was east-northeast. Both .vessels were sailing under full canvas, and both had their regulation lights set.

Immediately before the .collision the brig was. sailing, close-hauled to the wind, the schooner had the wind a little free. When the brig was discovered from the schooner, the two yes-'' seis were approaching each other end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve the risk of collision. A short time before the. collision the lookout on the schooner discovered the-brig dead ahead. .• Her wheel was at once put to port,- and she bore off. The schooner was not discovered by the brig until the brig had ■ been discovered by the schooner. The lookout was the first to see the schooner from the brig, and called out “ Light right *189 ahead.” The brig’s wheel was then put to starboard, and she • swung oil one point. On being hailed from the schooner and told to luff, the wheel was put to port; but before it could materially affect the course of the brig, the two vessels came together.

The duty of the vessels in the emergency preceding' the collision is plainly prescribed by the sixteenth rule for the prevention of collisions on water, which is as-follows : “ If'two sail vessels are meeting end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve risk of collision, the helms of both shall be put to port, so that each may pass -on the port side of the other.” Rev. Stat., sect. 4283.

■We.have seen that the vessels were approaching each other end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve risk of collision. 'The rule under such circumstances required them to port their wheels, and pass each other on the' port side. The brig, in violation of the rule, instead of porting her helm, put it to starboard.- The court found as a matter of fact that this was the direct cause of the collision, and as a conclusion of law, -that she was in fault for so doing. We think that from the finding the conclusion inevitably follows.

The counsel for the appellant; however, insists that the conclusion amounts to laying down this rule: that a vessel close-hauled on the starboard-tack seeing a light right ahead is in fault if she starboards; and he argues that the rule thus stated ‘is too broad, and that whether a vessel is in fault for starboarding on seeing a light right ahead depends upon what the light is, that is to say, whether it is green or- red. He insists that if the light seen by the brig upon the schooner just before the-collision was green, that this fact’made it the duty of the brig to starboard and not to port her helm. In support of this-view he cites Jenkins’s Rule of the Road at Sea, pp. 44, 124, 125, 127, 129, 135, 208, and other authorities.

He then goes on to argue from the testimony that the light seen by the brig was green. As we have already shown, we have nothing to do with the testimony. We are limited strictly to the findings of fact, so that the -point presented by his contention is whether, upon'the facts found', the rule of navigation was too broadly stated by the court. .The answer *190 is, therefore, plain. The court did not find that the light seen by the brig was a green light, and did find that the vessels were approaching each other end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve the risk of a collision. The situation as found by the court was, therefore, precisely the .one provided for in the sixteenth rule, which it was the duty of the brig to obey by putting her helm to port. The rule to be deduced from the conclusion of law drawn by the court from the facts found is not a whit broader than the sixteenth rule itself, and is really only a repetition of that rule.

The effort of the appellant seems to be to bring the case within the provision of the twenty-fourth sailing rule, .which declares that, “ in construing and obeying these rules due regard must be had to all dangers of navigation, and to any special circumstances which may exist in any particular case, rendering a departure from them necessary in order to avoid immediate danger.” Rev. Stat., sect. 4233.

The findings, however, having brought the case .clearly within the sixteenth rule, if there were any additional facts which took it out of that rule and brought it within the operation of the twenty-fo.urth rule, it was incumbent on the appellant to establish them and have them incorporated with the findings.

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104 U.S. 185, 26 L. Ed. 716, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 1988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-annie-lindsley-scotus-1881.