The El Sol

45 F.2d 852
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 19, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 45 F.2d 852 (The El Sol) 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
The El Sol, 45 F.2d 852 (S.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I hold both El Sol and the Sae City to blame for the collision which is the subject-matter of these two proceedings for limitation of liability.

I hold that the United States, as owner of the Sae City, is entitled to a limitation of its liability.

It is admitted by all parties that the Southern Pacific Company, as owner of El Sol, is entitled to a limitation of its liability.

I. These two cases were tried before me as one ease, and, although the procedural machinery precludes the entry of a single decree because different claims are filed in the two proceedings, the eases are the equivalent substantially of a libel and cross-libel with intervening petitions by cargo owners against the nonearrying steamship, and will be dealt with in this opinion as if that was the procedural pattern of the controversy.

II. On the morning of March 11, 1927, El Sol, a steel screw steamship built in 1910 —of 6,008 tons gross, 3,747 tons net register, 405.6 feet long, of a beam of 53.1 feet and a depth of hold of 27.4 feet—was coming up New York Bay, inward bound, with carg’o from Galveston, Tex.

The Sae City, a steel screw steamship built in 1918 at Hog Island, Philadelphia— of 5,735 tons gross register, 3,445 tons net register, 390 feet long, of a beam of 54.2 feet, and a depth of hold of 27.6 feet—was going down the bay outward bound, with a part cargo for Antwerp and other European continental ports via Philadelphia, where she expected to complete her loading.

The two steamships were, therefore, substantially of the same size.

On March 11, 1927, during the period and at the place to which my attention must be directed, the wind was negligible, the weather was foggy, with a visibility, as I find, of about one-quarter of a mile, though some of the witnesses describe the fog as thick fog, and the tide was ebb running at between 1.5 and 2 knots per hour.

At about 7:45 a. m. on that day by the Sae City’s deck time, which, for convenience, I shall hereinafter use, the Sac City’s bow struck the starboard after quarter of El Sol, penetrating about 18 feet into her side, whilst El Sol was proceeding up the westward side of the main ship channel in the Upper Day close to the eastern boundary of the Anchor-ago Grounds, and had reached a point almost opposite the Statute of Liberty.

El Sol was fatally injured and sank very near the place of the collision. Her wreck when buoyed and marked by the Lighthouse Service was found to lie W. S. W. of Governor’s Island Extension Light and almost due East of the Statue o£ Liberty. Eventually it had to bo blown up to (dear the channel.

Although they had heard each other’s fog whistles earlier, the vessels first sighted each other about two minutes before the collision —at 7:43 a. m. when they were approximately a quarter of a mile apart.

When they sighted each other, the Sac City was on a course about S. W. % S. and El Sol on a course about N. E. % N.

There was thus an angle of 172° between their courses, and the situation was obviously that of vessels meeting in a narrow channel, and with a quarter of a mile, 1,320 feet, between them, they were then between three and four ships’ lengths apart.

Undoubtedly the collision would have been avoided, if El Sol had been on her proper side of the channel. Cf. The S. V. Luckenbach, 197 F. 888, 893 (C. C. A. 2). It was, I think, her wrongful insistence on coming up on the westerly side of the channel which created the initial difficulty, for when the Sac City sighted her she was almost directly ahead and apparently heading very slightly to the starboard of the Sae City’s course.

The speed of El Sol, with the tide against her, was not more than about two miles over the ground, perhaps a bit less.

The speed of the Sae City over the ground, with the tide, can be tested by her own time. Her bell-book tells the story. It was 7,000 yards, 21,000 feet, from Pier 3, Hoboken, whence the Sac City started to the place of collision. This is just short of four miles. She traversed this distance between 7:16 a. m. and 7:45 a. m.'—substantially a half hour. Her engines were stated in her [854]*854bell-book to have been at “slow ahead” from 7:16 a. m. until 7:43 a. m. when, as I find, she sighted El Sol. Then she was less than a quarter of a mile above the place of collision. Allowing for the ebb tide, her speed over the ground when she sighted El Sol must have been about seven miles per hour.

By all the tests laid down this was too fast for the conditions then obtaining. The Colorado, 91 U. S. 692, 702, 23 L. Ed. 379; The Nacoochee, 137 U. S. 330, 339, 11 S. Ct. 122, 34 L. Ed. 687; The Martello, 153 U. S. 64, 70, 14 S. Ct. 723, 38 L. Ed. 637; The Umbria, 166 U. S. 404, 413, 17 S. Ct. 610, 41 L. Ed. 1053; The Manchioneal, 243 F. 801, 805 (C. C. A. 2); The Bayonne, 213 F. 216, 217 (C. C. A. 2); The George W. Roby, 111 F. 601, 609 (C. C. A. 6); The H. F. Dimock, 77 F. 226, 229 (C. C. A. 1); The Michigan (C. C. A.) 63 F. 280, 287 (C. C. A. 4).

The initiative in signals was taken by El Sol. She blew a two-blast signal proposing a starboard to starboard passage. The Sac City, instead of reversing at once and blowing alarm signals, as she should have done, cf. The Teutonia, 23 Wall. 77, 85, 23 L. Ed. 44; The Transfer No. 10 (D. C.) 137 F. 666, 667; The Benalla (D. C.) 45 F.(2d) 864, per L. Hand, J., seems to have thought she could make the suggested maneuver safely, and replied with two blasts. She then failed to go. to port, as she now claims, because she had not sufficient speed for good steerageway.

Having settled on a starboard to starboard passing, the two vessels exchanged two more two-blast signals, and then, finding themselves in more imminent peril, each reversed. The Sae City then dropped her starboard anchor, also without avail, for she struck El Sol, inflicting, as abqve stated, what turned out to be a mortal wound.

As is usual, various wholly unmaintainable contentions are made in behalf of each vessel.

It is said that the Sae City was in fault for dropping her starboard instead of her port anchor; that El Sol was in fault for not having gone full speed ahead. It is sufficient to say that these faults, if faults they were, were in extremis.

When the two vessels came in sight of each other they were approaching each other at a rate, due to their respective speeds, of approximately eight hundred and fifty feet a minute. Consequently there was not time for "a great deal of consideration of maneuvers.

Having regard to their courses and speeds, their mutual bearings which must have been observable to each, and their respective positions in the tide, they should not have attempted a starboard to starboard passing which’ was obviously risky and which in the event proved fatal to El Sol.

As" sometimes happens in evidence, one of the men on the spot has hit off the situation as I believe it existed. The'chief officer of El Sol said in his deposition, “Either one could have stopped and the other one could have done it alone.”

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Bluebook (online)
45 F.2d 852, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-el-sol-nysd-1930.