The Farnley

8 F. 629, 5 Hughes 298, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedJune 16, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F. 629 (The Farnley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Farnley, 8 F. 629, 5 Hughes 298, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396 (circtdmd 1881).

Opinion

Waite, Chief Justice.

It would be a useless task to attempt to reconcile the conflicting evidence in this case. There are, however, some conceded facts. The steamer was going up and the schooner down the bay. The wind was north-west, or perhaps a little north of that. The libel alleges it was north-west, and the master and second mate of the schooner say the same. The pilot of the steamer says it varied from N. N. W. to N. W. I3oth vessels were in a condition to avail themselves of the most desirable courses up and down the bay. They were where, according to the official chart, that course would be N. \ E. or S. W., and about four miles to the west of Sharp’s island light. The schooner had her sails off to port. That is [632]*632•where they would he if she was sailing on the course given by the chart. The-wind was about a seven-knot breeze. The schooner was going at the rate of about seven miles an hour and the steamer four.

Each vessel saw the other a considerable time before the collision, and when they were certainly more than a mile apart. The regulation lights were properly set and burning on both vessels. Before' the collision the steamer put her wheel to port, and soon after hard a-port. Under the operation of this helm she fell off to the eastward several points. Not long after the steamer began to fall off, the schooner put her wheel hard a-starboard, which carried her also off to the eastward. In the collision the schooner struck the steamer,, which was 280 feet long, about midships. The cutwater of the schooner was bent by the blow from starboard to port, and her starboard bow, to a point 10 feet back from the stem, was so much broken that she filled and sank in less than an hour. The port bow of the-' schooner was not injured at all, except, perhaps, directly at the stern.

So far there is no dispute. The issue between the parties may be thus stated: The schooner claims to have been sailing for a half hour before the collision on.a course S. by E. J E. Before that, time her course, had been S. by W. J W. About a quarter of an hour before the collision the lookout of the schooner saw and reported' the mast-head light of the steamer bearing about one point over the starboard bów. Not long afterwards the green light of the steamer’ appeared in the same direction. These lights continued in sight without any material change of bearing until the vessels got within three or four hundred yards of each other, when suddenly the steamer went off to the eastward, exhibited her red light, and started directly across the bow of the schooner. No change was at first' made in the course of the schooner on this account, but when the bow of the steamer came opposite that of the schooner, the wheel of the schooner was put hard a-starboard, and she too fell off somewhat to the eastward before the vessels came together. The change of course by the schooner, it is claimed, was because the steamer had, by her unskilful movements, made a collision inevitable, and such a change was necessary in order to avoid more disastrous com sequences.

On the part of -the steamer it is claimed that she was going up the bay on .a course N. W., when her pilot on the bridge and looking through a glass saw the sails of the schooner almost directly ahead, and .some miles away. Not long afterwards the red light of the schooner appeared, bearing somewhat less than a point over the port [633]*633bow. This light, as the vessels approached each other, drew slightly to port. The pilot, after awhile, thinking it prudent to widen somewhat the distance between the courses of the two vessels and to show his red light decidedly to the schooner, ported her wheel. Almost immediately afterwards the schooner seemed to be falling off in the same direction. At first both her groen and red lights were displayed to the steamer, and then her green alone. As soon as the change in the course of the schooner was made, the wheel of the steamer was put hard a-port, but the engines were not stopped.

The difficulty is in relation to these claims. The testimony on both sides is positive. It was undoubtedly the duty of the steamer to keep out of the way of the schooner, but it was equally the duty of the schooner not to embarrass her in her efforts to that end by an unnecessary change of course. When two sailing-vessels or two steam-vessels are meeting end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve risk of collision, the statutory sailing rules require both to put their helms to port, so that each may pass on the port side of the other. Rev. St. § 4233, rules 16,19. The supreme court has said that ships would be meeting end on, within the meaning of this rule, when they were approaching each other from opposite directions, or on such parallel lines as to involve risk of collision on account of their proximity. The Nichols, 7 Wall. 664; The Dexter, 23 Wall. 69. I am satisfied from the evidence that, under this rule, these vessels were approaching each other nearly end on. This may be fairly inferred from what is said by the witnesses on both sides, when taken in connection with the admitted facts. It is not pretended by those on the schooner that the steamer was seen at any time more than one point over their starboard bow, and she kept that position, without any change at all until the vessels wore within three or four hundred yards of eaeh other, and probably less, according to the statements of the witnesses. In that time the vessels together ran moro than a mile. So, on the steamer, the schooner, when miles away, according to the statements of the pilots and others, appeared to he almost directly ahead. When her red light was first seen it bore less than a point over the port how, and it at no time opened much, if any, more than a point in that direction. According to the testimony from the schooner, the first indication of any change of course in the steamer was when the red light appeared, and it was but a very short time after that before the bow of the steamer came Across that of the schooner. Then the schooner starboarded her wheel, and the steamer had only time to get far enough by to receive the blow midships or thereabouts. The tes[634]*634timony from the steamer is that,'although her wheel was put hard a-port, and she kept on at her full speed of four miles an hour, the schooner, by starboarding, was able to overtake and collide with her before-she could get out of the way. All this indicates most unmistakably .to my mind that, whether the steamer was in fact a little to the east or a little to the west of the schooner, the lines of the courses of the two vesssels were from the beginning in dangerous proximity. This, conclusion is strengthened by the further fact that the collision occurred not very far from the place where the vessels would be likely tobe if they had followed closely the.sailing directions-given, upon the chart, which both vessels were perfectly able to do. The steamer, loaded and disabled as she was, would be almost-certain to take the most desirable route, which could not but have been known to her pilot of more than 34 years’ experience, and no reason is given why the schooner should not have done likewise.

The statutory rules do not require a steamer, when meeting a sailing vessel end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve the risk of collision, to port her wheel and let the vessels pass port to port, but, other things being equal, that would be the natural impulse of every navigator. Custom has made that the almost universal rule of the road both on land and water in this country.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 629, 5 Hughes 298, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-farnley-circtdmd-1881.