The Glaucus

10 F. Cas. 468, 1 Low. 366
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 468 (The Glaucus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Glaucus, 10 F. Cas. 468, 1 Low. 366 (D. Mass. 1869).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

The libellants cite the statute of April 29, 1864 (13 Stat 58), which prescribes for steamers only one white-light at the foremast-head, and prohibits all lights not prescribed. The claimants say that all the Sound steamers carry two, and rely on Act July 25, 1860, c. 234, § 11 (14 Stat 2281, which enacts: That the provision for a foremast head-light for steamships, in the former act, shall not be construed to apply to other than ocean-going steamers and steamers carrying sail; and that all coasting steamers and those navigating bays, lakes, or other-inland waters, shall carry, besides the red and green lights, a central range of two white-lights, one of which is to be. at the head of the vessel, &c. It is not shown that the two lights of the Glaucus did not conform to this later statute, nor that the misfortune was in any wayattriburable to the state of her lights. I refer to this point because the law of 1866 has not been cited here before, and because-its language does not seem to be very happily chosen. It puts ocean steamers and steamers carrying sail, in one class with one sort of lights, and coasting steamers in another, with a different sort, whereas most of the coasting steamers on the Atlantic coast, are both ocean-going and carry sail, so that it may sometimes be difficult for the persons concerned to know to which order they belong. For[469]*469tunately, however, nothing turns upon this distinction in the present case.

The Glaucus was bound to see the schooner on such a night as this in good season, and to avoid her; and if it be true, as is testified, that propellers of this size and class are slow in minding the helm, this only makes it the more essential that the greatest vigilance should be exercised by their officers and crew to discover sailing vessels at the earliest possible moment, for it cannot change the law, nor can it be so great an obstacle as to excuse the steamer altogether, and except her out of the general rule of law on such a night as this. All this is well understood by the claimants; and they aver that the steamer took all proper measures, but that the schooner porteu her helm, and thus caused the collision.

The pilot, second mate, and quartermaster of the steamer were in her pilot-house, and there was a man forward on the lookout. The pilot testifies that he saw a red and a green light about four points on his starboard bow, thought the vessel was a steamer, but that there was no danger, and starboard-ed a little; presently observed that the green light was shut in, and saw sails on the vessel, and then ordered the wheel hard a starboard, and afterwards finding he could not run ahead of the vessel stopped his engine. He estimates the distance at which he first saw the lights, at three-quarters of a mile. The testimony of the second mate and quartermaster is substantially similar. The lookout saw only the red light; he makes no estimate of the distance at which he first perceived it. They all think the schooner changed her course, and that is the disputed question of the cese. The appearances on which they rely are, that the sails were more and more plainly seen as the vessels approached each other, and that the green light disappeared.

I have carefully considered the claimants’ evidence on this point, and am not satisfied that the fact is proved. The steamer changed her course, and it was impossible for her crew to say whether the schooner did so or not, unless they had something besides their own vessel to compare her with, or unless the effects which they saw could not be accounted for by their own change of course. They feel very sure that she did change, and none the less so, because if she did not the steamer must have been in fault. That the sails on the port side of the schooner were seen more plainly as the vessels approached each other is accounted for by the fact of approach. If both lights were seen, and then only the red light, and the steamer kept her. course, the schooner must have changed hers; but the steamer did not keep her course, and I doubt if they ever saw both lights. The witnesses who depose to this were mistaken in two of their suppositions, and may have been so in a third; they took the Electric Flash for a steamer, and they thought her not dangerously near. In this case neither vessel could see both the side-lights of the other until she was crossing her bow. Seeing both lights means that you are on the course of the vessel whose lights you see. If two vessels are on opposite courses, each is on the other’s course; but here the vessels were approaching at an angle of forty-five degrees, and neither could see along the line of the other’s course till she was crossing her bow. If the steamer then was across the bow of the schooner when she first made her out, and was going twice as fast as she, and so ma-noeuvred as to increase the distance between them, all which is averred by the claimants, a collision was impossible, whatever the schooner might do, unless the vessels were so near when the steamer first discovered the lights that it was already almost inevitable; and however near they may have been, their bows could hardly come together under those circumstances. I repeat that the pilot’s account that he saw both lights of a vessel four points on his starboard bow and starboard-ed his helm, and was going twice as fast as the other vessel, which by porting her helm struck his stem, is incredible, unless it all happened in less than one minute; and if this heavy and' slow-working steamer had swung three points to port under the influence of her starboard helm, it would seem that some considerable time must have elapsed. No sudden or accidental change of the schooner’s course to bring both her lights to view is possible, because such a change must have been to windward, and she was close to the wind and did not tack. I cannot but believe that the men in the steamer’s pilot-house were either mistaken in thinking they saw both lights, or else that they have much overstated the time that elapsed. The lookout, who should have seen the schooner first, saw only the red light; and this is precisely what he should have seen, on the theory of the libellants.

The libellants’ witnesses are clear and consistent in declaring that the schooner’s course was not changed. (The judge here examined the evidence on this subject.) I am satisfied that the steamer has not only made out no sufficient justification, but that the facts show affirmatively that she was in fault. • She is in the dilemma that she should either have slowed her engine, and, if necessary,' have stopped and reversed, as the statute requires; or if it was too late for that, and she took the most prudent course after seeing the schooner (which I am inclined to believe), she should have seen her sooner. Interlocutory decree for the libellants.

On the coming in of the assessor’s report, the case was again spoken to by the same counsel.

LOWELL, District Judge. The report of the assessor in this cause is excepted to by both parties. It seems that the schooner belonged at Gloucester, and was sent thence to Fortune Bay in Newfoundland, by her owners, for a cargo of frozen herring, which was [470]*470■obtained, partly by purchase and partly by barter; and while on her voyage to New York with this cargo on board, she was run into in Long Island Sound on a dart and windy night and sunt to the water’s edge by the steamer Glaucus, and was abandoned by the master ■ and crew, and picted up after some days and taten into New London, where she was repaired. .

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 468, 1 Low. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-glaucus-mad-1869.