The Golden Grove

13 F. 674
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 1, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. 674 (The Golden Grove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Golden Grove, 13 F. 674 (D. Del. 1882).

Opinion

Bradford, D. J.

This is a cause of collision civil and maritime, in which the owners of the brig Kremlin, (the vessel sunk by the collision,) and of the freight pending on the cargo on board the said brig at the time of the collision, on behalf of themselves, and of the officers and crew of the said vessel at the time of her said loss, owners of charts, books, instruments, and personal effects on board said ves[675]*675sel at tlie time of her loss, the owners of the cargo of sugar on board of the said vessel at the time of her loss, and the owners of the chronometer on board of the said vessel, are complainants, and John S. Smailes, the master of the British steamer Golden Grove, intervening for the interest of the owners thereof, is the respondent.

There are facts in this case admitted on both sides, or so clearly proven as to leave no rosonable doubt as to their verity, a statement of which will simplify and shorten its examination:

On the morning of Tuesday, July the 9th last past, at about 1 o’clock, tlie brig Kremlin, then on a Voyage from Cienfuegos to Boston with a cargo of sugar on board, was run into and sunk by the said Golden Grove; tho place of collision being about 30 miles S. by J a degree E. from the island of Hantucket. The Kremlin was sailing H. E. by E. She was a hermaphrodite brig of about-tons burden, and was moving at the rate of six and a half knots an hour. Her length was about 117 feet; depth, 15 feet; and beam, 30 feet. She was sailing wifcli a free breeze aft, about one and a half points on the starboard quarter. The night was not dark, neither was it perfectly clear. The horizon was smoky and hazy, though not so cloudy as to prevent stars well above the horizon from being seen. There was no galo—only the ordinary breeze of a summer night on the waters.

The British steamship Golden Grove was on her voyage from Cardiff to the Delaware breakwater for orders. Her course was W. J- S., and she was sailing at the rate of eight and a half knots per hour. At the time of the discovery of the steamer by the Kremlin tho former bore about two and a half points on the starboard bow of tho latter. The Kremlin did not change her course in the least degree until she was struck by the steamer. Tlie Golden Grove had hut one watch on deck for some time before the collision took place. On the first discovery and report by the watch of tho steamer of the bright light or flash-light on tlie Kremlin, the helm of the Golden Grove “ was at once put hard arport,” and from that time to tlie timo of the collision she kept her lielxn hard a-port, and in that time changed about five points of the compass. Ho attempt was made until some time after this maneuver to arrest the speed of the steamer; not, indeed, until within some 200 feet of each other, when the attempt which was then made proved utterly inefficacious. Immediately on the discovery of the approach of the steamer the captain of the Kremlin had a torch lighted on the starboard side of his vessel, on which side the steamer was approaching. It was relit twice after it had been first extinguished. It was such an one as was commonly used by sailing vessels on the approach of steamers in the night-time. The Kremlin had no other bright light on board. The red light on the steamer was seen from the Kremlin distinctly before the toreh-light was lit.

While it is true that it is the duty of the steam-vessel to avoid the sailing vessel, it is no less the duty of the latter to afford the steamer all the means and signals the law, custom, and common prudence prescribe to enable her to make this avoidance; and if in any respect [676]*676she fails therein and thereby produces the disaster, she must either bear the whole loss, or her share thereof, as her fault was the sole or partial cause of the collision.

The libelants say that the Kremlin in all respects obeyed the requirements of the law and usage as regards the conduct and management of sailing vessels, particularly those provisions concerning the exhibition of signals required by law, and that the collision was the result of carelessness, recklessness, ignorance, and the violation of the simplest rules for the preservation of safety on the part of the watch and officers of the steamer. The claimant on the other hand contends that the collision was not the result of any fault on the part of the officers, or of any of the crew of the steamer, but was produced by a series of improper acts and maneuvers on the part of the Kremlin—First, (as stated in the printed argument of the claimant, page 22,) by placing her' lights so that they did not cover ten points; second, by flashing three consecutive lights in such a way as to obscure those lights and make them useless; and, third, by failing to do, when the catastrophe was imminent, the only thing which could have been done to prevent the accident, or at least to attenuate its consequences.

It must be evident that this is a case in which the collision was not the result of any accident in the legal sense of the word. Signals were shown and seen. There was ample time in case of doubt, as will be fully shown hereafter, to have arrested the speed of the steamer before an accident was possible. There was nothing in the character of the night as to darkness or storm or dangerous coast to interfere with the full exhibition of signals, their prompt discovery if properly exhibited, and their intelligent interpretation by every man fit to be on the lookout or to navigate a steam-ship. This collision was therefore not the result of accident, but of fault somewhere, either wholly by the steamer or wholly by the brig, or jointly by both. In the investigation of this question of fault I shall take up the subject in the order in which it has been considered by the claimant’s counsel :

1. Had the brig proper side lights, and were they properly placed; that is, placed so in the vessel as that no object intervened so as to obstruct the green light on the brig from the lookout on the steamer ? It is not contended that the lights, green and red, as required by the rules for preventing collisions on the water, (enacted by the congress of the United States and to be found re-enacted in the late revised edition of the Laws of the United States, § 4233, p. 815, [677]*677and in the articles and regulations now in force under orders in council in Great Britain for preventing collisions at sea, to be found in Holt’s Rule of the Road, articles 3 and 5, and pages 8 and 9,) were' not of the precise kind required by law, as to form, size, quality, and construction of the lantern and fenders. The character of the lights and lanterns and fenders was so abundantly proven by witnesses who spoke to that point, and by the production of a lantern as Exhibit D, which was proven to be of the proper kind, and exactly like those on hoard of the Kremlin, that it must be assumed as an undeniable fact that the Kremlin had on board the night of the collision, such lights, red and green, and their proper screens or fenders. In this connection it may be stated that it was proven that the lights were larger than those usually used on brigs of the size of the Kremlin, and were of the same size as those used by the steamer.

2.

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The Atlas
2 F. Cas. 183 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-golden-grove-ded-1882.