The International

143 F. 468, 74 C.C.A. 602, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1906
DocketNo. 47
StatusPublished

This text of 143 F. 468 (The International) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The International, 143 F. 468, 74 C.C.A. 602, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758 (3d Cir. 1906).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the decree of the-United States District Court for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania, in the cases named in the caption. 125 Fed. 419.

Benjamin D. Welch, as master of the yacht “Venture,” filed his-libel in the said district court, against the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, as owner of the steam tug, “International,” in-a cause civil and maritime, to recover damages .resulting from a collision between the said yacht and certain barges, towed by the tug, “International,” on the Delaware river, on the night of July 14r 1900.

■ An answer was filed by the respondent, and also a -petition for limitation of liability under the act of Congress, in that behalf, praying for an appraisement, and “that all claims by any persons whomsoever, for loss, damage or injury to persons or property caused by the said collision, shall be heard and determined in this court, and apportioned according to law.” Petitions, as stated, were accordingly filed, for the purpose of recovering damages aforesaid. The learned district judge found both parties at fault, with the result that the damages were divided and a commissioner appointed to make inquiry and hear testimony as to what persons had suffered damage by reason of said collision, and the amount thereof. Upon the report of such commissioner, a final decree was entered by the court below, from which the present appeal has been taken. A careful reading of the testimony convinces us that the court below was right in the disposition made of this case, and that the opinion filed fully supports the conclusion arrived at by the learned judge. We therefore adopt the same as the opinion of this court, and quote it, as follows:

McPHERSON, District Judge. “By one of these libels, the sloop yacht ‘Venture’ seeks to recover damages for a collision by which she was sunk, and became a total loss. The other proceeding was taken by the Railway Company, In order to limit its liability under the Act of Congress. I. find! the facts to be as follows:
“In the afternoon of July 14, 1900, the sloop yacht ‘Venture,’ a small pleasure craft, 42 feet long and 13 feet beam, started from Camden with a party of eighteen persons on board, both men and women, for a sail upon the Delaware river. They proceeded down the river, aided by the ebb tide, to a point not" far below Lincoln Park, landing at the park about seven o’clock, because-of the failure of the wind, with the purpose of waiting until a breeze should: spring up, and also until the tide should turn. They remained at the park: until about half past eleven o’clock, and then, as the tide was at the flood and a light breeze from the southwest was blowing, they started to return. The yacht was of light draft, drawing no more than 2 or 3 feet of water,- and accordingly her master kept along the eastern shore of the river; in' order to be out of the way of larger vessels proceeding up or down1 the-river in the channel. Shortly after one o’clock the yacht reached League-Island, where the river bends to the eastward and then resumes its northerly course, forming the Horseshoe Bend. Here they crossed the river to-the western shore, and proceeded slowly along that shore as far as the upper-end of the Ironside bar or shoal. At this point, the set of the tide, by-reason of the bend, is toward the eastern or New Jersey shore; and here the-very light breeze that had been helping them in some degree, left them entirely and the yacht merely drifted with the tide. Indeed, it had done little-else than drift during their progress up the river, for the breeze had been barely sufficient to give the boat steerage way. The crew consisted of two-[470]*470men, the captain and a mate. Both were in the stern of the boat, aft of the sail, which was swung over the starboard quarter. The captain was at the wheel, in such a position that he could not see up the river except by stooping and looking under the boom; and the mate was seated on the rail near the captain, in a little better situation, perhaps, to see approaching objects, but certainly not in the right place for a lookout under the circumstances. The night was clear and moonlight, and there was no difficulty in seeing lights of approaching vessels a long distance away. As the yacht drifted toward the center of the channel, the captain and the mate saw the lights of the tug ‘International,’ coming down the river with a tow. The tug is a powerful ocean-going vessel, 130 feet long, 26 feet beam, drawing 116 feet, and of 400 tons registered tonnage. The tow consisted of three large and heavy barges, loaded with coal, lashed together abreast, and attached by a bridle to a wire hawser about 60 fathoms long. The barges from starboard to port, were the ‘Hercules,’ 200 feet long and 27 feet beam, drawing 13% feet of water and of 756 tons registered tonnage; the ‘Girard,’ 1S6 feet long, 35 feet beam, drawing 16 feet and of 841 tons registered tonnage; and the ‘Glendower,’ 193 feet long, 34 feet beam, 16 feet draught, 855 tons registered tonnage. When the tug was seen by the yacht, she was probably half a mile away, and each was showing her green light to the other. The yacht was headed somewhat toward tiie Pennsylvania shore, with her boom out to starboard and her sail set in order to catch an occasional puff from the south or west, but she was not under control, for the wind was not strong enough, or constant enough, to give her steerage way, and she was drifting with the tide toward the center of the channel and the track of other vessels. No effort was made on the part of the yacht to change this condition of affairs until the two boats had come very near to each other. There is some dispute concerning the distance that separated the tug and the yacht when they passed each other, but it makes little difference whether the distance was 30 feet, as one witness says, or 100 feet, as it seemed to another witness. In either event, the situation was plainly perilous, and the captain of the yacht, seeing that a collision was likely to occur with the tow, sent the mate forward with an oar to attempt to move the yacht to port, and an ineffectual effort in that direction was made. It was of no avail, however, and in a few moments the yacht came into collision with the barges and was sunk.
“From the point of view of the tug, the facts are these: The tug with its tow was coming down the river in the center of the channel, and as she approached the coal piers at Greenwich Point she saw down the river the red light of a tug having a schooner in tow, and the green light of the yacht. At this time, the ‘International’ and the yacht were at least a half mile distant from each other, the other tug being probably not much more than a quarter of a mile away. The situation was evidently dangerous. On the eastern side of the river was Greenwich Point anchorage, which was occupied that night by a number of vessels at anchor, and the available surface of the channel was thus reduced to a width of' no more than 750 feet. Moreover, the yacht was then nearly in line with the tug, for the master of the tug. testified that, when he first saw the yacht, after he had straightened down on a new course, she was ‘just a little mite on the starboard bow.’ The tug with the schooner in tow blew one whistle, indicating that she would pass to port, and this signal was returned by the ‘International.’ At this time, three possible courses were open to the ‘International.’ She could attempt to pass to the westward of the ‘Venture,’ where perhaps there may have been somewhat more room, but as this course required the tug to

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Bluebook (online)
143 F. 468, 74 C.C.A. 602, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-international-ca3-1906.