The Kingston

173 F. 992, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 172
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedAugust 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 F. 992 (The Kingston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.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 Kingston, 173 F. 992, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 172 (W.D.N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

The Canadian passenger steamer Kingston, 300 feet over all, bound from Kingston, Ontario, to the port of Charlotte, N. Y., came in collision with the steamer Titania, 106 feet long, with passengers on board, on August 11, 1908, at about 10:30 o’clock p. m., between the piers at the entrance to the Genesee river, near Charlotte. The starboard side of the Titania was crushed, and, rapidly filling with water, she sank. She had been engaged in making two or three trips daily during the summer season from Sea Breeze, to Charlotte, N. Y. The Kingston was proceeding up the river to her landing. It was a clear, moonlight night, and each vessel was seen by the other, when out in the open lake, approaching the entrance to the river on convergent courses. Each vessel knew the destination and proper and usual course of the other. The east pier light and west pier light, which projected about 500 feet farther out into the lake than the former, could be plainly seen by persons on the decks of the vessels. There was careless seamanship on the part of one or both of the steamers. Neither signaled the other.

The libelants claim, and testimony has been given in support thereof, that when the Titania was about 1,000 feet distant from the east pier, and heading so that she would pass outside of the light on the west pier, she turned into the channel, which was not less than 500 feet wide, and straightened in her course parallel with the piers. Her master testified that at this time the Kingston was 100 or 150 feet astern, overtaking him, at the rate of 16 miles per hour, a rate of speed twice that of the Titania; that without blowing any signal, or giving any warning of her movements, she overtook the Titania, passed ahead, and, while passing*, her suction or swells deflected the course of the Titania, forcing her how laterally into the paddle box of the Kingston, with the result that, after drifting a short distance, she rapidly filled with water, and without loss of life sank to the bottom of the river. It is uncontroverted that she sank about 167 feet south of the east pier light and .115 feet to the westward of the east pier, which is located 105 feet east of the middle of the river.

The position of the respondent, briefly stated, is that the collision occurred before the Titania had straightened in the channel; that she was not moving in a straight course, parallel with the piers or with the Kingston, but, on the contrary, that she came in contact with the paddle box of the Kingston, which was the ahead steamer, on an oblique or diagonal course. It is also claimed that the Titania, by reason of her greater speed just prior to the collision, and her proximity to. the east pier when making the necessary detour into the channel, overtook the Kingston, which had then checked her speed, and then negligently sheered four points out of her course to westward and into the Kingston. It is shown that immediately after the impact the Kingston stopped her engines, whistled to the lifeboats, and then backed to stop her headway.

The libelants specifically charge that the collision was occasioned by the sole fault of the Kingston, first, for attempting, to overtake the [994]*994Titania in a harbor of less than 500. feet without-first signaling for permission to do so; second, for steering her course so close to the Titania; and, third, for navigating up the channel at an excessive rate of speech' The Kingston alleges that the collision was occasioned by the primary fault of the Titania, in that, first, her navigators had no lookout; second, that she proceeded at ajiigh and dangerous rate of speed; third, in not checking, when rounding the east pier; fourth, in not straightening up and keeping out of the way of the Kingston. There is testimony tending to show that each vessel had been overtaken by the other.

The libelants invoke rule 25 of the White law, approved February 8, 1895 '(Act Feb. 8, 1895, c. 64, 28 Stat. 649 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p! 2891]), which prohibits a steam vessel passing another going in the same direction in rivers less than 50.0 feet wide, unless the overtaken vessel has signified her willingness to such a movement, or unless she is disabled. There is much conflict in the testimony as to whether the Titania entered the channel between the pier's before the Kingston. It is insisted that she did enter the channel first, and had straightened in her course. ' If .this claim has been established by the libelants, it follows that-the Kingston clearly and flagrantly violated the statutory rule just mentioned.

. On the other hand, the respondent alleges that, as the vessels were approaching the entrance to the river on convergent courses, rules 18, 20, and 21 of the White law govern the disposition of this controversy. The eighteenth rule provides that, when two vessels are crossing, so as to involve risk of collision, the vessel which has the other on her starboard side shall keep out of the way of the other; while rule 20 requires the vessel on the starboard side to keep her course and speed, and the twenty-first rule provides as follows:

. “Every steam vessel, which Is. directed by these rules tq keep out of the way of another vessel, shall on approaching her, if necessary, slacken her speed or stop or reverse.”

If these statutory provisions apply to the facts under inquiry, it is manifest that the Titania violated them. At the oral argument both sides practically claimed that the starboard hand rule did not apply, inasmuch as each vessel knew the destination of the other, and that their courses were not crossing. In the brief of respondent, however, filed after the oral argument, it is contended that, as the courses of the steamers were convergent, the Kingston became the privileged vessel, and the Titania was obliged to navigate in obedience to the eighteenth rule. After carefully considering- the evidence in relation to the movements of the vessels and their position at the time of collision, I conclude that the contention of the Kingston in this respect must be sustained. It makes no difference that each vessel presumably or actually knew the destination and course of the other and that neither vessel would cross the other’s bow. The Kingston was coming from the north, and heading riearl)’straigKt for the channel, and she was perceived by the master of the Titania when the latter vessel was 1,000 feet to the eastward. The Titania was making for the channel from the east, steering on a N. W. y¿ N. course. After making the turns, she steered in a southwesterly direction. [995]*995Irrespective of whether such detour was made at the point claimed hy the libelants, or much closer to the east pier, as is contended hy the Kingston, I think the courses of the steamers to the entrance of the river were slanting or oblique when they became factors in each other's navigation, and therefore that they approached each other on crossing courses. The Titania, being the burdened vessel, wa4 obliged to keep out of the way of the Kingston, which was approaching the river from the north on her right side. The John McCullough, 145 Fed. 501, 76 C. C. A. 261; The Deveaux Powell and the Lackawanna, 165 Fed. 635, 92 C. C. A. 54.

The weight of the evidence establishes that the Titania was not in the channel ahead of the Kingston, and that rule 25, regulating the manner of passing a vessel in a channel less than 500 feet wide, did not apply. On the other hand, the testimony of the Kingston preponder atingly shows that the Titania turned into the channel much closer to the east pier than 500 feet.

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173 F. 992, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-kingston-nywd-1909.