The Klatawa
This text of 266 F. 120 (The Klatawa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
On October 26, 1919, the Diamond K and the launch Klatawa collided in the narrow channel leading from Lake Union to Union Bay. The libelant, as owner, charges the Klata-wa with negligence and seeks damages. The owner of the Klatawa, by cross-libel, charges negligence and prays damages.
The Diamond K is a one-man boat, and had no lookout. The Klat-awa is a larger boat, and had a lookout. The water in which the vessels collided is a narrow channel, and from the University grounds, from which point the libelant’s vessel was approaching, has considerable curvature. The channel is of sufficient width for vessels to freely pass, by each keeping in the fairway. In the channel on the starboard of the Diamond K was a pontoon. The testimony does not [121]*121disclose the extent or exact location. The Diamond K, on leaving the University grounds, sounded one blast, and took a course at full speed, which is about 6% miles per hour. Libelant’s vessel was going in a westerly direction. At the entrance of the channel, on the south side, are some piles standing in the water the remains of an approach to a bridge, which had extended across the channel, but which is now removed. (See diagram appended).
The Klatawa, approaching the channel, “hugged” the south shore, and entered the channel near the piling of the old bridge, at a speed of about 4 or 4% miles per hour. Before entering the channel, the Klatawa blew one blast, ported her helm, rounded the curve and the piles at the end of the old bridge approach, and while in this maneuver saw the' Diamond K approaching about two points to starboard. She completed the maneuver, and the vessels were nearly end on, and about 70 feet apart. The Klatawa gave one blast and reversed. The Diamond K starboarded her helm, gave one blast, reversed, and ported her helm, and the vessels collided. The master of the Diamond K testifies that he was “going down possibly mid-channel.” I am, however, satisfied that he was on his port side of the channel. The cross on the diagram, supra, marks about the point of collision.
A narrow channel is defined as a body of water navigated up and down in opposite directions, and does not include harbor waters, with piers on each side, where the necessities of commerce require navigation in every conceivable direction. The No. 4, 161 Fed. 847, 88 C. C. A. 665; The Rules of the Road at Sea (La Boyteaux) p. 166. Inland rule 25, international rule 25, and pilot rule 10, each provide:
“That in narrow channels every steam vessel shall, when It is safe and practicable, keep to the side of the fairway or midchannol which lies to the starboard side of such vessel.”
The libelant strenuously insists that the Klatawa was the burdened vessel, and attempted to cross the bow of the Diamond K, whereas she was compelled to keep out of the way, and cites article 19, which provides:'
“When two steam 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.”
I think both vessels are at fault, and the damages should be divided. Each party has grossly overestimated his damage. I think $2,250 to libelant and $250 to respondent will compensate each. The libelant is accordingly awarded a decree for $1,000. The sinking of the Diamond K, on removal from her moorings after the collision, was not the fault of the respondent, and no award is made for expense in raising her. Neither party to recover costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
266 F. 120, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-klatawa-wawd-1920.