The Margaret B. Roper

103 F. 886, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedAugust 2, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 F. 886 (The Margaret B. Roper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Margaret B. Roper, 103 F. 886, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182 (D.S.C. 1900).

Opinion

BRAWLEY, District Judge.

The case for the libelant is that, sailing closehauled on a course to the north, with the wind northwest by west, she was sunk by the claimant, heading south, and sailing free. The case for the claimant is that she was sailing closehauled on the starboard tack, on a course southwest by south, with the wind west by north. Whatever may be the truth, there was such “risk of collision” as brought into operation the sailing rules embodied in article lá of the international regulations, which are as follows:

“Art. 14. When two sailing vessels are approaching one another so as to-involve risk of collision, one of them shall keep out of the way of the other as follows, namely: (a) A ship which is running free shall keep out of the way of a ship which is close hauled, (b) A ship which is close hauled on the port tack shall keep out of the way of a ship which is close hauled on the [887]*887starboard tack, (c) When both are running free, with the wind on different sides, the ship which has the wind on the port side shall keep out of the way of the other, (d) When both are running free, with the wind on the same side, the ship which is to windward shall keep out of the way of the ship which is to leeward.”

The Fannie Brown, a schooner of 430 net registered tonnage, was heavily laden with phosphate rock, bound from Charleston to Baltimore, making four or five knots an hour. The Margaret B. Roper, a schooner of 393 net registered tonnage, partly laden with 100 tons of sulphur, bound from New York to Charleston, was making about seven knots an hour. There was a wholesale breeze of about; 14 miles an hour, and the collision occurred about 8 o’clock on the night of December 26th, at a point about 25 miles northeast of Cape Hatteras, the night being starlight. The Brown, with everything on board, sunk shortly after the collision, all hands getting aboard the Roper, which swung alongside. The mere fact that one vessel is sunk, and that the other survives a collision claimed to have occurred on crossing courses, is not of itself a circumstance which aids in the determination of the fault, for the vessel that arrives first at the point of intersection is generally the sufferer, and that is a matte-r of chance and of a few seconds. The burden of proof, therefore, rests upon the libelant here, but I do not give much weight to the contention of the claimant that the testimony of his witnesses is to be discredited because of their interest, each of them claiming some compensation for loss of personal goods. It would be a hard case if the same blow that caused the injury should at the same moment strike down the only testimony competent to prove it. An unvarying experience shows that the testimony of all seafaring men is affected by the supposed interest of the ship they sail on, and the truth as to any happening at sea is to be ascertained, if at all, not by weighing the number and bias of witnesses on one side against the number and bias of witnesses on the other side, or by attempting to reconcile testimony generally irreconcilable, but by taking certain conceded or well-proved facts, or facts established by disinterested witnesses, and from them deducing such conclusion as seems to accord best with the probabilities of the case. The fact not disputed in this case is that the Roper struck the Brown on the starboard side in her forerigging, cut her through, and knocked off the after-part of the forward house, the jib, fore staysail, and headgear forward of the foremast, and all the stay-sails remaining in good condition and uninjured after the collision. The forward house was about 12 feet long, the foremast passing through it about 2 feet from the forward end, and was about 6 or 7 feet from the rail. The fore staysail had a boom about 22 or 23 feet long, which swung within 5 feet of the rail. The master of the Brown being asked, “Did she strike you a glancing blow?” answered, “She struck a pretty solid blow.” The mate, being asked a like question, answered that he did not think it was a glancing blow. Cannon, the steward of the Brown, standing on the fore hatchway, on the starboard side, about 12 feet aft the foremast, and about a foot and.a half away from the after-end of the forward house, says that , a very few seconds before the collision he saw both “lights of the Roper, and [888]*888judged that she would come between the cat and the forerigging.” This witness has drawn a diagram, which is in evidence, marked “Exhibit F,” indicating what, in his view, was the line upon which the Roper approached the Brown. The angle of incidence therein is about 50 degrees. The lookout on the Brown says she was struck “in the forerigging.” After the collision the vessels swung round and lay alongside, bow and bow. The Roper was examined by the court during the hearing, and the testimony, confirmed by such personal inspection, shows that her stem was considerably bruised, and that there were bruises on the starboard side above the main deck, and indentations of probably a half inch from a point about 5 feet aft to about 12 feet aft the stem. . There were some bruises on the port side, and a hole where the wood showed some decay, and the testimony is that the lumber ports on both starboard and port sides had been broken in. As the Brown was heavily laden, she was probably about 5 feet lower than the Roper. It is therefore clearly established that the Roper struck the Brown at an angle more or less considerable. Cranmer, the master of the Roper, estimated it at about five points, which is about the angle given in Cannon’s diagram. Neither the master nor mate of the Brown testifies on this point. In the collision all the head sails of the Roper, her jib boom, and martingale went, and the testimony is that among the wreckage picked up was this martingale and a sheer pole claimed to be that of the Brown. This martingale and sheer pole were offered in evidence. The sheer pole was of iron of about an inch thickness, wrapped with tarred twine, and is of three links, each about 3-| feet in length. One of the links of the sheer pole produced is bent in the form of a loop, and this loop fits over the lower end of the martingale. In the crown of the loop the twine is broken and abraded, and the contention is that these abrasions were caused by the jumper chains w’hich run from the lower end of the martingale to the jib boom, which chains, the testimony shows, were broken. Inasmuch as the sheer pole on the Brown, as on all vessels, runs fore and aft, this loop bears silent but pregnant testimony to the fact that it must have been caused by some hard body of about the diameter of this martingale pressing against it at such an angle of incidence as to bend rather than glide from it. The genuineness of this sheer pole is questioned because some of the libelant’s witnesses, who were in a position to see, did not see it; but the man who fished it up with the other wreckage testifies positively to its being taken from the water; and Capt. Lamson, who saw it produced in court, and who had opportunity to do so, has not denied that it belonged to the Brown. The practical difficulty in the way of the fabrication of such a piece of testimony, the chances of exposure, and the serious consequences that would be likely to follow such attempts, with the intrinsic signs of genuineness in the thing itself, all compel the acceptance of this evidence. My conclusion upon this branch of the case, ■ in which there is little or no conflict of testimony, is that the Roper must have struck thé Brown at an angle of from 35 to 50 degrees.

Next will be considered the account of the collision as detailed by the chief witnesses for the libelant.

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Related

The Margaret B. Roper
111 F. 623 (Fourth Circuit, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
103 F. 886, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-margaret-b-roper-scd-1900.