The Munrio

11 F.2d 900, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1053, 1926 A.M.C. 639
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
DocketNos. 18031, 18082
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 900 (The Munrio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Munrio, 11 F.2d 900, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1053, 1926 A.M.C. 639 (N.D. Cal. 1926).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, District Judge.

These are two libels, brought to recover, for damage which resulted from the collision of two vessels near Cape Mendocino on October 14, 1923.

The steamship Munrio, the more severely injured of the two, was on her way southward from Coos Bay, holding a course 2 degrees eastward of due south. At 7:34 a. m. she was proceeding in dense fog. At that time she stopped to take a sounding, and after doing so went ahead slowly until 7:46, when the fog signal of an approaching vessel was heard, apparently dead ahead and some distance off. According to the testimony of several witnesses, her engines immediately were stopped.

About three minutes later the whistle of a third vessel became audible, apparently several points off the port bow. The Munrio thereupon went ahead again at a slow rate of speed, at the same time changing her course about two points to starboard. At 8:01, in response to dangerously nearing fog whistles, she was swung four points further in that direction. A minute later the Tejan loomed -up, 300 feet away, two points forward of the port beam, and heading for the bridge. The Munrio’s engines were put full [902]*902speed' ahead and her wheel hard aport; hut before the effect of- this maneuver could be felt she was struck amidships and nearly sunk.

The Tejón is an oil tanker, 430 feet long, and at the time of the accident was heavily laden with a cargo of oil in bulk. At 7:45 a. m. she was on a true course of 358 degrees, exactly parallel to that of the Munrio, when the latter vessel’s whistle was heard on her starboard bow. Although navigating in thick fog, she continued to run, as she had been running for some time, at full speed. At 7:50 her speed was reduced to half, and at 7:56 to slow; but it was not until 8:02, when the Munrio was sighted, with her entire port side in view, that her engines were stopped. At 8:03 she went full speed astern, but not in time to avert collision, which had become inevitable.

Each vessel denounces the other as having been entirely at fault. Article 16 of the International Rules of the Road (Comp. St. § 7S54) provides that “every vessel shall, in a fog, * * * go at a moderate speed, having careful regard to the existing circumstances and conditions”; also that “a steam vessel hearing, apparently forward of her beam, the fog signal of a vessel the position of which is not ascertained shall, * * * stop her engines, and then navigate with caution until danger of collision is over.”

That the Tejón was guilty of a double violation of this rule is conclusively established by the testimony of her own witnesses. Prom 5:52 until the vessels met, she was continuously in dense fog. Paragraph 1 of the rule quoted, as interpreted by the courts,, required her, two hours in advanee of the accident, so to reduce her speed as to make it possible for her to stop in time to avoid collision with any properly approaching vessel, upon coming in sight of it. The Conner (D. C.) 300 F. 827, 830, and cases cited; The Belgian King (C. C. A. 9) 125 P. 869, 876, 60 C. C. A. 451. She was, in the language of the case last cited, “bound to observe unusual caution, and to maintain only such a rate of speed as would enable her to come to a standstill by reversing her engines at full speed before she could collide with a vessel which she could see through the fog.” Instead of doing so, from 7:11 until 5 minutes after hearing the first whistle of the Munrio, she ran at full speed of at least 9 miles per hour, dropping down for the next 6 minutes to half speed, which of itself was clearly excessive.

In the Belgian King, supra, the vessel of that name had run. through fog for 15 minutes at 8% knots per hour before hearing the whistle of an approaching vessel forward of her beam. The engines immediately were put at slow, and 5 minutes later were stopped and reversed. A collision occurred 2 minutes afterwards. It was -held, as I think it must be held here, that, had the offending vessel properly reduced speed when fog was encountered, she would have been able to avoid the accident.

In the present ease all hands are agreed that, when struck, the Munrio lay almost squarely across the Tejon’s bows. Her progress through the water in the direction from which that vessel was coming was negligible. It therefore is apparent that the momentum gained by the Tejón during 39 minutes of unjustifiable full speed, aided by 12 minutes of slower steaming, was too great to be checked within the limited distance of visibility. This of itself is sufficient demonstration of negligence. The Manchioneal (C. C. A. 2) 243 F. 801, 805, 156 C. C. A. 313.

But the Tejon’s inexcusable failure to stop her engines on hearing the Munrio’s first fog signal was an even more obvious fault. The second paragraph of rule 16 imposed an absolute duty upon her to do so, violation of which may not be ignored (The Beaver [C. C. A. 9] 219 F. 134, 137, 135 C. C. A. 32; Lie v. San Francisco & Portland Steamship Co., 37 S. Ct. 270, 243 U. S. 291, 296, 61 L. Ed. 726), and with which during a space of 17 minutes admittedly no attempt whatever was made to comply. Hence in two important particulars she was guilty of highly culpable negligence.

The remaining question is: Was the Munrio, under the circumstances of her position, at fault in- changing her course? Her witnesses all claim that, when they first heard the Tejon’s whistle, it seemed to be coming from dead ahead. But inasmuch as at that time the courses of the vessels were exactly parallel, had this been true, any substantial change by either would have prevented their coming together. The only conclusion to be drawn from subsequent events is that at 7:46 the Munrio was about half a mile eastward of the Tejon’s path of navigation, and that her changes of course, instead of bringing that vessel abeam, had an opposite result.

It is urged that these changes of course were made without regard to their probable effect, that they proximately contributed to the accident, and that, had either of them been omitted, the vessels would have passed in safety. More specifically, the charge is that the Munrio’s action carried her obliquely across the lane of north-bound traffic; that [903]*903she speculated on the position of fog whistles, the position of which she had not ascertained, and in attempting to avoid them placed herself almost at right angles to the usual path of navigation, thus exposing herself to injury. The second paragraph of article 16 is invoked, and it is vigorously asserted that, after her engines had been stopped, the Munrio did not “navigate with caution until danger of collision is over.”

If the record contained even slight palliation of the Tejon’s own disregard for this rule, her argument might seem to come with a better grace. “But the offending vessel always accuses. What was done by the unoffending vessel in the high peril which the offending vessel’s wrongdoing had brought shows the reverse of beneficial action. If the injured vessel moved, then she should not; if she remained at rest, she should not; if she went forward, she should have gone astern; if she reversed, it was the height of unskillfulness; and so the delinquent seeks to escape, in whole or in part, from the results of his own wrongdoing.” The Ponce (D. C.) 116 F. 55, 56.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sun Oil Co. v. Standard Vacuum Transp. Co.
8 F. Supp. 512 (E.D. New York, 1934)
Mexican Petroleum Corp. v. Doane Towboat Co.
55 F.2d 32 (First Circuit, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 F.2d 900, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1053, 1926 A.M.C. 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-munrio-cand-1926.