The Negaunee

20 F. 918, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 14, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 20 F. 918 (The Negaunee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Negaunee, 20 F. 918, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117 (N.D. Ill. 1884).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

The libelant in this case, as owner of the schooner E. M. Portch, seeks to recover the damages sustained by his vessel by a collision with the schooner Negauneo. Tho collision occurred on the waters of Lake Michigan, nearly abreast of Ah ñapee, and 12 or 15 miles from the west shore of the lake, and between the hours of 7 and 8 o’clock in the morning of September 19,1880. Tho Negaunee is a large three-masted schooner, and was laden with over 1,100 tons of coal, bound from Buffalo to the port of Milwaukee. The Portch was also a large three-masted schooner, loaded with cedar ties and posts, and bound from Alpena to Chicago. The libel alleges that the collision was occasioned wholly by the fault and negligence of those in charge of the Negaunee, and the answer denies that there was any negligence on the part of the Negaunee.

The proof shows, and it is admitted, that at the time of the collision, and for several hours before, a thick wet fog had prevailed. Tile wind was about S. The course of the Negauneo was S. W. by S., and the course of the Portch was B. E. S. Tho Negauneo was carrying all her sails, and the Portch all her lower sails, hut not her gaff nor jib topsails, but she had been carrying all or part of her upper sails until just before the collision. The speed of each was between four and five miles au hour, as estimated by the judgment of their respective officers and crews. The two vessels had been in company, or in sight of each other, during tho day before, and from the fact that they had made the same distance during the night, I conclude that they had run at about the same rate of speed, although it is probable that tho « Negannee may have carried more sail, as her cargo was heavier than that of the Portch, and she was settled deeper into the water, and probably needed to carry more sails than the Portch to make the same speed.

I conclude from the proof, without now taking time to discuss it, that both vessels had competent lookouts, and that both were sounding their fog-horns at the regular intervals required by the sailing rules. The Negaunee, being on the port tack, was sounding two blasts of her horn in quick succession, at intervals of not more than two minutes, and the Portch, being on the starboard tack, was sounding one blast of her horn at intervals of not more than two minutes. The concurrent proof from witnesses on the decks of both vessels is [920]*920that neither heard the horn of the other, and that the vessels were not over 150 feet apart when they sighted each other, and I am satisfied that they sighted each other about the same instant. The witnesses also agree that when they sighted each other a collision was inevitable., At this time the Portch was pointing nearly to,the fore-rigging of the Negaunee, and the wheel of the Portch, by order of her captain, was put hard up, and the sheets of her after sails slacked off, by which maneuver it was intended to swing the bow of the Portch off with the wind, and, if possible, carry her astern of the Negaunee, while the Negaunee’s wheel was put hard down at about the same time, for the purpose of bringing her head up into the wind. The expedients resorted to on both vessels were unavailing, and the bow of the Portch strpck the Negaunee near the Negaunee’s mizzen rigging, tear? ing out her bowsprit and breaking in her bows, but doing comparatively little injury to the Negaunee. As already said, it is agreed by the officers and crew of both vessels that when each became aware of the proximity of the other a collision was inevitable, and the most that was expected from the maneuvers adopted was to mitigate the damage.

It is urged on the part of the Portch that it was a fault on the part of the master'of the Negaunee to put his wheel hard down and come up into the wind, as he thereby lost some of his headway and threw the stern of his vessel towards the Portch; while it is.contended on the part of the Negaunee that her captain did the right thing, and that the mas--ter of the Portch was at fault iff putting his wheel hard up; that if he had put his wheel hard down the Portch would have swung up into the wind, and the two vessels would have come together by the bows, where they are strongest, and would have glanced off from each other. Experienced practical navigators have testified on both sides, and seem about divided equally in opinion as to whether the maneuver attempted by the Portch or that attempted by the Negaunee was the best seamanship. There is, however, good authority in support of the actioh of the master of the Negaunee.

In the Hedge-Anchor, a treatise on navigation, used as a text-book at the United States naval academy, the following rule is stated:

Rule 404, (page 221.) “In eases of surprise and danger, from the accidental meeting of two ships on opposite tacks in the night, it too often happens that officers are more apt to give orders to the stranger than to take any measure of precaution themselves, such as hailing to put the helm up or down, and to clear them, when they may be as much in fault, and possess the same means of extricating themselves from the difficulty. In situations of this sort, it is much better that both parties should put their helms down rather than 'up; the ships will approach each other for a time, but will diminish in velocity, and afterwards separate. ”

I do not care to discuss the question of nautical" skill here raised, as I think there can be no doubt that the maneuvers resorted to on each vessel must be deemed to have been adopted in extremis, and the master of neither is to be charged with fault for what he did un[921]*921der the circumstances. One cannot say from the proof, with any degree of certainty, that a collision would have been averted, or the consequences any less serious, if different maneuvers had been made or attempted.

But it is urged that the Negau nee, being on the port tack, was, under the seventeenth rule of section 42;S3, Rev. St., required to keep out of the way of the Porteh; that the Porteh had the right of way and was to hold her course, and it was the Negauneo’s duty to give the way or turn out; and this rule would be aptly invoked if the proof showed that those in charge of the Negaunee had sufficient notice of the proximity of the Porteh to enable them to execute the proper movements to give the Porteh the way. The proof, however, shows, as I have already said, that at the time the Negaunee’s officers wore apprised of the presence of the Porteh, they were so near together and a collision so imminent that it was futile to attempt to keep out of the way; and it seems to me that, under the circumstances, rule 17 was inoperative, and rule 24 of the same section, which requires that “due regard must be had to all the dangers of navigation, ándito any special circumstances which may exist in any particular case rendering a departure from the general rules necessary in order to avoid .immediate danger,” became the guide of both parties; that is, that each party, under an unexpected impending peril, must do what he can promptly to avoid it.

I can see no reason for concluding, from the proof in the case, that the lookout of the Negaunee was negligent or incompetent. It is true, I think, if the testimony is to be believed, — and it is not incredible,— that these two vessels found themselves suddenly looming up out of this dense fog within 150 feet of each other, and without either having heard the fog-horn of the "other, although the horns on each may have been sounded at the proper intervals.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. 918, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-negaunee-ilnd-1884.