The Nottingham

143 F. 942, 75 C.C.A. 14, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 1906
DocketNo. 585
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 F. 942 (The Nottingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Nottingham, 143 F. 942, 75 C.C.A. 14, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804 (1st Cir. 1906).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The schooner Devi Hart and barge No. 7, second in tow of the steam tug Nottingham, were in collision about 10 p. m. on April 20, 1904, north of Pollock Rip Lightship and near the bell buoy on the easterly side of Pollock Rip Slue. The schooner and her cargo of coal were a total loss. The night was cloudy, but otherwise clear; the wind moderate and northerly, if not due north. The tide at or near the bell buoy was running northeast, about two knots an hour. The schooner was on a south-southwest course, with her booms well off on her port side, going about six miles an hour through the water, and about four miles an hour over the ground. Her course brought her close to the bell buoy, near which her master says he intended to go in order to give the tow a chance to get by.

The evidence from the tug and barges as to their course is not consistent or satisfactory. The answer filed June 21, 1904, alleged that the Nottingham was proceeding according to law on the easterly side of the channel. Tingle, the master of the Nottingham, says that he was on the westerly side; that when rounding buoy No. 2, near the Pollock Rip Lightship, he passed about fifty feet from it; that he straightened the tow out) and when the Nottingham was abreast of the bell buoy he first made out the green light of the Hart, and that he then had Pollock Rip Shoal Lightship bearing north-northeast, and was steering north by compass. He had at that time taken no precaution for keeping out of the way of the schooner.

The tow was made up as follows: Nottingham, hawser more than 1,000 feet: Wilkesbarre, hawser 900 feet; barge No. 7, hawser 900 feet; barge No. 5—in all, more than 3,500 feet in length; the bow of barge No. 7 being about 2,000 feet from the stern of the tug.

The sunken wreck of the Hart is marked by a buoy, described in the local notice to mariners as “placed at the entrance of Pollock Rip Slue, Nantucket Sound, Mass., Pollock Rip Bell Buoy being about 300 yds. N. E.” The schooner lies somewhat to the east of the buoy.

Making due allowance for drift and other causes which might have carried the Hart from the place of collision, it seems highly probable that barge No. 7 was about 900 feet south of the bell buoy, and the Nottingham little, if any, more than 1,100 feet to the north of the bell buoy, when the collision occurred. The speed of the tug and tow, assisted by the tide, was about 6 miles an hour. The schooner passed both the tug and the Wilkesbarre, the first barge, by a safe clearance, though, according to the captain and wheelsman of the Wilkesbarre, the schooner’s course seemed to be converging upon that of the tow. This convergence, we think, does not indicate any change by the Hart from her south-southwest course. The exact location of barge No. 7 with reference to the Wilkesbarre and the line of tow at this time is a matter of doubt.

It is the contention of the claimant that the barges were all straight in line after the tug, that the tug was steering north by the compass, and that each of the barges was held up stiffly on a starboard wheel, and that the resultant course was north-northeast. Capt. Hanson, of barge No. 7, and Capt. Jones, of the Wilkesbarre, however, say that, [944]*944while on their course and straight in line with the tug, Pollock Rip Lightship bore nearly right ahead. This, testimony is more consistent with the drawing of the sails of the barges in a northerly wind than is the testimony of Capt. Tingle, of the tug. If both accounts can be reconciled, it is upon the view that the tow, from the time she passed the lower lightship, was heading on a north-northeast course, directly towards the Pollock Rip Shoals Lightship, and close to the bell buoy, which she intended to leave on her starboard side by a narrow margin, and that Capt. Tingle, of the Nottingham, upon discovering the green light of the Plart when abreast of the bell buoy, made an attempt to give her more room by bearing off two points to the north, thus bringing the northerly lightship two points on his starboard bow. This would account for the fact that the tug cleared the Hart by a larger margin than that between her and'the Wilkesbarre, as seems to be agreed, and would tend to show that, at the time of the collision, barge No. 7 was more to the east than either the tug or the first barge.

If, on the other hand, we should accept the view that the Nottingham’s compass course was north, and that the barges followed straight in line with the stern light of the tug, then the courses were converging, and barge No. 7 probably farther to the east than the tug, which had passed the point of intersection when she made the schooner’s green light.

But, whether the courses of the tow and schooner were nearly parallel, and both close to bell buoy, or slightly converging, we are of the opinion that the tug was at fault in running too near the easterly side of the channel and to the bell buoy. Considering the shoals to the eastward of the bell buoy, we think the tug gave the schooner but little chance to maneuver, and was at fault in .not making an earlier discovery of the schooner’s lights, and in not making an earlier attempt to perform her duty of keeping out of the schooner’s way.

We are further of the opinion that barge No. 7 was at fault, in that she kept no proper lookout, did not observe the schooner’s movements, and therefore made no attempt to change her wheel when a collision was imminent. While this probably would not have averted a collision, it seems a reasonable probability that the blow would have been lessened, and a possibility that the loss of the schooner might have been avoided.

The schooner came upon the hawser, broke it, and the bow of barge No. 7 struck the schooner’s port quarter, cutting deeply in, so that she immediately began to fill and sank within a few minutes.

The more difficult question is as to the alleged faults of the schooner in her maneuvers immediately preceding the collision. Though the libel alleges that the schooner held her course, it is conceded by those on board that she did not do so; and there are some discrepancies in the evidence from the Hart as to when her wheel was changed, and as to the reasons for the change.

The Hart, just prior to the collision with barge No. 7, struck the bell buoy near the mizzen rigging on the port side. The master of the Hart says no change of the wheel had been made previous to this time; that upon striking the buoy, his wheel was first rolled hard [945]*945up in order to throw the schooner’s stern to windward, so that the bell buoy would not sweep away the boat on the stern davits; that she fell off from a point to a point and a half to the eastward, or to port; that he then first saw the barge No. 7, without lights, coming in under his lee, possibly once and a half his vessel’s length away, heading about for the schooner’s main rigging; that he then ordered the wheel hard down, seeing that there was then no chance to keep off clear of the barge; that his vessel did not swing to starboard, and was heading about south half west when the collision occurred.

It is claimed by the Hart that the barge was without lights, and no lights were observed on the barge by witnesses on the Hart or upon the schooner McCann, which was following her on a similar course but slightly to the eastward.

upon the whole evidence as to the lights upon barge No.

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Bluebook (online)
143 F. 942, 75 C.C.A. 14, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-nottingham-ca1-1906.