The Ottawa

70 U.S. 268, 18 L. Ed. 165, 3 Wall. 268, 1865 U.S. LEXIS 709
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 70 U.S. 268 (The Ottawa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Ottawa, 70 U.S. 268, 18 L. Ed. 165, 3 Wall. 268, 1865 U.S. LEXIS 709 (1866).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Amended libel alleged that the appellee was the owner of the schooner Caledonia; that on the sixteenth day oí September, 1860, she was engaged in prosecuting a voyage *270 from Chicago to Buffalo, having on board a cargo of six thousand bushels of wheat, belonging to her owner; that, at eight o’clock in the evening of that day, when she was navigating in Lake Huron, eight miles northwesterly from Thunder Bay Light, she encountered the propeller Ottawa, bound up the lake, and that the propeller was so negligently and carelessly managed and navigated that a collision occurred between the two vessels, whereby the schooner, with her cargo on board, was sunk in the lake and lost.

Appellant, in his amended answer, admitted the collision and loss, but denied that the propeller was in fault, and averred as a distinct ground of defence that the collision occurred entirely through the incompetency of those in charge of the schooner, and in consequence of their carelessness and mismanagement.

Decree in the District Court was in favor of the libellant, and the same was affirmed on appeal in the Circuit Court; whereupon the owner and claimant of the propeller appealed to this court.

I. Most of the material inquiries of fact presented for decision are, as usual in this class of cases, involved in perplexing uncertainty on account of the conflicting nature of the testimony. Superádded to that difficulty, which experience shows is one generally tó be expected in controversies of this character, the present investigation is greatly complicated and embarrassed by the unreasonable length of the examinations and cross-examinations of the witnesses, as exhibited in the record. Undoubtedly a party calling a witness, may, if he sees fit, examine the witness by specific interrogatories, instead of relying .upon the general statements of witness, as made responsive to the oath under which he testifies; and it is equally clear that the opposite party may in all cases .cross-examine the witness in respect to all the material matters disclosed in the examination in chief, but it is past belief that everything valuable involved in the right of cross-examination may not be secured without propounding, in a collision case, four or five hundred questions to a single witness.

*271 Cross-examination is the right of the party against whom the witness is called, and the right is a valuable one as a means of separating hearsay from knowledge, error from truth, opinion from fact, and inference from recollection, and as. a means of ascertaining the order of the events as narrated by the witness in his examination in chief, and the time and place when and where they occurred, and the attending circumstances, and of testing the intelligence, memory, impartiality, truthfulness, and integrity of the witness; but a few questions, well directed to those several objects, are in general amply sufficient to effect all that can well be accomplished by the fullest enjoyment of that admitted right.

II. Embarrassed, however, as the investigation is by the complications and difficulties suggested^ still there are some facts and circumstances having an important bearing upon the principal questions involved in the pleadings, which may be regarded as conceded, or as so fully proved that they are not properly the subjects of controversy in the case.

Seaworthiness of the schooner is not denied, and it is fully proved that she was well manned and equipped, and that .the master, at the time of the collision, was in charge of her deck. Proofs are also entirely satisfactory that she had an able seaman at the wheel, and a competent lookout, properly stationed, forward of the windlass, having no other duty to perform, and at a place where there was nothing to obstruct his view.

Just before the collision the master was standing near the helmsman, but, when notified by the lookout that- he discovered a light, he went immediately forward, in order to determine what, if anything, was necessary to be done.

Prior to six o’clock the schooner had been sailing on a course southeast by south, but, being well out in the lake, the master, as he states, changed her course at that hour half a point to the southward, and he adds that she had been sailing upon that course about two hours.

Evidence is full to the point that the schooner showed a proper light, and the master testifies in substance and effect that she held her course until the collision was inevitable. *272 Careful examination has been given to the evidence on this last point, and it is not perceived that there is any good reason to doubt the truth of the statement.

Allegation of the libel, as to the time and place of the collision, is correct.

Doubt cannot be entertained but that the propeller was a seaworthy vessel, and it is satisfactorily shown that she was well manned and equipped.

Appellee insists that she was responsible for the consequences of the collision, because she was in fault in three particulars:

1. He insists that she had no proper lookout, as required by the decisions of this court.

2. That she did not show the signal lights, as required by law.

3. That she did not comply with rule of navigation, which requires that where a steamer and a sail vessel are approaching each other from opposite directions, or on intersecting lines, the sail vessel shall hold her course and the steamer shall keep out of the way.

1. Argument for the appellee assumes that there was no one on the deck of the propeller, except the man at the wheel; but the appellant insists that the master, also, was on deck, and contends that the master, under the circumstances of this case, was a competent lookout within the meaning of the decisions of this court. Strong doubts are entertained whether he was on deck at all after the vessels came into such proximity as required precautions, until the moment before the collision occurred; but in the view taken of the case, it is unnecessary to decide the point, as it is clear that if he was on deck, as is supposed by the appellant, still he was not a proper lookout within the requirement of the rules of navigation, as expounded by the decisions of this court.

Two objections are made to the master, as lookout, even admitting that he was on deck, and they are both well taken. Admission of the appellant is, that the master was the officer of the deck, and that he had charge of navigating *273 the vessel, and the proofs are satisfactory that if he was on deck at all at that time, he was in the wheel-house with the man at the wheel. Steamers are required to have constant and vigilant lookouts stationed in proper places on the vessel, and charged with the duty for which lookouts are required, and they must be actually employed in the performance of the duty to which they are assigned. They must be persons of suitable experience, properly stationed on the vessel, and actually and vigilantly employed in the performance of that duty. *

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Bluebook (online)
70 U.S. 268, 18 L. Ed. 165, 3 Wall. 268, 1865 U.S. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ottawa-scotus-1866.