The Pacific

154 F. 943, 83 C.C.A. 515, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1907
DocketNo. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 154 F. 943 (The Pacific) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Pacific, 154 F. 943, 83 C.C.A. 515, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605 (3d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

LANNING, District Judge.

This is a collision case. Three vessels are concerned in it — the dredge Pacific, the tug S. A. McCauley, and the steamship Maiing. The collision resulted in damage to the [944]*944dredge amounting, with interest and costs, to the sum 'of $19,754.70. By the final decree of the District Court all three of the vessels were adjudged to have been in fault, and one-third of the damages was apportioned to each of them. The steamship abides by the decree, and has paid the one-third assessed against it. The tug and the dredge (with her insurers) have appealed, and by the' errors assigned have presented questions concerning the negligence and contributory negligence of the several vessels.

The collision occurred in the Delaware river, below Philadelphia, on the night of November 16, 1897. The night was dark, but clear. The dredge was anchored in the easterly side of the river, bow down. The tug was tied to the westerly side of the dredge, bow up, her stern projecting some feet below the dredge’s bow, and the dredge’s stern projecting some feet above the tug’s bow. The steamship, in passing down the river, struck the dredge and did the damage complained of. The dredge for some months had been engaged under employment of the United States government in dredging out the navigable channel of the river 90 feet on the westerly side and 175 feet on the easterly side of the line of the Edgemoor range lights. For some days previous to the collision the dredge had been working on the easterly side of this line. About 5 o’clock in the afternoon, just preceding the collision, she was. removed to a point about 350 feet easterly of the line of the range lights, and there anchored for the night. Her anchor lines, extending to the west, toward and across the dredged channel, were weighted and submerged. Those extending to the east, away from the dredged channel, were not submerged. The dredge’s lights indicated that she was at anchor.. Whether the lights of the tug indicated that she was moving or at anchor is disputed. The steamship, in passing down the river, having rounded the Edgemoor buoy, which was 1 to 1J4 miles above the dredge and tug, took a- course by which the dredge’s lights were kept slightly on the steamship’s starboard bow, so that, if she had not subsequently changed her course, she would have passed, or attempted to pass, on the easterly side of the dredge. The nearer she approached the dredge, therefore, the further was she departing from the line of the range lights, by which alone she should have steered her course. It is admitted by her counsel that she was on the wrong side of the river. We are satisfied, too, that, if she had not subsequently changed her course, she would have fouled the dredge’s port lines and incurred the risk of doing serious damage to the dredge. The evidence of the steamship’s pilot shows that he thought the dredge was on or nearly on the line of the range, lights, which were to his stern, and that, instead of guiding his course by those lights, he guided it by the lights of the dredge. The dredge had withdrawn from the ship channel for the express purpose of leaving the channel free and unobstructed during the night. It was the duty of the pilot of the steamship to keep to his starboard side of the channel. Instead of doing so, he not only passed over to his port side of the channel, but beyond it into the shallower water, where the dredge was anchored. He was in charge of a moving steamer which he had under full control. He was going down the river on an ebb tide running two or more miles an hour. While he says that after [945]*945rounding the Edgemoor buoy he reduced his speed, the master, who executed the pilot’s orders, declares that until within about five ship lengths from the dredge the steamship was going at full speed. That the pilot was grossly negligent is perfectly clear, and, as above stated, the liability of the steamship for at least one-third of the damages has been admitted and the amount paid.

The question now to be decided is whether either the dredge or the tug is chargeable with contributory negligence. In The Oregon, 158 U. S. 186, 197, 204, 15 Sup. Ct. 804, 809 (39 L. Ed. 943), the court said:

“Where one vessel clearly shown to have been guilty of a fault adequate In Itself to account for the collision seeks to impugn the management of the other vessel, there is a presumption in favor of the latter which can only be rebutted by clear proof of a contributing fault. This principle is peculiarly applicable to the case of a vessel at anchor, since there is not only a presumption in her favor by the fact of her being at anchor, but a presumption of fault on the part of the other vessel which shifts the burden of proof upon the latter.”

In that case the Clan Mackenzie was at anchor in the Columbia river outside of the usual track of steamships. Her lookout saw the Oregon bearing down on the Clan Mackenzie. The lookout hailed the Oregon, and continued to shout until just before the collision. Concerning the shouting, the court said:

“It was a case of action in extremis, and, while it is possible that a bell might have called the attention of the approaching steamer, it Is by no- means certain that it would have done so and, whether the lookout acted wisely or not, he evidently acted upon his best judgment, and the judgment of a competent sailor in extremis cannot be impugned. * * * As we have already observed, it is not sufficient for the Oregon to cast a doubt upon the management of the Clan Mackenzie. In view of the clearness of her own fault, it is not unreasonable to require that she should make the fault of the other equally clear.”

In The E. A. Packer (C. C.) 49 Fed. 92, 98, Judge Wallace said:

“I understand the rule to be well established that in every case where a vessel, by her own negligence, or the breach of a statutory rule, places another In great peril, the latter will not be held guilty of negligence because at the last moment she did something that contributed to the collision, or omitted to do something that might have avoided it. It has often been hold by the Supreme Court that a vessel which by her own fault causes a sudden peril to another cannot impute to the other as a fault a measure taken in extremis, although it was a wrong step, and but for it the collision would not have occurred, and that a mistake made in the agony of the collision is regarded as an error for which the vessel causing the peril is altogether responsible.”

Is the dredge chargeable with contributory negligence? The steamship contends that she was, first, because she did not sink her anchor lines extending to the eastward; second, because, it is alleged, she gave to the steamship an irregular and improper signal by the waving of a lantern; and, third, because, it is again alleged, she was improperly anchored in the fairway of the river. It is true that the dredge’s port breast line and port quarter line were not weighted, and that they were obstructions to any vessel that should attempt to pass near to the dredge on her port or easterly side; but, if it be assumed that there was a duty on the part of the dredge toward smaller craft to sink those [946]*946lines, as she did the lines on her starboard or westerly side, the question here presented is: Did she owe any such duty to this particular steamship ? It seems to us that the duty of the dredge to sink its port lines was a duty owing only to those vessels that might lawfully pass on the easterly side of the dredge.

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Bluebook (online)
154 F. 943, 83 C.C.A. 515, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pacific-ca3-1907.