The Pemaquid

255 F. 709, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 708
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedNovember 21, 1918
DocketNo. 436
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 255 F. 709 (The Pemaquid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Pemaquid, 255 F. 709, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 708 (D. Me. 1918).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

The libelant seeks to recover damages sustained by his steamer, J. T. Morse, in consequence of a collision with the steamer Pemaquid, which took place, in a thick fog, on September 8, 1915, at about 8 o’clock in the morning, inear Field Ledge Buoy No. 15, at the western entrance of Deer Island Thoroughfare.

The Pemaquid is a single screw steamer of a burden of 409 gross tons; she is 132.5 feet long, 28 feet beam, and capable of a speed of about 11 or 12 knots. At the time of the collision she was drawing about 9 feet. She was owned and operated by the Maine Central Railroad, and was engaged in. carrying passengers and freight between the ports of Sargentville and Rockland.-

[1] At about 7:48 o’clock on the morning of the 8th of September, 1915, the Pemaquid left her landing at Stonington with the intention of proceeding westward, out through, the western entrance "of Deer Island Thoroughfare, running by. schedule, on her regular passage, to make the train at Rockland. After leaving the Stonington wharf, she proceeded on her usual course, west, % south, to pass between the buoys on Allen’s Bar. She was then put on a course, west % south, for Field Ledge Buoy, which is about a mile añd a quarter from the Stonington wharf.

Capt. Wescott, master of the Pemaquid, testifies:

That, after they left Stonington at 7:48, they proceeded at full speed ahead; they made Allen’s Bar in four minutes; from there the run to Meld Ledge Buoy is three and three-quarter minutes; from Meld Ledge Buoy to Mark Island is about the same; they usually slow down at Allen’s Bar for forty seconds to get a departure; here they heard the three whistles of the Morse at Mark Island; he knew she was coming on through the Thoroughfare, and that the vessels would meet and pass at about Meld Ledge Buoy; after slowing down, he came ahead at full speed of ten and one-half or eleven knots; he continued at full speed for a minute and a half or two minutes, before he gave the order to slow; then he gave one bell, and that was possibly two and one-half- minutes before the collision, though he kept no record at the time; he was steering for Meld Ledge Buoy, and he should not consider it safe to go on his voyage without making it; he had never done so; he did not think he could have safely laid his course farther to starboard; if he had gone too far to starboard, he would not see the buoy in the fog; he thinks the channel is two hundred to three hundred feet wide; the buoy is a black, spar buoy, and sticks up out of the water probably twelve feet, and is eight inches in diameter; they have to navigate sixty to seventy feet from the buoy; he had heard the Morse’s whistle forward of the Peinaquid’s beam, and knew she was coming for the buoy, and that she would be well over on the starboard side of the channel; he was not in the habit of slowing his ship for the Morse to pass, and of -course he did not do it; he sighted the Morse very nearly ahead, and perhaps two hundred feet away; immediately upon the. Morse breaking out of the fog, he gave three- bells, and stepped back and told the quartermaster to put the wheel hard aport; he had just got it hard aport before the collision; he does not know at what speed the Pemaquid was proceed[711]*711ing at the time of the collision, but his best estimate is two or three or four knots.

Eaton, the lookout, testifies:

That ho went on walch at Stonington on the bow of the Pemaquid; he was the only man on the bow; the captain and quartermaster were in the pilot house; he reported the position of the Morse once, but made no report of the change in its bearing; he was not the regularly employed bow watchman; lie had been on steam vessels three days at the time; before lie left his home at Sargentville he had been a farmer, and had ru& a 21-foot private naphtha boat for summer people; at the time of the collision he had been on the Pemaquid three days; ho had been lookout once before on the Pemaquid, namely, the day before the injury; on that day he remained on duty from Brooklin to Stonington, or an hour and a half, and he was on duty possibly ten minutes the day of the collision; he had no other experience as a lookout on a steam vessel; up to the time he sighted the Morse, the Pemaquid’s engines had not been moving astern so far as he knew; the only thing that indicated any change was the change in the vibration, and the lessening of the wave at the Pemaquid’s bow. -

From other officers of the Pemaquid it appears that at the time of the collision the steamer seemed to be going about six or seven knots; that the engine was not stopped until they saw the Mjorse ahead a second or two before the steamers came together; that the course the Pemaquid was on took them over close to the buoy; that they were then on regular running time, and were pretty nearly over to the buoy when Captain Wescott gave the bell to slow down; that the bow lookout did not report the buoy; that it is uncertain whether the look out saw the Morse and reported her before any one in the pilot house saw her.

Article 16 of the Inland Rules (Act June 7, 1897, c. 4, 30 Stat. 99 [Comp. St. 1916, § 7889]) provides:

“Art. 16. Every vessel shall, in a fog, mist, failing snow, or heavy rain storms, go at a moderate speed, having careful regard to "the existing circumstances and conditions.
“A steam vessel, hearing, apiiarently forward of her beam, the fog sigua.1 of a vessel the position of which is not ascertained, shall, so far as the circumstances of the case admit, stop her engines, and then navigate with caution until danger of collision is over.”

Article 25 is as follows:

“Art. 25. In narrow channels, every steam vessel shall, when it is safe and practicable, keep to that side of the fair-way or mid-channel which lies on the starboard side of such vessel.” Comp. St. 1916, § 7899.

The General Prudential Rule (article 27) is as follows:

“Art. 27. In obeying and construing these rules due regard shall be had to all dangers of navigation and collision, and to any special circumstances which may render a departure from the above rules necessary in order to avoid immediate danger.” Comp. St. 1916, § 7901.

On examination of the whole testimony from those aboard the Pemaquid, I can have no doubt that the steamer was proceeding in violation of the statute governing the speed of_vessels in a fog. Her immoderate speed is shown, also, by the nature of the blow which she inflicted; for although the Pemaquid had much less weight than the Morse, her speed was such that, when she struck the Morse, she cut into her a distance of 27 feet. The force of this blow, can be accounted [712]*712for only by the fact that she must have been moving át a rapid rate through the water at the time of the collision.

It is clear from the testimony of the officers of the Pemaquid that, after slowing down at Allen’s Bar, and hearing the whistle of the Morse, the steamer continued at full speed on her course for Field Ledge Buoy, and that she kept well over on the port side of the channel, when, as her captain admits, he knew the Morse would keep over on her starboard side of the channel, and would be at Field Ledge Buoy at about the time the Pemaquid would arrive there.

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255 F. 709, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pemaquid-med-1918.