The Peru

91 F. 426, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 47
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedDecember 24, 1898
DocketNo. 4,247
StatusPublished

This text of 91 F. 426 (The Peru) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Peru, 91 F. 426, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 47 (D. Or. 1898).

Opinion

BELLING EE, District Judge.

On the 4th day of October, 1897, the schooner Orion was beating v. the coast cf. the mouth of the Columbia river, bound for Shoalwater Bay, when she came in collision with the German ship Peru, in tow of the tug Eelief, bound for the port of Astoria, on the Columbia river. The collision took place between 4 and 5 o’clock in the afternoon. There was no fog, and the weather was clear. The wind was from the northwest, and inshore was a good beating breeze, but offshore it was blowing about 15 miles per hour. Inshore the sea was pretty smooth, but offshore it was about half rough. The Orion was keeping close in, to get the benefit of smooth water, and had been making short tacks at intervals during the day. The vessels had been in sight of each- other since the forenoon, the schooner then being a little to the north of Tillamook Rock, and the ship to the north and west of the schooner, cf. the Columbia river. The schooner at this time was heading for Point Adams. After getting close in, she stood out on a long tack v. the coast; and, after making a short tack to a point opposite the end of the Columbia river jetty, she was put upon her starboard tack,—her last tack to the place of collision. Her course then was between W. and W. I S. It was about 4 o’clock in the afternoon when the schooner was put upon this last tack. The ship Peru had taken Pilot Wood on board, and about half past 3 o’clock in the afternoon was put upon the port or inshore tack, and was soon after taken in tow by the tugboat Eelief. After being taken in tow, the foresail, mainsail, and crossjack of the ship were furled. The remainder of the sails were kept set, in order to assist the tug in making the entrance into the river. The tug and ship were making from 7 to 8 miles per hour, and the Orion from 5 to 6 miles. The hawser by which the ship was towed was probably about 175 fathoms in length. The courses of the tug and tow and of the schooner converged inte one another. The first and second mates of the Peru took the bearings of the Orion from time to time while the vessels were approaching each oilier, and the captain and some of the sailors considered the probabilities of a collision, but all concluded that the vessels -would clear if they kept on their respective courses; while Pilot Cordiner, who was on the tug, came to the conclusion, while the vessels were two or three miles apart, that, if they kept on their courses, they would come together. It seems inexplicable (hat in these circumstances a collision should have occurred. The explanation is that the master of the Orion, having the right of way, expected that the tug and tow would keep out of his way; while the officers on the tug and ship were' of the opinion that the schooner, from her position inshore, was making for the Columbia river, and expected her to tack to starboard at any moment, and follow in their wake. The officers in charge of both vessels relied upon this assumption until a collision was imminent, and when such efforts to avoid it as were then made were too late. [428]*428Among the regulations prescribed by congress to prevent collisions at sea are the following:

“Art. 17. When two sailing vessels are approaching one another, so as to involve risk of collision, one of them shall keep out of the way of the other as follows, namely: * * * (b) A vessel which is close-hauled on the port
tack shall keep out of the way of a vessel which is close-hauled on the starboard tack.”
“Art. 20. When a steam vessel and a sailing vessel are proceeding in such directions as to involve the risk of collision, steam vessels shall keep out of the way of the sailing vessel.”
“Art. 22. Every vessel which is directed by these rules to keep out of the way of another vessel, shall, if the circumstances of the case admit, avoid crossing ahead of the other.
“Art. 23. Every steam vessel which is directed by these rules to keep out of the way of another vessel shall on approaching her, if necessary, slacken her speed, or stop, or reverse.”
26 Stat. 320.

Under these regulations the schooner had a right to expect that the tug and ship would keep out of her way, until it was too late to have avoided the collision on her part. The fact that, from her position, those on board the tug and ship supposed she was bound in, and would tack to starboard, and follow in the ship’s wake, does not excuse their failure to take the precautions required of them to avoid a collision. It merely explains their 'failure to do so. The schooner had a right to be where she was, and, if those navigating the tug and ship saw fit to act upon an assumption of their own as to what she intended to do, they did so at their peril. It may have been a very natural conclusion that the schooner was bound v. the river; but it was negligence to substitute such a conclusion for those precautions to avoid a collision, easily taken, which prudence would suggest, and which the law requires.

The claim is made by'the owners of the schooner, in their libel, that both the ship and tug are liable; but, on the hearing, this claim as to the tug was not urged. It was not abandoned, but the opinion was intimated, if not expressed, that the ship alone is liable. On behalf of the ship it is contended that the schooner and tug are both responsible, and for the tug it is conceded that the schooner was not in fault, and the entire responsibility is charged upon the ship. The opinion already expressed disposes of the question of negligence on the schooner’s part, and the question for decision is whether the tug, or the ship, or both, are liable for the damage libelants have sustained.

In the case of The Civilta and The Restless, 103 U. S. 699, upon facts essentially like those in the present case, the tug and ship were both held liable. The course of the tug, with the ship following in her wake, and that of an approaching schooner, varied but little from parallel lines. These courses crossed each other either just ahead of the tug, or between the tug and ship. The tug did not change her course until the schooner was v. to her, or nearly so. The ship struck the schooner on the port side, and sunk her. The schooner’s lights were burning brightly, but were not seen by those on board the tug or ship. In that case, as in this, the controversy was mainly between the tug and the ship, in an effort of each to throw the responsibility for the accident upon the other. The court held that the tug and ship, being in [429]*429law one vessel, and that a vessel under steam, were obliged to keep out of the way. Both vessels were, as in this case, under the general orders of a pilot on board the ship; but, as in this case, the tug actually received no orders from the pilot. The court say:

“Being on the ship, which was two hundred and seventy feet astern of the tug, it is not to be presumed that he was to do more than direct the general course to be taken by the ship in getting to her place of destination. The details of the immediate navigation of the tug, with reference to approaching vessels, must necessarily have been left to a great extent to those on hoard of her. She was where she would ordinarily see an object ahead before those on the ship could; and, having all the motive power of the combined vessels under her own control, she was in a situation to act promptly, and do what was required, under the circumstances.

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Related

The" Civilta" and The" Restless"
103 U.S. 699 (Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 F. 426, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-peru-ord-1898.