The Philadelphia

239 F. 396, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1435
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 9, 1917
DocketNo. 23
StatusPublished

This text of 239 F. 396 (The Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Philadelphia, 239 F. 396, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1435 (E.D. Pa. 1917).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This controversy grows out of a collision. The place was just outside of the Overfalls Lightship at the entrance to Delaware Bay. The time was about 2:30 o’clock p. m. on May 9, 1915. The weather was clear, the sea smooth, with no wind to hamper the proper handling of either vessel, plenty of sea room in which to maneuver, and no vessels or other obstructions to interfere. From such a very general outline statement the fact of collision would suggest some unexpected and unforeseen happening or fault in the handling of one or both vessels. If to this outline is added the further fact that one of the vessels was a steamship about to discharge her pilot, and the other was a pilot boat ready to take the pilot off, and there was nothing to account for the collision, other than the handling of the vessels, an anticipated finding of culpability somewhere would be compelled. If the further fact developed that the steamship had been brought to a stop, and nothing remained to be done, except for the pilot boat to round up near the steamship, so that the pilot could be taken off in a yawl, and that in rounding up the pilot boat ran into the steamship, an explanation of the mishap, if not due to the fault of the pilot boat, would be demanded.

There is just this prima facie case made out against the respondent. It is evident that the explanation must be looked for in the particular detail facts, and not in the broad ones. It is not difficult to visualize the movements of each vessel down to almost the immediate moment of the collision. Each was looking for and expecting the other. What was to be done was known to each. What was done on board each vessel is not in dispute. The testimony of the witnesses respecting [398]*398what took place is in accord, except as to the movement of the steamship in fact, and what movement would have resulted from the way in which she was handled. The difficulty which confronts the, libelant is to reconcile the particular (and in this sense the minor), things which, according to the weight of the evidence, did happen with the main facts for which the libelant contends. The difficulty which confronts the respondent is to find any exculpating features in the particular facts which will overcome the condemnation involved in the main facts.

The following statement, although perhaps not entirely accurate, is one over which there is no substantial dispute: The pilot boat was made out by the steamer when the vessels "were- from four to six miles apart. When first sighted, the pilot boat bore off the steamer’s port bow, but her position was practically dead ahead. The order to stand by was given, and the course of. the steamer was changed so as to make the pilot boat bear off the steamer’s starboard bow. A course of S. S. E. kept her so.

There are obvious advantages in the pilot leaving the ship from the lee side, and this is usual. The wind was about N. N. W., and as this was nearly a following wind, either side might have been made the lee side. Whatever difference there was favored making the port side the lee side. The pilot so decided, and the ladder was there slung. .The order to stand by was followed at 2:10 with an order to slow down, and this at 2:18 with an order to stop, and this at 2:22 with full speed astern, and this almost at once (entered as of 2:23) with stop. The expectation on the part of every one aboard the steamer was that the pilot boat would pass on the starboard hand, come around under the steamer’s stern, and range alongside the steamer on her port side. This expectation was a very natural one on their part, and this course would have been an entirely proper one for the pilot boat to have taken. From the viewpoint of the steamer, the orders given resulted in her speed being reduced from 8 or 8% knots to 6, and from that fir a half knot, or at most a knot (when her engines were reversed), and then to a dead stop. Her heading during this time had not changed from S. S. E. From the further viewpoint of the steamer, the pilot boat came up on the starboard hand, ported her helm, and instead of coming around the steamer’s stern, and ranging alongside on the port side (as those aboard the steamer expected her to do), she put her helm hard aport and attempted to make the turn short of the steamer, so as to round up on the starboard side. Coming at the speed at which the pilot boat was moving, there was not room for this maneuver, and the collision was brought about.

The libelant, on this version of the facts, presents this plain case— the steamer brought to a stop with the port side made the lee side, and preparations made to discharge the pilot from that side, and the pilot boat colliding with her in the attempt to round up alongside. The case as thus made out would be free from all difficulties in affixing the blame, except for the circumstance that it is impossible to understand how the collision could have been brought about in this way, consistently with certain other features which tire weight of the evidence shows to have been present. Whatever the real facts are, the weight of the [399]*399evidence establishes that the pilot boat approached on a course parallel (in reverse) to that of the steamer; that she did not port her helm until she was abeam of the steamer (somewhere between just forward of amidship of the steamer and off the steamer’s quarter); that the pilot boat was moving at the rate of 7 knots; that she struck the steamer head-on a right-angle or nearly right-angle blow at a point about 50 feet aft of the steamer’s stem. Add the facts that the steamer was about 280 feet and the pilot boat about 148 feet long, and it becomes impossible to account for what happened, if the steamer did not go astern or swing her bow to starboard.

The place of contact seems to be established beyond question. The clear weight of the evidence is toward the finding of the blow being a right-angle blow. It follows that one of four things must be: The pilot boat must have made her turn as she was approaching the steamer; the steamer must have had sternway on; the bow of the steamer must have swung to starboard, thus putting her athwart the course of the pilot boat as the latter came around; or some new element accounting for what happened must be brought in. Wherever the truth may be found, the case as presented entitles the respondent to a finding that the pilot boat did not change her course until she came abeam or abaft the beam of the steamer. The libel itself avers this, and all the testimony bears it out. There is nothing in the evidence or in the circumstances to justify a finding that the steamer was going astern. The only circumstance, other than those stated, is that the man at the wheel of the pilot boat realized the imminence of the collision just before it occurred, and that he dropped the wheel and reversed his engines to full speed astern, so far checking his headway that the pilot boat was almost stopped, and immediately backed away from the steamer.

These latter facts were not introduced- for the purpose, nor is there any suggestion, in the evidence or in the argument, that they account for the collision consistently with the steamer not having changed her course. The respondent asks for a finding that she did change her course, not only because no other explanation will explain the collision, but also because of the evidence introduced that the effect of reversing the engines of the steamer would be at once to throw her head to starboard.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. 396, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-philadelphia-paed-1917.