The Simon Dumois

163 F. 490, 90 C.C.A. 36, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1908
DocketNo. 732
StatusPublished

This text of 163 F. 490 (The Simon Dumois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Simon Dumois, 163 F. 490, 90 C.C.A. 36, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563 (4th Cir. 1908).

Opinion

BOYD, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree in admiralty rendered by the District Court for the District of Maryland, 'at Baltimore. The appellant, the Di Giorgio Importing & Steamship Company, filed a libel against the. steamship Simon Dumois, the appellee, to subject the latter to the payment of the value of a cargo of bananas, laden on the steamship Iberia, alleged to have been destroyed as the result of a collision between the two said steamships near Ft. McHenry, in the harbor of Baltimore, on the 7th of March, 1904, which said collision is alleged to have been caused solely by the fault of the Simon Dumois. The Iberia was bound for Baltimore, fully laden with the cargo aforesaid, and the Simon Dumois was outward bound,!/ in ballast. The allegations of the libelant are:

“The steamship Iberia with a perishable cargo of bananas, left the quarantine station about 7 o’clock on the morning of the collision, bound for Baltimore. The weather was foggy at starting, but the pilot was able to pick up the buoys which mark the northeastern boundary of the channel, and proceeding at a speed of about two knots an hour, and blowing fog signals at 'regular intervals, he continued along the line of these buoys, near enough to distinguish the numbers on some of them, until those on the bridge sighted the topmast of a four-masted schooner lying at anchor on the southwesterly side of the channel and partially across it. No change was made in the course of the Iberia until she reached a point about 700 feet from the stern of the [491]*491schooner, when a fog whistle was heard coming from the vicinity of the schooner and on the port bow of the Iberia. The iberia answered with a fog signal and ported her wheel, and almost immediately thereafter a steamer (which subsequently proved to be the Dumois) loomed up, coming around the stern of the schooner, and headed directly across the channel and the Iberia’s course. The wheel of the Iberia was at once put hard a port, the engines were reversed, and signals given. Within a space of time estimated from a half a minute to a minute, the Dumois, continuing her course across the channel, struck the Iberia on her port side, just forward of amidships, and sunk her. The Iberia, at the instance of the collision, was stopped, or practically so. After the collision the Iberia drifted with the tide in the direction of Ft. McHenry, where she finally took bottom some four hours later. The Dumois left the harbor of Baltimore outbound about 7:15 a. m. on the same morning. The weather was hazy and rainy, and the pilot laid her course ‘on the southernmost edge' of the channel until he had passed opposite Ft. McHenry, when he ported his wheel about two points and deviated from, his course about 100 feet in order to pass under the stern of an inbound schooner. After clearing the schooner the wheel was starboarded, and the vessel again brought upon her channel course and steadied, when a four-masted schooner at anchor was observed about: a mile ahead, lying over the southern edge of the channel. The vessel was under full speed at this time, but shortly thereafter a heavy fog bank was seen ahead, which completely enveloped the schooner. The steamer continued until within about 100 feet of the fog banks, when she reduced her speed to slow, and blew fog whistles. This course was held for 10 or 12 minutes, until the schooner was seen in the fog about 150 feet away, and almost ahead, when, in order to avoid the schooner, the engines were stopped and the wheel hard «starboarded, to pass under her stern. This altered the course of the steamer from parallel with the channel to almost directly across it. After clearing the schooner orders were given to port the wheel and go slow ahead, but before either could be executed a fog whistle was heard from the Iberia. The engines were ordered reversed, but before any of these orders could be carried out the Dumois’ headway had carried her across the channel and brought her into collision with the port side of the Iberia with sufficient force to crush in her side. At the time of the collision the Iberia was cargo laden and drew 19 feet of water, while the Dumois was light and drew but 14 feet 6 inches of water.”

The- libelant further insisted that the collision occurred on the northeasterly side of the ship’s channel and somewhat astern of the anchored schooner before referred to, and that the disaster was due to the fact that the Dumois, in her efforts to avoid striking the schooner, had turned and was steering diagonally across the channel and into the path of the incoming Iberia, so that, whilst the Iberia was proceeding in her due course, the Dumois, by this misdirection of her course, was the solé cause of the collision. On the other hand, the appellee, in the answer, insists that the Simon Dumois, at the time of the collision, was navigating well on the outward bound one-half of the channel, and probably, if not on the anchorage ground, adjoining that side of the channel; that all reasonable skill, care, and prudence was used by the navigators in laying and maintaining a proper course; and that when the collision of the two vessels was imminent, and as soon as the danger was discovered, all proper signals were given by the navigators of the Dumois, and every means within their control was used to prevent the collision; but that it took place, and was due not to the fault of the Dumois, but to surrounding conditions, over which her navigators had no control.

Testimony was introduced both by the libelant and by the respondent relative to the facts and circumstances attending the navigation of [492]*492the two ships and the collision which occurred. Of course, there is, as generally in cases of this character, much contradictory testimony, which, however, was considered, as we readily gather, by the trial judge, whose duty it was, under the rules of evidence, to reconcile, if possible, conflicting testimony, but, if the testimony is so absolutely contradictory as to be incapable of reconcilation, then to accept such of it as he believes and disregard such as he does not. In this situation the trial judge found the following facts:

“The collision occurred, I think, well within 100 feet of the stern of the schooner, as is established by the strong probative facts and testimony. It seems to me that the proof leaves no doubt that the Dumois was not in the channel at all, but at the time of the collision was within the water of the dredged-out anchorage ground to the south of the channel. There is ample proof that the Dumois was navigating with great care. All her officers were on deck, her first officer having been stationed on the bow as a lookout, and her master was with the pilot on the bridge. Her speed when the fog set in was slow, and when the schooner was seen, her engines were stopped. When the collision occurred, her engines were making full speed-astern. I can find no particular in which it can be justly said that the Dumois was in fáult. As the Iberia is not represented in this litigation, I forbear to comment upon her navigation. * * * From a patient consideration of all the testimony, my conclusion is that none of the faults charged against the Dumois have been sustained.”

After a careful reading and consideration of the testimony, we find no sufficient ground upon which to disturb these conclusions, and the decree of the District Court of Maryland is therefore affirmed.

Affirmed.

NOTE. — The following is the opinion of MORRIS, District Judge:

MORRIS, District Judge.

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Bluebook (online)
163 F. 490, 90 C.C.A. 36, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-simon-dumois-ca4-1908.