The Sir Robert Fernie

96 F. 348, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 329
CourtDistrict Court, D. Washington
DecidedSeptember 2, 1899
DocketNo. 197
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 96 F. 348 (The Sir Robert Fernie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Sir Robert Fernie, 96 F. 348, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 329 (washd 1899).

Opinion

HANFORD, District Judge.

For services in rescuing the bark Sir Robert Fernie from a situation of peril on the night of November 2-3, 1898, the owners and crew of the steam tug Fairfield have brought this suit to recover salvage. At the time of rendering the services the Fairfield was a new vessel, employed in a general to wing-business about Tacoma Harbor, and in all the waters of Puget Sound and the Straits of Juan de Fuea, having power sufficient to handle a ship of 3,000 tons in ordinary weather. Her value was about §12,-000; her usual complement of officers and men consisted of a captain, mate, engineer, fireman, one deck hand, and a boy;- and her average earnings were §50 per day. At the time of being called to assist the Sir Robert Fernie the engineer and deck hand were absent, but the engineer joined the vessel in the manner hereinafter related in time to relieve the fireman, who had been, during the night’s experiences, doing all the work in the engine room. The Bir Robert Fernie is a large, steel-hull, four-masted bark, nine years old at the time of the occurrence, and worth, as near as I can estimate her value, from §75,000 to §100,000. She was loaded with a cargo of 3,910 long tons of wheat, of the value of §96,000, and destined on a voyage around Cape Horn to some port in Great Britain. Being thus loaded, she was moored to a buoy in Tacoma Harbor, awaiting the completion of a new windlass to replace her old one, which had been taken out on account of being- damaged and unserviceable. Her steam winch was out of order, so that during the night in question she had no means of handling chain cables. Besides her lack of equipments for contending against the elements, she was not fully manned, only part of her usual complement of able seamen being on board, and ber officers seemed to have but little confidence in the loyalty of the men she did have. It is proved by statements afterwards made by her captain, and also hv the answer verified by Mm, that one of the most important acts of seamanship during the night was performed by the ship’s cook; and it is made a matter of record in the ship’s log, written by the first mate, and signed by the captain, three mates, and two able seamen, that in heaving the sounding line it parted, and about 70 fathoms of line was lost; and on examination of that part of the line which remained on the reel it was found that the line had been cut at the place where it parted, and also cut in other places, by some person, maliciously. There was considerable delay in some of tbe importan!: operations during the night, which the captain ascribed to the unwillingness of his men, and he expressed his belief that they had tried to run the ship ashore. The buoy to which the ship was moored was placed in the harbor for the accommodation of ships by the city government, and consisted of a raft, attached to a 5,509-pound anchor by 00 fathoms of chain cable, weighing 15,000 pounds. When tbe buoy was picked up, it was found that tbe chain cable had become unshackled, or had parted, near tbe anchor, for about 60 fathoms of chain was still appended to the log raft. This had been dragged by the ship across the bay to a place less than one-fourth of a mile from the north shore, where the depth of the water is only about 50 feet. At that place the chain dragging on the bottom must have held the ship’s head so that the wind would make her siring shore[350]*350ward, and, allowing for the slope of the beach, there could not have been much water under her stern. The night of November 2d was dark and stormy. There was a heavy rainfall, and a southwest gale prevailed during most of the night, with frequent squalls of great violence. The condition of the weather is established beyond question by the testimony of well-known citizens, who have no interest to induce them to give false testimony,- and who have had lifelong experience in battling with the elements upon the ocean. Their testimony is corroborated by reports of the storm published next day in the daily papers, by the fact that the ship dragged the buoy and 60 fathoms of chain across the bay, by the conduct of the captain of the Sir Robert Fernie in calling for assistance, by the record of the ship’s log, and by the record of the United States weather station at Tacoma, which shows the velocity and direction of the wind during the night, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. 348, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-sir-robert-fernie-washd-1899.