The Victory & the Plymothian

168 U.S. 410, 18 S. Ct. 149, 42 L. Ed. 519, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1734
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1897
DocketNos. 66 and 67
StatusPublished
Cited by225 cases

This text of 168 U.S. 410 (The Victory & the Plymothian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Victory & the Plymothian, 168 U.S. 410, 18 S. Ct. 149, 42 L. Ed. 519, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1734 (1897).

Opinion

*416 Me. Chief Justice Fullee,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of tbe court.

The District Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals concurred in finding the Victory grossly in fault, and we see no reason for arriving at any other conclusion. In our opinion the collision was the direct consequence of the Victory’s disregard of the rule of the road and her reckless navigation.

In any aspect of the case, the rule of the road was to keep to the right.

By rule eighteen of the regulations prescribed by the act of April 29,1864, carried forward in section 4233 of the Bevised Statutes, if two vessels under steam.are meeting end on, or nearly end on, so as to involve risk of collision, the helms of both shall be put to port, so that each may pass on the port side of the other.”

The first rule of the supervising inspectors is to the same effect. 1

*417 And this was proven to be the usage in the navigation of the Elizabeth Biver, and known to the master of the Victory.

These vessels were approaching each other in such directions and with such bearings as required them to keep to the right. The distance between Craney Island Light and buoy No. 9 was about a mile and one eighth. When the Plymo-thian was at buoy No. 9 the Victory was somewhat to the north óf or near Craney Island. As the Plymothian straightened down the channel, opposite buoy 9, she was near the eastern side and heading straight down the channel course N. \ or £ E. She was obliged to swing, on leaving the pier, to round the buoy, but hacl steadied down as she passed it. The evidence thoroughly established that she was never on the westerly side of the channel. We think the District Judge was amply justified in finding as he did that the Plymothian had not, “ in coming out from Lambert’s pier, gone over to the west of the channel near to red buoy No. 22; and had not, after doing so, recrossed the channel to reach its position near buoy 9, as claimed by the Victory’s counsel. The tide was not strong enough to force her over there, and it would have been out of her course to have gone there. The testimony is conclusive to that effect.”

The Victory when in the neighborhood of Craney Island was either in mid-channel or to the westward of it, and on the Plymothian’s port bow. The Victory’s witnesses admitted starboarding twice for different schooners and hard-starboarding just before the collision; but both of the lower courts, in accordance with the great weight of evidence, found that the Victory was not prevented by other vessels in the channel, either from going on the westerly side or from stay *418 ing there, while the testimony of the Yiotory’s pilot indicated that his object in heading over for the easterly side of the channel was to cut oif some of the distance into port by passing dose to buoys Nos. 7 and 9.

Moreover, as immediately after straightening down the Plymothian ported a little and then hard-ported, even if the Victory had been beading at a gradual angle across the channel all the’way from- Craney Island, the vessels would have been approaching each other from an oblique direction, which would have brought the inspectors’ second rule into play,, that vessels so situated “ shall pass to the right of each other as if head and head, or nearly so.”

The starboard-hand rule had no application. Although when the Plymothian started from the pier her starboard side must necessarily have been down stream as she turned, the vessels were never starboard to starboard after she had rounded buoy 9 and straightened down the channel and the Victory had passed Craney Island and straightened up S. •£• W. Indeed the rule applicable when two vessels “ aré crossing so as to involve risk of collision,” that “ the vessel which has the other on her own starboard side shall keep out of the way,” is ordinarily inapplicable to vessels coming around bends in channels, which may at times bring one vessel on the starboard of the other. It has often been held as a general rule of navigation that vessels approaching each other in narrow channels, or where their courses diverge as much as one and one half or two points, are bound to keep to port and pass to the right, whatever the occasional effect of the sinuosities of the channel. New York & Baltimore Transportation Co. v. Philadelphia & Savannah Steam Navigation Co., 22 How. 461; Union Steamship Co. v. New York Steamship Co., 24 How. 307; The Vanderbilt, 6 Wall. 225; The Johnson, 9 Wall. 146; The John L. Hasbrouck, 93 U. S. 405; The Berkshire, 33 U. S. App. 531, 540.

It is interesting to note that Union Steamship Co. v. New York Steamship Co. was a case of collision in the channel of the Elizabeth Eiver, where the steamship Jamestown, outward bound, took the eastern side of the channel, rounding *419 Lambert’s Point near the buoy, and proceeded on her course north one fourth east. She was struck by the Pennsylvania, coming up, by reason of the Pennsylvania putting her helm to starboard instead of keeping her proper course, or porting when it became known that the Jamestown was approaching; and it was held that the Pennsylvania was solely to-blame.

The -principle was embodied in Article 21 of the International Regulations, adopted by the act of March 3, 1885, c. 354, "23 Stat. 438, providing that “ in narrow channels every steamship shall, when it is safe and practicable, keep to that side of the fairway or mid-channel, which lies on the starboard side of such ship,” which is Article 25 of the Regulations adopted August 19, 1890, c. 802, 26 Stat. 320, and put in operation, after some postponements and amendments, in 1897, 29 Stat. 885, 893; and of the act of June 7, 1897, 30 Stat. 96, c. 4.

In The Pekin, (1897) App. Cas. 532, Articles 21 and 22 of these regulations were considered. Article 21 is given above and Article 22 reads as follows: “ Where by the above rules one of two ships is to keep out of the way, the other shall keep her course.”

That was an appeal from the decision of the Supreme Court for China and Japan, sitting in Admiralty, in which the steamship Normandie was alone held to blame for a collision which took place, between her and the steamship Pekin in the river Whangpoo on April 3, 1896. The case was thus stated by Sir Francis Jeune, delivering judgment in the Privy Council: “At Pootung Point the Whangpoo' makes a sharp bend towards the south, returning indeed on its course at something more than a right angle, and to the eastward of'that point the stream is divided by a line of buoys into two navigable channels, the northern being called the inside, and the southern the outside channel. The westernmost of these buoys is known- as the Old Dock buoy. The Pekin was proceeding up the inside channel, along the line of buoys, that is to say on the starboard side of that channel, and the Normandie was coming down the river to the southward of mid-channel.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

William H. McGee & Co. v. the M/V "Nedlloyd Van Noort"
767 F. Supp. 398 (D. Puerto Rico, 1991)
Harris v. Newman
404 F. Supp. 947 (S.D. Mississippi, 1975)
Moran Scow Corporation v. SS BOSTON
342 F. Supp. 216 (S.D. New York, 1972)
Gulfcoast Transit Company v. M/S KYUNG-JU
343 F. Supp. 867 (E.D. Louisiana, 1972)
Iron Ore Transport Co. v. Steam Vessel Flying Foam
343 F. Supp. 510 (E.D. Virginia, 1971)
Maroceano Compania Naviera v. S.S. Verdi
312 F. Supp. 489 (S.D. New York, 1970)
Afran Transport Company v. United States
309 F. Supp. 650 (S.D. New York, 1969)
National Iranian Tanker Co. v. Tug Dalzell 2
411 F.2d 759 (Second Circuit, 1969)
Holland-America Line v. M/V Johs. Stove
286 F. Supp. 69 (S.D. New York, 1968)
Harbor Towing Corporation v. Tug Reliance
211 F. Supp. 896 (E.D. Virginia, 1963)
NM Paterson & Sons, Limited v. City of Chicago
209 F. Supp. 576 (N.D. Illinois, 1962)
Navegacion Castro Riva v. the M.S. Nordholm
178 F. Supp. 736 (E.D. Louisiana, 1959)
Mattina v. Commercial Cable Co.
137 F. Supp. 472 (E.D. New York, 1956)
Pure Oil Company v. Jack Neilson, Inc.
135 F. Supp. 786 (E.D. Louisiana, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 U.S. 410, 18 S. Ct. 149, 42 L. Ed. 519, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-victory-the-plymothian-scotus-1897.