The West Cherow

276 F. 585, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 983
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedOctober 21, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 276 F. 585 (The West Cherow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The West Cherow, 276 F. 585, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 983 (E.D. Va. 1921).

Opinion

WADDILN, Circuit Judge.

[1] The facts of the case are briefly these: The West Cherow, a large ship owned by the United States, 410 feet 5 inches long, 54 feet beam, and 29 feet 9 inches deep, and 8,582 dead weight tonnage, light, anchored under the direction of an official pilot in the roadstead of the Fayal Channel, in the Azores, on 75 fathoms of chain, on the evening of the 3d of February, 1920. Late in the evening of the following day, the Dutch steamship Pend-' recht, an oil tanker 242 feet long, 18 feet beam, and 1,589 gross tons, also anchored in the immediate vicinity on 60 fathoms of chain, about 300 to 400 feet aft of the West Cherow. The ships remained in these positions, apparently swinging safely with the tides, until that evening of the 5th of February, when, about 12 o’clock noon of that day, a breeze set in, increasing in velocity between 12 and 2:30 o’clock, as claimed by the parties, respectively, to from 36 to 50 miles an hour. At 2:30, as claimed by the West Cherow, and 2:40, as claimed by the Pendrecht, the vessels came into collision; the port quarter of the West Cherow striking the starboard side 'of the Pendrecht slightly forward of amidship.

The West Cherow insists that she was in all respects free from fault for the collision, and that the same was caused by the failure of 'the Pendrecht to allow her sufficient berth room at the time of her anchorage. The Pendrecht, on the other hand, claims that ample berth room was allowed the West Cherow, and that the collision resulted from the dragging of the anchor of the West Cherow, caused by the high wind upon her exposed freeboard, and her failure to exercise proper maritime caution and skill in the navigation of the ship, by not letting out anchor chain, or moving up on her anchor, either of which, as claimed by the Pendrecht, would have averted the disaster.

This brief summary of the facts gives the issues between the parties, the correct determination of’ which will settle the dispute between them. It will readily be seen that the collision must have been brought about in one of the three ways indicated, as there was nothing in the prevailing conditions to have caused the ships to come together. These causes will be considered in the order named.

First. Did the Pendrecht foul the berth of the West Cherow upon coming to anchor? This is the primary question to be considered, because, if it did, that of itself would constitute fault on the part of the Pendrecht. The court has given full consideration to this feature of the case, and its conclusion is that, in the circumstances' of this collision, an insufficient anchorage space was allowed the West Cherow by the Pendrecht, when the latter came to anchor. There was no- excuse for the failure of the Pendrecht to allow ample berth room to the ship at anchor. It was in a roadstead, miles of deep water all round, and the anchorage in no way crowded. It is true the space allowed of 300 to 400 feet was sufficient, so long as the two vessels [587]*587swung the same way; but it was manifest to the Pendrecht that ihe West Cherow was light, riding high out of the water, some' 40 feet, as the court recalls, from the water to the top of its superstructure. The Pendrecht, by reason of her construction, was low down in the water, and it was evident, in case of a storm arising, that the more exposed vessel would likely be influenced by the force of the wind; whereas, the less exposed vessel would be influenced by the tide.' This, it seems to the court, is just what did occur, and was the primary cause of this collision, and ought to have been foreseen by any intelligent mariner. Anchorages that do not allow for a double swing of ships at anchor necessarily present the impending peril of one being driven by the wind, and the other swept by the tide. While in many instances, by reason of lack of space, such an anchorage might be justified, no such necessity existed here, and navigators likely to be affected by the insufficient berth room should have been admonished at all times to be upon guard to escape almost certain disaster, if the wind and tide conditions indicated, arose. The Juniata-The Sovereign of the Seas (D. C.) 124 Fed. 861, and cases cited; The Jason— The Hesperos (D. C.) 257 Fed. 438, 441.

Second. Considering the evidence introduced by the Pendrecht, that the West Cherow dragged her anchor, which was the sole cause of the collision, the court has given much consideration to the same. The testimony is squarely in conflict; those on the West Cherow scouting the suggestion that their anchor dragged, and those on the Pend-recht affirming that it did. This question must be solved in the light of all the evidence, and after viewing the testimony from every standpoint, and in the light of the circumstances of the collision, the court is convinced that there was no dragging of the anchor of the West Cherow. There was nothing in the surroundings to cause it to drag. The anchorage ground was of the best; the anchor strong< and powerful, and her anchor chain of sufficient length; and there were no weather conditions that would have caused the anchor to drag. The navigators and crew of the Pendrecht, it is true, testified positively that the dragging occurred; but the facts as to the position's of the several members of the crew, their opportunities of knowledge, the fact that at the time most of them were engaged in employment incident to coaling their ship, the explanation they make as to how and why they observed the dragging, coupled with the mystery of the writing of the ship’s log, and the failure to produce the rough log alleged to have been made at the time of the collision, one and all tend to discredit, rather than support, the dragging theory. The positions the vessels occupied quickly after the collision, and as they straightened out, likewise tend to refute the suggestion. Moreover, the Pendrecht, being clearly at fault in her original anchorage, should not be heard to rely on suggested faults of the ship imperiled by her conduct, in the absence of clear proof to the contrary.

Third. Coming now to the further defense of the Pendrecht, to the effect that the West Cherow failed to exercise proper maritime skill to avoid collision, by dropping, another anchor, or by paying out or heaving in on her chain, or by operating her engines or otherwise, [588]*588as she might have done under the circumstances, the court’s conclusion is that there is much force in some of these suggestions, especially that of the failure of the West Cherow to take timely action to avert the collision after the same became imminent, namely, that as the result of the wind she had become windrode, and the Pendrecht, lying low in the water, had become tiderode. Por nearly 24 hours, these two vessels had remained in the positions they were in just preceding the collision. The masters of both vessels were charged with knowledge of the fact that the distance between the ships was only a safe anchorage so long as both vessels swung the same way. The West Cherow was a large ship, and high out of the water. Her navigators knew, or were charged with knowledge, that upon the coming of a considerable storm their ship would be affected more by the wind than the tide, if those forces were in opposite directions. The wind came at 12 o’clock. It was not very strong, it is true. It was not such a storm as swept the ship high out of the water, over one affected by the tide, but it was of sufficient velocity as that by 2 o’clock the West Cherow says she was held in the wind, and her bow forced from south-southwest to south. The collision occurred, according to the West Cherow, at 2:30, and 2:40 as claimed by the Pendrecht.

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Bluebook (online)
276 F. 585, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-west-cherow-vaed-1921.