Thorp v. The Defender

23 F. Cas. 1155, 1 Bond 397
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 1155 (Thorp v. The Defender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorp v. The Defender, 23 F. Cas. 1155, 1 Bond 397 (S.D. Ohio 1860).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

This suit is prosecuted by the libellants, as owners of the steamboat William Baird, to recover damages for injuries resulting from a collision with the steamboat Defender, which occurred on the Mississippi river some sixty miles above Vicksburg, about twelve o’clock, in the night of November 4, 1S36. The ease made in the libel is, in brief, that the Baird, properly manned and equipped as a freight and passenger boat, was proceeding on a trip from New Orleans to St. Louis, and when near what is called the Tennessee landing, steering up the Mississippi shore, the pilot was about to make the usual crossing to the Louisiana shore, when he discovered the Defender about one mile above, coming down near the Louisiana side, and about to cross from that side to the opposite shore; that on seeing the descending boat, the pilot of the Baird sounded two blasts of the whistle as a signal that be wished to take the larboard side in passing the Defender, and that the pilot of the latter boat thereupon sounded his whistle twice, to indicate his acceptance of the Baird’s signal; that the Baird, in accordance with the signals, was immediately pointed across toward the Louisiana shore, and in. her efforts to get to the larboard, was running nearly square across the river; that the Defender pursued the proper course of a down boat, under the signals which had passed, until she came within a short distance of the Baird, and1 then straightened down stream, and came “head on” against the starboard quarter of the Baird, striking her about the middle of the boilers, displacing the boilers, breaking the connection steam-pipes, carrying away the starboard guard, and crushing in some of the planks of the hull, thereby causing the water to flow in rapidly, and endangering both the boat and cargo, and making it necessary to’throw overboard a large quantity of salt and lumber, which were a part of her cargo.

The libel contains the usual averment that the collision resulted solely from the mismanagement and fault of those in charge of the Defender, and the libellants claim full damages for the loss of, and injuries to, the cargo, for the costs of repairing the injuries sustained, and for the detention of the boat while the repairs were in progress.

The answer of the respondents sets forth that the pilots of the Defender, the boat being near the Louisiana shore, at a point called Pecan Grove, saw the Baird coming up on the Mississippi side, and when nearly opposite Benhampton two whistles were heard from the Baird, indicating the wish of the pilot to pass up on the larboard side; that the signal, though unusual and not according to the proper course of navigation, was accepted by the pilot of the Defender, and responded to by two whistles; that he immediately pointed his boat toward the Missi s'ppi shore, intending to make a long crossing, and heading to a point a short distance above Ben-hampton, thus leaving ample room for the [1156]*1156Baird to pass up on the Louisiana side, for which she had signaled; that in violation of her signal the Baird continued some distance up the Mississippi side, and when within one hundred yards of the Defender, suddenly changed her course to the larboard and ran nearly square across toward the Louisiana shore, and directly across the bow of the descending boat; that the Defender, being near the middle of the river, quartering toward the Mississippi shore, with her starboard bow struck the starboard quarter of the Baird, near the middle of the boilers, tnereby giving a glancing blow, quartering aft in its course.

The respondents also aver that the Defender, after accepting the signal of the Baird, pursued the proper line of navigation, without any material change of direction; and that the sole cause of the collision was the sudden change of the Baird to the larboard, and her attempt to cross the bow of the Defender, when the boats were so near. The answer further avers, that the collision occurred just below the Tennessee landing, about one-third of the way from the Mississippi shore, and that it resulted solely from the fault of the Baird.

The answer also alleges that the Defender suffered damage to a small amount, for which the respondents claim compensation. And they also assert a claim for salvage service rendered the Baird, in saving the boat, and cargo from entire loss.

, The merits of this controversy obviously lie within a narrow compass. The parties agree in their statements of some of the facts involved in this collision. But as to the course and position of the boats previous to and at the time of the accident, their theories are in direct conflict, and both can not be sustained. The libellants Contend that the Defender did not run in accordance with the signal given and accepted. They insist that, instead of crossing to the Mississippi shore, she kept near the middle of the river, and when within a hundred yards of the Baird, wrongfully changed her direction, and steered, head on, toward the Baird, and ran into her as she was crossing to the Louisiana side. On the other hand, the respondents insist that, in obedience to the signal, their boat, at the time of the collision, was passing down nearer the Mississippi than the Louisiana shore, slightly quartering toward the Mississippi side, in the usual and proper place for a descending boat, and that the Baird, in plain violation of an established rule of navigation, when the boats were from one hundred to .two hundred yards apart, attempted to make a straight crossing directly across the bow of the Defender, and that by reason of this movement the Defender unavoidably, and without any fault on her part, came in contact with her.

As to some of the facts involved in this controversy there is no conflict, either in the statement of the parties or the evidence adduced. There is no dispute as to the signals which passed between the boats, nor is there any disagreement in the evidence, that the Baird was coming up, near the Mississippi side, when the Defender was first seen, about a mile above, near what the witnesses call a false point on the Louisiana shore. Nor is there any question that the river was wide the whole distance between the boats when the signals passed. It is equally certain there was sufficient depth of water for either boat, from shore to shore. It was about twelve o’clock at night, but not so dark as to prevent a boat from being distinctly seen a mile distant, or to render navigation difficult or dangerous.

In reference to these general facts, it is very obvious that the collision could not have occurred without fault of one or both boats. And the question presented is, which boat is to be held responsible for the injury and loss resulting from the collision. The respondents insist that the first error or fault was committed by the Baird in signaling for the larboard or Louisiana shore. And the preponderance of the proof as to the proper and usual way of navigating the river at that point sustains this view. There is no evidence that the Baird had any business call to the opposite shore, and no reason is perceived why she could not have kept up the Mississippi side, at least until the descending boat had passed. There was sufficient water along that shore, nor does it appear that there was any difficulty in pursuing that course. It would seem, therefore, that the pilot of the. Baird erred in signaling for the larboard side. But it is insisted by the libellants that, by rule 2 of the rules of navigation adopted by the board of supervising inspectors under the steamboat law of 1832, it is the right of the ascending boat to choose the side' she prefers to take when meeting a down boat.

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Related

The Marshall
12 F. 921 (S.D. New York, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 1155, 1 Bond 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorp-v-the-defender-ohsd-1860.