Ward v. Ogdensburgh

29 F. Cas. 199, 5 McLean 622
CourtDistrict Court, D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 199 (Ward v. Ogdensburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Ogdensburgh, 29 F. Cas. 199, 5 McLean 622 (ohiod 1853).

Opinion

LEAVITT, District Judge.

The libellants aver substantially, that said steamboat, being of eight hundred tons burden, with passengers and freight on board, loft Buffalo on the evening of the 19th of August. 1S32. for Detroit, and proceeding on lior voyage across the lake, by the usual and direct route, with all her signal lights burning and in good condition, about lialf-past two o'clock, in the morning of the 20th of August, off Long Point, on the Canada shore, was run into with great violence by the propeller Ogdensburgh. then on lior way from Cleveland to the entrance of the AVclland Canal; the said steamboat being struck on her larboard side, near the forward gangway, and the guaid and hull being so broken, that she filled with watei, sunk, and was a total loss to the libellants. It is also averred, that at the time of said collision, the Ogdensburgh did not have lights burning and properly displayed, as required by law; and was not then steering on the usual and proper route from Cleveland to the Welland Canal; and, that on the [201]*201approach of the Atlantic, though clearly visible for at least two miles, the propeller did not ■stop her engine, lessen her speed, alter her course, or take any other precaution to avoid a collision. It is also alleged, that the officers and crew of said steamboat, as the propeller approached, first put the helm a-port. and then hard a-port, to get out of the course of the propeller, and used every effort to prevent a collision, but that the propeller, though seeing the lights of the Atlantic at a great distance, did not port her helm, or slacken her speed, or display lawful signal lights, but was so unskillfully and improperly managed, that she was run nearly at right angles into and against the Atlantic; and that the collision resulted irom the carelessness, negligence, and unskill-fulness of the officers and crew of said propeller; and that the libellants have sustained ■damage thereby to the amount'of one hundred thousand dollars.

The answer of Chamberlain & Crawford, the claimants of the Ogdensburgh, which they aver to be a propeller of three hundred and fifty-three tons burthen, sets up in substance, that she left Cleveland with a heavy freight, about twenty minutes after twelve o’clock, in the afternoon of the 19th of August, 1852, and proceeded by way of Fairport. toward Ogdens-burgh. New York, the place of her destination, which was to be reached by means of the Welland Canal, in Canada; that about two o’clock, the next morning, steering her proper course, N. E. by E., for the entrance of said canal, the wind being light from S. W., and the weather somewhat hazy, her watch on deck discovered •a steamboat light, from two to three points off Iter starboard bow. and at the supposed distance of three miles; that keeping on her course at a speed of about seven miles an hour, her mate ascertained that the light was fast nearing her. and gave the signal to “slow" the engine; which was done, and the light still coming nearer, an order was given to stop; that finding the boats were in danger of collision. the engine of tlic propeller was reversed, •and she was backed; that these orders were given with all possible dispatch, but in spite of all these precautions a collision ensued.

The answer then avers, that by reason of the Atlantic's turning from her proper course, and continuing with unabated speed fifteen miles an hour, in a directum across the bow of the propeller, she fell with all her momentum upon the propeller’s stem, wrenching it out of place, .and carrying her half round. It is charged, that the collision was wholly caused by the unparalleled recklessness of the persons in command of the Atlantic: and that those navigating the propeller managed her according to the .approved rules of lake navigation, and with a. clue regard to the safety of both vessels. 4 It is also averred, that the propeller had all her lights burning, and displayed as required by law.

The claimants ask for a decree for the injury sustained by the propeller, as the result of the collision, and by the agreement of the parties, such a decree is to be rendered in this case, if in the judgment of the court the claimants are entitled to compensation. It is also further agreed, that the value of the Atlantic was seventy thousand dollars, and is to be so considered by the court if it shall be adjudged that the libellants are entitled to a decree in their favor.

The matters in controversy in this ease are indicated by the foregoing summary statement of the libel and answer.

A great mass of testimony, partly oral and partly in the form of depositions, has been exhibited to the court in support of the opposite claims of the parties, and as usual in investigations growing out of marine collisions, there is, in some material points, great conflict in the testimony. Without noticing the large portions of the evidence, which have no direct bearing on the points in dispute. I shall refer to that only which forms the basis of the conclusions to which I have been led.

But before noticing the facts, it will be proper to state some of the settled doctrines of the maritime law as to collisions. Lord Stowell, justly distinguished for his eminent ability as an admiralty judge, classifies the cases in which collisions may occur as follows: “In the first place a collision may happen, wfithout blame being imputable to either party, as where the loss is occasioned by a storm, or other vis major. In that case the misfortune must be borne by the party on whom it happens to light; the other not being responsible to him in any degree. Secondly: A misfortune of this kind may arise where both parties are to blame, where there has been want of due diligence or skill on both sides. In such case the rule of law is, that the loss must be apportioned between them, as having been occasioned by the fault of both of them. Thirdly: It may happen by the conduct of the suffering party only; and then the rule is, that the sufferer must bear his own burden. Lastly: It may have been the fault of the ship which ran the other down; and in this case, the innocent party would be entitled to an entire compensation from the other.” 2 Dod. Adm. 83; Abb. Shipp, marg. p. 230.

It is clear, from the general phase of the present ease, that it does not fall within the first classification. The disastrous collision under consideration did not happen through an agency beyond human control. There is a fault resting somewhere; a wrong-doer, chargeable with want of skill, or inattention to duty. The libellants insist that they are losers of their valuable steamboat and her appendages, by reason of the mismanagement of the Ogdensburgh. The respondents, on the other hand, insist, not only that they are not liable for the loss of the Atlantic, but that they are entitled to compensation for the injury sustained by them, as the result of the collision.

To make good their claim to indemnity, tlio libellants must show that the collision was caused by the fault of the other party, and that no censure attaches to those charged with the nun-agement and navigation of their boat. And, if [202]*202the respondents would show a just ground of claim for remuneration for their loss, it must appear that they are without fault. I think there is no foundation for urging that the present is a case of mutual culpability, calling for an apportionment of the loss between both parties. The maritime law is rigid in its exactions of unremitting care and vigilance on the part of those entrusted with the navigation and safe keeping of vessels of every kind, to avoid accidents and injuries by collision.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 199, 5 McLean 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-ogdensburgh-ohiod-1853.