The general rule, which prevails in cases tried by a circuit
court without a jury, that the trial court is bound to find every
fact material to its conclusion of law, and that a refusal to do
so, if properly excepted to, is ground for reversal, prevails also
in admiralty causes.
The libel in this case set forth, as ground for recovery, a
collision between the barge
Cross Creek in tow by the tug
Packer, and the barge
Atlanta, in tow by the tug
Wolverton, whereby the latter barge and its cargo suffered
material injury. The main question at issue was as to which tug was
in fault. After the circuit court had made its findings of fact,
the claimant submitted requests for several additional findings,
which the judge declined to find otherwise than as he had already
found. Among these was the following: "The porting of the
Wolverton's wheel, when she was abort 200 feet from the
Packer, was a change of four or five points from her
course." It appeared from the evidence brought up with the
exceptions that such was the fact.
Held that the claimant was entitled to a finding in
regard to this point.
This was a suit in admiralty, instituted by the New Jersey
Lighterage Company, appellee, owner of the barge
Atlanta,
against the steam tug Dr. John
Wolverton, which had the
Atlanta in tow, and also against the steam tug E. A.
Packer, to recover damages for a collision between the
Atlanta and a barge lashed along-side and in tow of the
Packer, on her port side, known as "
Cross Creek Barge No.
5," which occurred in the afternoon of October 25, 1880, near the
mouth of the East River, in the harbor of New York. Service never
having been obtained upon the
Wolverton, the case
proceeded against the Packer, and in the district court a decree
was granted dismissing the libel upon the ground that the
Wolverton was solely at fault for the collision. 20 F.
327. Upon appeal to the circuit court, this decree was reversed
upon the ground that the collision was partly, at least, the fault
of the
Packer, and that, under the rulings of this Court,
the libellant
Page 140 U. S. 361
was entitled to recover its entire damages against her, which
amounted, with interest, to $5,404.31, for which a decree was
rendered against her.
Pursuant to the act of February 16, 1875, 18 Stat. 315, the
following facts were found by the circuit court:
"First. That on the 25th day of October, 1880, the libellant was
the owner of the barge
Atlanta, and was a common carrier
of a cargo on said barge, as alleged in the libel."
"Second. That on that day, in the afternoon, a collision
occurred between said barge and the barge
Cross Creek No.
5, then in tow of the steam tug
Packer."
"Third. That the barge
Atlanta and her cargo were on
that day taken in tow by the steam tug
Wolverton at
Roberts' stores in the East River, to be towed to the long dock,
Jersey City, and were towed astern of said tug by a hawser of one
hundred and fifty feet in length between the tug and barge."
"Fourth. That on that day, the tug
Packer was bound
from the North River into the East River, having in tow on her port
side the barge
Cross Creek No. 5, loaded with about 450
tons of coal, the barge projecting beyond the bow of the tug."
"Fifth. As the
Wolverton, with her tow, was crossing
the mouth of the East River, the
Packer, with her tow, was
heading around the Battery into the East River, passing the New
York shore opposite the barge office, nearly two hundred yards
away."
"Sixth. That the tide in the East River was ebb, and at about
full strength. The
Wolverton and her tow were going with
the tide about seven miles an hour, and the
Packer and her
tow were proceeding against the tide at a speed of about two miles
an hour."
"Seventh. That the
Packer and her tow had come so far
around from the North River before seeing the
Wolverton as
to be in the ebb tide coming out of the East River, and when she
saw her, was heading up against that tide, and was about 200 yards
out from the shore opposite the barge office."
"Eighth. The vessels saw each other when about 500 yards apart,
and at that time the course of the
Wolverton was about
N.W. by N., and the course of the
Packer was E. by N.,
and
Page 140 U. S. 362
as they approached each other, the
Packer had the
Wolverton on her starboard bow and the
Wolverton
had the
Packer on her port bow, the
Wolverton
being further out in the river from the New York shore than the
Packer, and the vessels being upon crossing courses
converging toward the New York shore."
"Ninth. As soon as the
Packer saw the
Wolverton, she blew two blasts of her steam whistle. She
was then under a starboard wheel and making in somewhat toward the
end of the piers, but upon signaling the
Wolverton, she
starboarded the wheel still more. The
Wolverton made no
reply to the
Packer's signals, but kept on her course
without abating speed until within about 200 feet. The
Packer then blew two more whistles and reversed her
engines, and the
Wolverton ported her wheel. The
Wolverton passed the how of the
Packer and her
tow, but the libellant's barge was unable to do so, and her port
side came into collision with the bow of the
Packer's
tow."
"Tenth. At the time the
Wolverton ported her wheel,
danger of collision was imminent and a collision seemed
unavoidable."
"Eleventh. There was nothing in the river to interfere with the
navigation of either vessel. The collision occurred about 400 or
500 feet off the ends of the piers and just below the slip of the
South ferry."
"Twelfth. There was no local usage of navigation applicable to
the situation of the vessels when they discovered each other."
"Thirteenth. That between the tide of the East River and the
North River there is an eddy which extends out about 400 feet from
the barge office, and the Parker had passed through this eddy and
reached the ebb tide, which struck on the port bow of her tow and
swung the vessels still further off shore before her pilot saw the
Wolverton."
"Fourteenth. The libellant's barge was in all respects properly
navigated. By reason of the collision, the barge and cargo
sustained serious injury."
The following conclusions of law are found:
"First. The two tugs being on crossing courses, it was the
Page 140 U. S. 363
duty of the
Packer, having the
Wolverton on
her starboard hand, to keep out of the way, and the duty of the
Wolverton to keep her course."
"Second. It was the duty of the
Packer to port her
wheel and stop and reverse her engine in time to avoid the
collision."
"Third. The libellant is entitled to recover against the
Packer the damages sustained by the collision."
The course of the
Wolverton, as stated in the eighth
finding, was subsequently changed by the circuit judge from N.W. by
N. to W.N.W.
From the decree entered upon this finding, an appeal was taken
by the owner of the
Packer to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
This Court has repeatedly held that under the Act of February
16, 1875, 18 Stat. 315, "to facilitate the disposition of cases in
the Supreme Court of the United States, and for other purposes," we
are no longer at liberty to pass upon disputed questions of fact,
but are bound to accept the findings of the circuit court as
conclusive, and are limited to a determination of questions of law,
and to the validity of such rulings, excepted to at the time, as
may be presented by a bill of exceptions prepared as in actions at
law.
The Abbotsford, 98 U. S. 440;
The Benefactor, 102 U. S. 214;
The Clara, 102 U. S. 200;
The Adriatic, 103 U. S. 730;
The Connemara, 108 U. S. 352,
108 U. S. 360;
Watts v. Camors, 115 U. S. 353,
115 U. S. 363;
The Gazelle, 128 U. S. 474. In
the case of
The Abbotsford, it was held that the only
rulings which could be presented for review here by bill of
exceptions were those made upon questions of law, following in this
particular a multitude of prior rulings under analogous statutes.
This was also affirmed in
The Annie Lindsley, 104 U.
S. 185, with an additional remark
Page 140 U. S. 364
by Mr. Justice Woods that
"where the circuit court has passed on all the issues, we cannot
listen to complaints that it has refused to find certain facts
which it was asked to find, or has found certain other facts which
the weight of the testimony did not warrant."
It does not, however, necessarily follow that this Court is
bound to determine the case upon the precise facts found by the
circuit court, if, in its opinion, such findings are ambiguous,
contradictory, or incomplete or fail to establish a satisfactory
basis for a decision. The circuit court is bound to pass upon and
find every material and ultimate fact necessary to a proper
determination of the question of liability, and in case of refusal
to make such finding, an exception may be taken thereto which can
be considered by this Court upon appeal. It cannot be that this
Court is concluded by a finding, for instance, of a single material
fact tending to show fault on the part of one vessel when there is
uncontradicted evidence of other facts which show either that this
fault did not contribute to the collision or that there were
contributing faults upon the part of the other vessel which might
make a case for a division of damages. If a circuit court could
find as a fact that a collision was due to the fault of one vessel,
an appeal to this Court would be useless, and unless the findings
set forth all the material facts, the ultimate finding of fault
becomes more or less a finding of a fact, when it should be a legal
inference from other facts.
The question is by no means a new one in this Court. In
The
Francis Wright, 105 U. S. 381,
105 U. S. 387,
it was said by Chief Justice Waite that
"if the circuit court neglects or refuses, on request, to make a
finding one way or the other on a question of fact material to the
determination of the cause when evidence has been adduced on the
subject, an exception to such refusal, taken in time, and properly
presented by a bill of exceptions, may be considered here on
appeal. So too, if the court, against remonstrance, finds a
material fact which is not supported by any evidence whatever, and
exception is taken, a bill of exceptions may be used to bring up
for review the ruling in that particular. In the one case, the
refusal to find
Page 140 U. S. 365
would be equivalent to a ruling that the fact was immaterial,
and in the other that there was some evidence to prove what is
found when in truth there was none. Both these are questions of
law, and proper subjects for review in an appellate court."
It was indicated that the bill of exceptions "must be prepared
as in actions at law," where it is used "not to draw the whole
matter into examination again," but only separate and distinct
points, and those of law. This practice was approved in
Merchants' Ins. Co. v. Allen, 121 U. S.
67. In
The John H. Pearson, 121 U.
S. 469, the question arose as to what was meant by the
term "Northern Passage" from Gibraltar to New York, and it was held
that the court below should have ascertained from the evidence what
passages there were which vessels were accustomed to take, and then
determine which of them the vessel was allowed by its contract to
choose as the northern, and the decree was reversed and the case
remanded for further proceedings upon this ground.
There is no practice under this statute which is peculiar to
courts of admiralty. The rule is general that wherever the trial
court finds the facts and the conclusions of law therefrom, it is
bound to find every fact material to its conclusion, and a refusal
to do so, if properly excepted to, is a ground for reversal. Thus,
in cases tried by the court without a jury, under Rev.Stat.
sections 649, 700, the findings of the circuit court are conclusive
upon this Court, and the power of this Court to review extends only
to the sufficiency of the facts found to support the judgment,
Tyng v. Grinnell, 92 U. S. 467, and
if not sufficient, the case may be remanded for trial upon other
issues involved therein.
Ex Parte French, 91 U. S.
423. The findings of the court under these sections are
treated as a special verdict and are gauged by the rules applicable
to them,
Norris v.
Jackson, 9 Wall. 125;
Copelin v.
Insurance Co., 9 Wall. 461,
76 U. S. 467;
Supervisors v. Kennicott, 103 U.
S. 554, and, as was said in
Graham v.
Bayne, 18 How. 60,
59
U. S. 63,
"if a special verdict be ambiguous or imperfect -- if it find
but the evidence of facts, and not the facts themselves, or finds
but part of the facts in issue, and is silent as to others -- it is
a mistrial,
Page 140 U. S. 366
and the court of error must order a
venire de novo.
They can render no judgment on an imperfect verdict or case
stated."
Under a similar method of procedure in several of the states, it
is held that the findings must contain all the facts and
circumstances necessary to a proper determination of the questions
involved, and in default thereof the judgment of the court below
will be reversed and the case sent back for a new trial.
Wood
v. La Rue, 9 Mich. 158;
Howerter v. Kelly, 23 Mich.
337;
Adams v. Champion, 31 Mich. 233;
Briggs v.
Brushaber, 43 Mich. 330;
Bates v. Wilbur, 10 Wis.
415;
Addleman v. Erwin, 6 Ind. 494.
The facts found in the present case are substantially that the
Wolverton and her tow were bound from Roberts' stores, in
the East River upon the Brooklyn side, to the long dock in Jersey
City upon a W.N.W. course, and at a speed of about seven miles an
hour. The
Packer, with her barge alongside, constituting
in fact one vessel, was heading around the Battery into the East
River, and at the time she first saw the
Wolverton was
upon a course E. by N., and heading against a strong tide at a
speed of about two miles an hour. The two vessels made each other
about 500 yards apart. From this statement of their respective
headings it is quite evident, and the Court also finds as a fact,
that they were upon crossing courses; that the
Packer had
the
Wolverton on her starboard side and was bound, under
the nineteenth rule of § 4233, to keep out of her way.
In fulfilling this obligation, however, she was entitled to act,
within the limitations imposed by the requirements of good
seamanship, upon the judgment of her master, and to put her helm to
port or starboard, and there was a correlative duty, no less
imperative, on the part of the
Wolverton "to keep her
course." Rule 23.
The Sea Gull,
23 Wall. 165,
90 U. S. 176;
New York &c. Steamship Co.
v. Rumball, 21 How. 372,
62 U. S. 384;
The Adriatic, 107 U. S. 512,
107 U. S. 518.
While this duty of avoidance is ordinarily performed by porting and
passing under the stern of the other vessel, and while this is
evidently, under ordinary circumstances, the safer and more prudent
course, cases not infrequently occur where good seamanship
Page 140 U. S. 367
sanctions, if it does not require, that the maneuver shall be
executed by starboarding, and crossing the bows of the approaching
vessel. Of course, in doing this the steamer takes the risk that
the approaching vessel, while fulfilling her own obligation of
keeping her course, may reach the point of intersection before she
has passed it herself, and hence at night or in thick weather the
maneuver would be likely to be attended with great danger. In the
present case, however, there were circumstances which indicate that
the selection of this course may have been such an exercise of
discretion upon the part of the master as was not inconsistent with
sound judgment and good seamanship. It was broad daylight, the
weather was clear, and a careful lookout could not fail to hear the
signals of an approaching vessel and to estimate properly her
course, her bearings, and her distance. There was a strong tide
ebbing out of the East River, and the
Packer was making
her way slowly and with some apparent difficulty against it. It was
obviously to her advantage to keep as near to the piers, heading as
she was directly against the tide, as it was possible to do, since
such a decided porting as would be necessary to avoid the
Wolverton and her tow would have compelled her to take the
full force of the tide upon her port side, and exposed her to a
strong outward drift as well as to the probability of the
Atlanta's sagging down upon her. Whether the starboarding
of the
Packer was a fault or not would depend largely upon
the question whether, assuming that the
Wolverton kept her
course and maintained her then rate of speed, either vessel would
pass the point of intersection before the other reached it. If it
were clear that no collision would have occurred had the
Wolverton kept her course, then the starboarding of the
Packer was not a fault, since the point of intersection
would either be ahead or astern of the
Packer. But if such
starboarding was likely to involve risk of a collision, then, of
course, it was a fault.
It was suggested upon the argument that there was a rule of the
supervising inspectors making it obligatory upon a crossing steamer
to avoid the one having the right of way by porting her helm in all
cases; but no such rule is incorporated
Page 140 U. S. 368
in the record or in the briefs, and it is not a regulation of
which we can take judicial notice. But even if such rule were
proved, it is by no means clear that the circumstances of this case
would not bring it within the exception contained in the
twenty-fourth rule of "special circumstances" requiring a departure
from the general regulations.
Whether the
Packer was guilty of fault in starboarding
or not, the duty of the
Wolverton was clear. She was bound
(1) to keep her course, and (2) to check her speed if there was
apparent risk of a collision, and, if necessary to avoid immediate
danger, to stop. She did neither. The eighth finding is that "the
vessels saw each other when about 500 yards apart," and the ninth
that
"as soon as the
Packer saw the
Wolverton, she
blew two blasts of her steam-whistle. She was then under a
starboard wheel, and making in somewhat toward the end of the
piers."
There is no finding whether the signals of the
Packer
were heard by the
Wolverton or not, but it is fairly
inferable that if the whistles were blown at a distance of 500
yards, they would be or ought to have been heard, and, under such
circumstances, the porting of the
Wolverton was a gross
fault unless it can be excused by the imminence of the peril.
The Corsica, 9
Wall. 630. The tenth finding bears upon this point, and is as
follows: "At the time the
Wolverton ported her helm,
danger of collision was imminent and a collision seemed
unavoidable." It is difficult to give a satisfactory interpretation
to this finding. While it is a familiar law of collision that a
wrong order, given
in extremis, or, as some of the
authorities say, "to ease the blow," will not be treated as a
fault, such principle manifestly has reference to a collision
between the vessel guilty of the wrong order and the approaching
vessel. Now no such collision took place in this case, since it was
the
Atlanta, and not the
Wolverton, which
received the blow. It would seem, too, the finding that the
collision "seemed unavoidable" could not have had reference to a
collision between the
Packer and the
Atlanta,
since the latter was 150 feet astern of the
Wolverton, and
to bring about a collision between her and the
Packer or
the
Packer's tow (which, being lashed alongside, may be
treated as identical
Page 140 U. S. 369
with the
Packer), it was necessary for the
Wolverton to cross from the starboard to the port bow of
the
Packer and to drag the
Atlanta under the bow
of the latter. Indeed, it seems impossible to exonerate the
Wolverton in view of the other finding that the vessels
saw each other when about 500 yards apart, and that as soon as the
Packer saw the
Wolverton -- that is, at this
distance of 500 yards -- she blew two blasts of her steam whistle.
Hearing this signal as she did, or as she was bound to do, the
porting of the
Wolverton must almost of necessity have
brought about a collision. The whistle was a signal to her that
porting was the one thing she must not do. If, in fact as testified
by her pilot, the
Wolverton ported four or five points
before the collision took place, it not only disposes of the tenth
finding, but shows that the collision was largely, if not wholly,
the fault of the
Wolverton.
The
Wolverton seems also to have been at fault for
excessive speed. If the officer in charge were satisfied that the
signals of the
Packer and her apparent starboarding were
an error and involved a risk of collision, it was his duty under
Rule 21 to slacken speed before crossing her bows, or, if
necessary, to stop, or even to reverse, if it could be done without
danger to tow. This rule was applied by the House of Lords to a
collision between crossing vessels in the recent case of
The
Memnon, 62 Law Times (N.S.) 84, 6 Asp.Mar.Law Cases 488,
wherein it was declared to be the duty of the vessel entitled to
keep her course to comply with the rule as to slackening speed, or
stopping and reversing if necessary, and, if she does not do so,
the burden is upon her to show that to continue her speed was in
fact the best and most seaman-like maneuver under the
circumstances. It is not easy to see how, under any view of the
facts, the
Wolverton can be exonerated from fault in this
particular.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that after the circuit
court had made its findings of fact in this case, eight additional
findings were submitted by the claimant, which the circuit judge
declined to find otherwise than he had already found, except with
regard to the compass course of the
Wolverton,
Page 140 U. S. 370
which he had found to be N.W. by N. by mistake. We have already
held that the circuit court is bound to find all such facts as are
material and necessary to a correct determination of the question
of liability involved. Upon examination of these proposed findings
in connection with the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions,
we think that most of them are immaterial or are covered by the
findings actually made. The sixth, however, is important, and reads
as follows: "The porting of the
Wolverton's wheel when she
was about 200 feet from the
Packer was a change of four or
five points from her course." We think the claimant was entitled to
a finding in regard to this point. It would also have been more
satisfactory if the court had found the number of points the
Packer swung under the order to starboard given "upon
signaling the
Wolverton," as found in the ninth finding;
but as no request was made for a finding upon this point, and no
exception taken to the omission, it is now too late for the
claimant to demand it.
The decree of the court below will be reversed, and the case
remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.