1. A vessel, off her course on a dark and stormy night in the
vicinity of dangerous shores, is held to the highest degree of
vigilance in maintaining the most effective lookout. P.
259 U. S. 7.
The Ariadne,
13 Wall. 475.
2. In this case, there was negligence in stationing the lookout
in the wheelhouse only when a better opportunity to see ahead was
afforded at the bow. P.
259 U. S. 6.
3. Upon the evidence,
held that the petitioner's tug
was guilty of negligence in taking her tow, the respondent's barge,
dangerously near to the shore, and in then changing her course by a
right angle suddenly, without a warning signal, with the result
that the barge's shackle, to which the to line was attached, gave
way under a sudden lateral strain and the barge was cast adrift and
grounded. P.
259 U. S. 4.
4. A towage contract providing that a tug will render reasonable
assistance to a barge from time to time in any emergency, and
whilst at anchor be within call to render such reasonable
assistance, but that the tug owner shall not be liable for any
damage to the barge or cargo while in tow or at anchor, is to be
construed as
Page 259 U. S. 2
leaving the tug liable for damage to the barge or cargo while in
tow due to the tug' failure to render reasonable assistance to the
barge in an emergency. P.
259 U. S. 11.
268 F. 449 affirmed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals which
reversed a decree of the district court dismissing a libel
in
rem filed by the present respondent, against a tug owned by
the petitioner, to recover for damage to the respondent's barge and
its cargo, resulting, as it was alleged, from the unseaworthiness
of the tug and the negligence and want of skill of those in charge
of her.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was begun by a libel
in rem filed by A. W.
Mylroie, the respondent herein, as owner of the American barge
Bangor, and lawful bailee of its cargo, against the
British tug
Commodore, in the District Court of Alaska.
The libel, as later amended, charged in substance that the
Commodore was engaged in towing the
Bangor on a
voyage from the international boundary between British Columbia and
the State of Washington to Anchorage, Alaska; that the tug at 2
o'clock in the morning on March 26, 1917, being then in Alaskan
waters, and out of her course in heavy wind and sea and a
snowstorm, sighting land immediately ahead, put her wheel hard
over, and under a full head of steam suddenly changed her course to
avoid the rocks and reefs on the shore of Mary Island, and that, by
reason of the snapping strain due to the sudden change of the tug's
course, the barge's shackle by which the towline was attached to
the barge was broken; that the barge drifted and
Page 259 U. S. 3
grounded on Mary Island, Alaska, with consequent damage to the
barge and cargo, all through the negligence and carelessness and
want of skill and want of knowledge of the waters on the part of
those in charge of the tug, and also because of the lack of
seaworthiness of the tug, in that it did not have a full complement
of men sufficient to keep a proper lookout at the bow of the
boat.
The petitioner joined issue upon these allegations by denying
negligence, lack of skill and unseaworthiness, and charged the
stranding of the barge with the consequent loss, to the
unseaworthiness of the shackle which had been furnished by the
barge owner. The tug owner further set up the defense against
recovery that he was exempted from liability for negligence because
of a clause of the towing contract.
The district court found for the owner of the tug and dismissed
the libel. It did not find it necessary to determine the effect of
the exemption clause of the towing contract because, from a
preponderance of the evidence, it found that there was neither
negligence nor lack of skill on the part of the tug, and that the
accident arose from the breaking of the shackle, which was
furnished by the barge owner, and that he had not sustained the
claim that it was subject to unusual or unnecessary strain through
the negligence of the tug. The circuit court of appeals reversed
the action of the district court, and took an entirely different
view of the effect of the evidence. It found that the tug was
unseaworthy, in that it did not have a large enough crew to station
a lookout at the bow, and that, if it had done so at a time when
the emergency required it, it could have avoided putting itself and
the barge in the position of danger which resulted in the loss of
the barge. It found further that the shackle was a new one with a
year's test, and that its breaking was due to the strain caused by
the sudden change of the course by the tug when it sighted
Page 259 U. S. 4
the rocks of Mary Island immediately ahead, and within dangerous
proximity, and put its helm hard down without notice by whistle to
the barge to enable the barge by putting its own helm hard down to
save itself. It held, moreover, that the clause of the contract
relied on by the tug owner exempting him from responsibility for
loss to the barge while in tow was void, and could form no
defense.
We have read the voluminous evidence in this record, and have
compared with care the findings of the two courts. After giving due
weight to the findings of the court which heard the witnesses, the
examination satisfies us that the district court was influenced too
much by the mere preponderance in number of the witnesses for the
tug owner, and that it did not sufficiently consider the
significance of certain conceded facts in sustaining the evidence
of the fewer witnesses for the barge owner. It was established
without contradiction that the night was a dirty one; that there
was a succession of snow squalls; that it was very dark; that the
proper course of the vessel was from Tree Point light to a point
two or three miles off Mary Island upon which there was a light
having a wide radius of observation; that the distance from Tree
Point light to the place of the wreck was 18 miles, and that the
actual course of the vessel in going that 18 miles was more than 2
miles nearer to the shore of Mary Island than it should have been.
There was a following wind of at least 30 miles an hour. In the
distance which the navigators of the vessel calculated she had run,
she would have picked up the Mary Island light a considerable time
before the accident had she been on her right course. This delay in
picking up the light should have advised them that she was out of
her course and in dangerous proximity to the shore. Their
calculations showed that they were only 16 1/2 miles from Tree
Point light when they had really made 18.
Page 259 U. S. 5
They did not put out a taffrail log, excusing this on the plea
that it was not the custom, and would not aid them. They did not
try echo signals because they said it would have done no good. They
did not try the lead to feel the depth and proximity to shore. No
explanation is given of why they departed so far from their course.
Suggestions are made of hidden currents, but none is shown to exist
there. Several of the expert witnesses called by the tug owner in
excusing the conduct of those in charge said that they frequently
had found difficulty in making this passage by Mary Island, and
were often out of their course. If that is true, and the place is a
dangerous one, then it called for additional care on the part of
the tug.
The tug had a captain, a mate and a pilot, so-called, who had
shipped as a purser. His name was Bjerre. The captain's name was
Johnson, and the mate's name was Dawe. Bjerre was pecuniarily
interested in the company which owned the tug, was its shore
captain, and went along to help the captain of the tug, as he
explained, because the captain of the tug was not used to outside
work -- that is, to work in the open ocean -- and part of the trip
would be in the open ocean. On the stand, Bjerre praised the
seamanship of Johnson somewhat extravagantly, and then, on
cross-examination, was obliged to admit that, in a subsequent
towage of the same barge, he had to discipline Johnson for getting
drunk on shore and coming to the vessel drunk -- an impeachment of
his unstinted praise. It is difficult to avoid the impression that
Bjerre went on the trip because the company was not certain of
Johnson's capacity to do the work safely. This seems to have been
understood by the crew, and explains why it was that the helmsman
said that he obeyed the orders of Bjerre, and why the mate
explained that he obeyed Bjerre's orders because he represented the
owners. Indeed, the vessel seems to have had two captains.
Page 259 U. S. 6
The evidence shows that, on the night in question, Bjerre and
Johnson were both in the wheelhouse; that the mate was there
sometimes, and that a helmsman named Charles Croft was at the
wheel. Johnson and Bjerre were constantly conferring as to the
course, and Bjerre professed to be the lookout. The wheelhouse was
40 feet from the stem and 18 feet above the deck. There was no
forecastle on the bow, and there were some obstructions there, but
nothing that a man of ordinary height could not have seen over if
at the bow, and there was no obstruction to the sight from the
wheelhouse. Bjerre testifies that, in addition to the snow squalls
that night, the following wind had blown the peculiarly dirty
smoke, due to the kind of coal they were using, in front of them,
and thus produced greater obscurity. This, Bjerre says, had cleared
up to some extent because. at 1 a.m., as the log shows, they slowed
down, though the distance made conflicts with the suggestion of a
great reduction of speed. Through all this difficulty of vision,
the tug was attempting to make its course and find land.
There was expert evidence that a lookout could see from the
wheelhouse better than from the bow; though some of the experts for
the tug testified that, under circumstances like these, they would
have sent a man to the bow as well. We agree with the court of
appeals that this was a case where a lookout should have been
stationed at the bow, and that the difference in position between
those in the wheelhouse and the man at the bow would have offered
greater opportunity to pick up the land by either the one or the
other than where the eyes of the tug were in the wheelhouse only.
The emergency was such that the greatest care of this kind was
necessary to avoid disaster. It is probable that, if a lookout had
been put at the bow, he might have seen the rocks for which they
were headed at a greater distance than they were seen by Capt.
Bjerre. Bjerre says he sighted land
Page 259 U. S. 7
when it was half a mile away, and Capt. Johnson agrees with him.
He is contradicted in this by the helmsman and the supercargo of
the barge and the subsequent event.
The injunctions with respect to the necessity for a lookout
devoting his whole attention to the situation ahead, contained in
the opinions of this Court, are so many that it is hardly necessary
to refer to more than one, that of
The
Ariadne, 13 Wall. 475, in which Mr. Justice Swayne
used this language:
"The duty of the lookout is of the highest importance. Upon
nothing else does the safety of those concerned so much depend. A
moment's negligence on his part may involve the loss of his vessel,
with all the property and the lives of all on board. The same
consequence may ensue to the vessel with which his shall collide.
In the performance of this duty, the law requires indefatigable
care and sleepless vigilance. . . . It is the duty of all courts
charged with the administration of this branch of our jurisprudence
to give it the fullest effect whenever the circumstances are such
as to call for its application. Every doubt as to the performance
of the duty and the effect of nonperformance should be resolved
against the vessel sought to be inculpated until she vindicates
herself by testimony conclusive to the contrary."
Attempt has been made in argument to distinguish cases in which
this rule has been applied from the one at bar on the ground that
they were cases in crowded harbors where collisions might have been
expected unless great care was taken. Certainly no such distinction
can be given weight in this case. A lookout is for the purpose of
seeing and advising those navigating the ship of what is in the
way, and the danger on a night like the one here presented an
exigency requiring the peculiar services of a lookout quite as much
as in a crowded harbor. We agree with the court of appeals that the
dangerous situation in which the tug and her tow were brought can
be reasonably charged to the absence of a proper lookout.
Page 259 U. S. 8
We come then to the question what caused the breaking of the
shackle. As to that, there is a sharp conflict of evidence between
the helmsman, Charles Croft, Capt. Johnson and Capt. Bjerre. Croft
testified for the barge owner, and the district judge said his
honesty made an impression on him. Croft said that Bjerre jumped to
the wheel and took it out of his hand, and put the wheel hard
aport, with the statement, "You are too darned slow;" that he
looked out and saw mist on the water, looking like wash upon the
rocks; that shortly after the turn, he felt a jar, and asked what
it was, that Bjerre answered, "We have lost the tow," and then
within a short time when Capt. Johnson came, he repeated, "The damn
tow is gone." Johnson and Bjerre would give the impression in their
evidence that Bjerre made out the land about half a mile away; that
he ordered the helmsman to change their course two points only, and
it was sometime after that, when the mate came in and reported that
the tow was gone. They said that there was at no time any jar. They
said that Croft's story applied to what happened after they had
lost the tow and had turned and gone toward the shore to her
assistance when suddenly they heard the surf and then had to put
their helm hard down to avoid going ashore. Croft is not shown to
have had any motive to misstate his evidence or to pervert facts.
It is not a situation that he would be likely to forget. The
relation and order of events were so clear that they would
naturally remain in his mind. Johnson and Bjerre both had very
strong motives for their story. The most noteworthy circumstance,
however, supporting Croft and shaking the credibility of the two
captains is that, though Bjerre and Johnson kept the log, they made
no note whatever of the change of course of two points, so that the
log does not show anything except "1.45 Barge broke away." The
omission of what it was most natural they should have put down if
it were such a leisurely change
Page 259 U. S. 9
as they testify, and one not in excitement and hurry, gives much
the greater weight in our judgment to the evidence of the helmsman.
It is an indication that the present story is one of later origin
than that night. The statement of the helmsman is supported too by
the evidence of the men on the barge, who testified to the jar that
they felt and then the breaking of the shackle.
A part of the shackle was recovered. The uncontradicted evidence
is that it was bought from a ship chandler a year before, and had
been tested by service during that period. Experts were called to
testify as to inferences to be drawn from the character of the
break in shackle. The most satisfactory witness was called by the
barge owner, who made the laboratory test and said positively that
the break was due to crystallization caused by a sudden strain. The
test showed that an arm of the shackle had a tensile strength of 47
tons, and less than that of the tow line. On cross-examination, the
tow's witness conceded that, if the strain was straight and direct
and steady, the tensile strength by the two arms of the shackle
might be doubled, but not so if the strain fell on one side or the
other. As the strain here was necessarily on one side, the shackle
became the weakest link in the chain between the tug and the
tow.
The circuit court of appeals found that the breaking of the
shackle was due to additional strain or snap of the sudden change
of course, and we concur in this view. The change of course by 90
degrees or at a right angle, as this, was would probably slacken
the tow line at first as the tow proceeded on its course and the
tug veered, but the progress of the tug on the new course would
take up the slack with a jerk.
The respondent's counsel charges negligence on the part of the
tug in not giving notice to the tow of the sudden change of course
by whistle. Expert evidence was called on behalf of the tug to show
that this was
Page 259 U. S. 10
not the custom. Indeed, it is not too much to say that the
expert evidence in this case as to customs prevailing in navigation
in those difficult inside passages on the British Columbia and
Alaska coast indicate such a laxity in the use of precautions that
we are not inclined to credit it, and certainly not to dignify such
alleged customs into a standard of due care. The evidence as to the
absence of necessity for the use of signals between tug and tow was
not satisfying. Indeed, it was admitted that at least one of the
great towing firms of that region had departed from the so-called
custom and had prepared a set of signals to be used between tug and
tow, and that this set of signals was on the tug that night. It was
not denied that an ordinary signal that the tug was about to change
her course would have notified the tow of the maneuver. We agree
with the circuit court of appeals that, under the circumstances and
in the great emergency, it was negligence not to have warned the
tow. Had the tow put her helm hard down, there is every probability
that it would have avoided the strain and the break in the
shackle.
Counsel on behalf of the tug owner press us with the argument
that there was a device on the tug for taking up and letting out
the tow line automatically to relieve the strain, and that this had
been set in operation that night. The mate testified that he had
his hand on the tow when he felt the jar of the break. If he had
his hand on the tow line, it is quite evident that it could not
have been paying out fast, and clearly it did not relieve the
strain.
We conclude that the tug was guilty of negligence in taking her
tow dangerously near to the shore from which, though she was able
to escape, she did not help her tow to escape as she might have
done by due warning. If she be liable for negligence, she must pay
for the loss to the tow and her cargo.
Page 259 U. S. 11
This brings us to the question how far the tug is exculpated
from liability for negligence by the contract. The clause of the
contract relied on by the tug owner is as follows:
"3. That the tug will render to the said barge
Bangor
reasonable assistance from time to time in any emergency which
might arise, and whilst discharging at Anchorage the tug is to be
within call of the barge at all times to render such reasonable
assistance in case of any emergency which might arise. The tug
company is not to be held liable for any damage which might happen
to the said barge
Bangor or its cargo while in tow or at
anchor."
The agreement of the tug to render to the barge reasonable
assistance from time to time in any emergency which might arise,
and the exemption of the tug company from liability for any damage
which might happen to the barge or its cargo while in tow, seem in
conflict, but it is our duty to reconcile them if we can.
In
Elderslie S.S. Co. v. Borthwick, (H. of L.) 10
Asp.Mar.Cas. N.S. 24, 26, the House of Lords was called upon to
declare the legal effect of a contract of affreightment with an
exemption clause relieving the ship, owners, and charterers from
liability for negligence of the master or other person in their
service, together with a provision that excepted loss or damage
from defects in hull if reasonable means had been taken to provide
against such defects. Lord Chancellor (Halsbury), in considering
these provisions apparently in conflict, used this language:
"The true construction of the clause is, according to my view,
that he is to be exempted from any liability for the particular
injury that has happened, and, if that had stood alone, I should
have thought it perfectly clear that he was not to be liable; but,
instead of that, he goes no to say in another part of the same
contract, to which I must, if I can, give some effect because of
that rule of
Page 259 U. S. 12
construction from which I cannot escape: 'I shall not be liable
for this same injury (as I must call it) if all reasonable means
have been taken to avoid it.' The only mode of reading as an entire
contract that instrument which has those two stipulations in it is
to suppose that you must read the first part of it thus, 'I am not
to be liable for this,' and then what comes after it by way of
exception, 'I shall not be liable unless I have failed to take all
reasonable means against the injury that has happened.' In that
way, you can read the two together, and you can make a reasonable
contract out of it."
Dealing with the clause in this case in the same way, we must
read it to mean that the tug was not to be held liable for any
damage which might happen to the barge or its cargo while in tow
unless the tug should not render reasonable assistance to the tow
in an emergency. As our view of the evidence results in the
conclusion that the negligence of the tug in not providing a proper
lookout created the emergency, and that the tug did not render
proper assistance to the tow in the emergency so created, the tug
is clearly liable for the loss. This makes it unnecessary for us to
consider the contention on behalf of the barge that the exemption
clause is void.
The circuit court of appeals directed a decree for the owner of
the tow, and sent the case back for a more satisfactory assessment
of damages. We brought the decree here by certiorari under §
240 of the Judicial Code. We now affirm the decree, and remand the
case to the district court for assessment of damages in conformity
to the mandate of the circuit court of appeals.