1. A steamship desiring to pass a flotilla of scows towed by a
tug which she had followed on the flood tide up the Delaware River
and thence into the still water of the Schuylkill, repeated a
passing signal after making the turn, and upon receiving an assent
from the tug, proceeded up the mid-channel of the Schuylkill, and
collided with the scows, which had been swung across it laterally
from the tug by the momentum imparted by the tide in the Delaware.
Held, that the tug, by assenting to the passing, did not
assume responsibility for the maneuver, and that the fault lay
entirely with the steamship, as she should have anticipated the
effect of the tide, and kept out of the way. P.
278 U. S.
89.
2. Objections to a decree made by respondents who did not
themselves apply for certiorari are not to be considered. P.
278 U. S.
91.
20 F.2d 111 reversed; district court affirmed.
Certiorari, 275 U.S. 521, to a decree of the circuit court of
appeals which modified the decree of the district court in a
collision case. The petitioner, Charles Warner Company, owner or
charterer of the tug
Taurus and several scows, libeled,
in rem, the steamship
Gulftrade, one of the two
respondents herein (Gulf Refining Company, claimant) and two tugs,
the
Triton and the
Churchman. It also sought
damages from the two tug owners
in personam. The district
court gave judgment against the
Gulftrade and the
Independent Pier Company, the other respondent herein, owner of the
Triton, and dismissed the libel as to the
Churchman and its owner. The circuit court of appeals
decreed that the damages
Page 278 U. S. 86
should be divided between the petitioner and the respondents.
The latter did not apply for certiorari.
Page 278 U. S. 87
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two numbers on our docket present one cause in admiralty.
It arose out of a collision between the single screw steamer
Gulftrade -- 429 feet long, 59-foot beam -- and two loaded
scows which, with two others, were being towed by the tug
Taurus upon hawsers astern. The flotilla was about 400
feet long. Both the tug and scows were owned or chartered by
petitioner, Charles Warner Company. The
Gulftrade was
accompanied by the tugs
Triton and
Churchman,
made fast to her port bow and port quarter. They were owned
respectively by Independent Pier Company and Alfred E. Churchman.
The
Triton's master was upon the steamer, and commanded
the three associated vessels.
The accident occurred in the Schuylkill River near its
confluence with the Delaware at 3:00 p.m., October 1, 1923. The
weather was fair, tide flood, wind light.
Drawing her tow, the
Taurus passed slowly up the
Delaware with the tide and rounded into the still water of the
200-foot channel of the Schuylkill. The
Gulftrade followed
under her own power, carrying with her the attending tugs, their
engines motionless until
Page 278 U. S. 88
the last moment before the collision. Shortly after the
flotillas entered the Schuylkill, the
Gulftrade, for the
third time, by a single blast, indicated her desire to pass to
starboard -- eastward. The
Taurus (as she had done twice
before while in the Delaware) gave an assenting blast. Attempting
to pass in mid-channel, the steamer struck two of the scows and
caused material loss.
The district court found that:
"The set of the tide swung the tail of the tow to the eastward
and more or less athwart the channel until it had straightened out.
. . . This, however, was a condition which the steamship was bound
to anticipate, and doubtless did. What happened was that the
navigator of the ship expecting the tow would go to the westward,
and, seeing it was so headed, assumed it would be out of his way by
the time he reached the passing point, and that a passage up
mid-channel would be clear. In this he miscalculated, and hence the
collision."
It declared the steamer guilty of negligence, the
Taurus without fault, and awarded full damages in favor of
petitioner Charles Warner Company primarily against the Independent
Pier Company, owner of the
Triton and secondarily against
the
Gulftrade.
The circuit court of appeals held:
"Under the circumstances, the
Taurus was in fault in
giving consent to the
Gulftrade to come ahead, relying too
much on her ability to get out of the channel. Evidently the
Taurus miscalculated the situation. So, also, it seems the
Gulftrade was at fault. She was the following vessel. All
she had to do was to hold back, and not run into the scows. She
certainly saw danger ahead when she gave the second signal, and she
certainly saw it more imminent when she gave the third signal. It
was quite clear that she did go ahead, and took an equal chance
with the
Taurus on the ability of the latter to give her
free channel-way to pass. The result was a needless collision.
"
Page 278 U. S. 89
We cannot conclude that the
Taurus was in fault. She
was prudently navigated in plain view of the
Gulftrade,
who knew the relevant facts, and, by assenting that the latter
might pass, she certainly did not assume responsibility for the
maneuver. At most, the
Taurus obligated herself to hold
her course and speed so far as practicable, to do nothing to thwart
the overtaking vessel, and she knew of no circumstances not open to
the observation of the
Gulftrade which would prevent the
latter from going safely by, if prudently navigated. Of course, no
ship must ever lead another into a trap. There was ample room for
the
Gulftrade to pass. But, if not, she should have slowed
down and kept at a safe distance. Her fault was the direct and sole
cause of the collision.
By the Act to adopt regulations for preventing collisions, etc.,
approved June 7, 1897 (chapter 4, 30 Stat. 96
et seq.), it
is provided:
"Art. 18, Rule VIII. When steam vessels are running in the same
direction, and the vessel which is astern shall desire to pass on
the right or starboard hand of the vessel ahead, she shall give one
short blast of the steam whistle as a signal of such desire, and if
the vessel ahead answers with one blast, she shall put her helm to
port; or if she shall desire to pass on the left or port side of
the vessel ahead, she shall give two short blasts of the steam
whistle as a signal of such desire, and if the vessel ahead answers
with two blasts, shall put her helm to starboard; or if the vessel
ahead does not think it safe for the vessel astern to attempt to
pass at that point, she shall immediately signify the same by
giving several short and rapid blasts of the steam whistle, not
less than four, and under no circumstances shall the vessel astern
attempt to pass the vessel ahead until such time as they have
reached a point where it can be safely done, when said vessel ahead
shall signify her willingness by blowing the proper signals. The
vessel
Page 278 U. S. 90
ahead shall in no case attempt to cross the bow or crowd upon
the course of the passing vessel. . . ."
"Art. 23. Every steam vessel which is directed by these rules to
keep out of the way of another vessel shall, on approaching her, if
necessary, slacken her speed or stop or reverse. . . ."
"Art. 24. Notwithstanding anything contained in these rules,
every vessel overtaking any other shall keep out of the way of the
overtaken vessel."
Under these regulations, the duty of the
Gulftrade was
clear. She should have anticipated the effect of the flood tide in
the Delaware upon the flotillas as they rounded into the still
water of the Schuylkill and kept herself out of the zone of evident
danger.
In
Southern Pacific Co. v. Haglund (The Thoroughfare),
277 U. S. 304, we
said:
"The
Relief was not at fault in accepting the passing
signal of the
Thoroughfare. This was merely an assent to
the proposed passage in the rear of the
Enterprise,
expressing an understanding of what the
Thoroughfare
proposed to do and an agreement not to endanger or thwart it by
permitting an interfering change in the position of the
Enterprise. See Atlas Transp. Co. v. Lee Line
Steamers, 235 F. 492, 495. And the
Relief, being in a
position to fully carry out its agreement, was under no obligation
to decline the passing signal because of the approach of the
Union on the other side, and to sound instead a warning
signal. There was nothing in the situation to indicate that the
approach of the
Union would prevent the
Thoroughfare from passing safely, if, as the
Relief had the right to assume, it were navigated with due
care."
In
Atlas Transp. Co. v. Lee Line Steamers, 235 F. 492,
495, the Circuit Court of Appeals (8th C.C.A.) had held:
"The reply of the
Josh Cook to the passing signal of
the
Rees Lee was no more than an assent to it at the risk
of
Page 278 U. S. 91
the vessel proposing it. It expressed an understanding of what
the
Rees Lee proposed to do, and an agreement not to
thwart it, but the success of the maneuver was at the risk of the
Rees Lee."
Whitridge v.
Dill, 23 How. 448,
64 U. S.
453:
"The vessel astern, as a general rule, is bound to give way, or
to adopt the necessary precautions to avoid a collision. That rule
rests upon the principle that the vessel ahead, on that state of
facts, has the seaway before her, and is entitled to hold her
position, and consequently the vessel coming up must keep out of
the way."
The steamer Rhode Island, Fed.Cas. No. 11,745, 20
Fed.Case 646, 650:
"The approaching vessel, when she has command of her movements,
takes upon herself the peril of determining whether a safe passage
remains for her beside the one preceding her, and must bear the
consequences of misjudgment in that respect."
See also City of Baltimore, 282 F. 490, 492;
The
Pleiades, 9 F.2d 804, 806.
Objections to the decree below were offered by counsel for
respondents in their briefs and arguments here. But no application
for certiorari was made in their behalf and we confine our
consideration to errors assigned by the petitioner.
Steele v.
Drummond, 275 U. S. 199,
275 U. S. 203;
Federal Trade Com. v. Pacific Paper Assn., 273 U. S.
52,
273 U. S. 66;
Webster Co. v. Splitdorf Co., 264 U.
S. 463,
264 U. S. 464;
Alice state Bank v. Houston Pasture Co., 247 U.
S. 240,
247 U. S. 242;
Hubbard v. Tod, 171 U. S. 474,
171 U. S. 494;
The Maria
Martin, 12 Wall. 31.
The decree of the circuit court of appeals is reversed, and that
of the district court is affirmed. The cause will be remanded to
the latter court for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.
Reversed.