Implicit in that portion of Art. 16 of the Inland Rules of
Navigation that directs a moderate speed for vessels proceeding in
foggy weather, and in the concomitant half-distance rule, is the
assumption that vessels can reasonably be expected to be traveling
on intersecting courses. On the facts of this case, it was totally
unrealistic to anticipate the possibility that the vessels were on
intersecting courses, and the rule was not applicable. Pp.
409 U. S.
144-146.
451 F.2d 1369, reversed.
REHNQUIST, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, and POWELL, JJ.,
joined. STEWART, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which DOUGLAS
and BRENNAN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
409 U. S.
147.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
While proceeding up the Columbia River, the oil tanker S. S.
Santa Maria, bareboat chartered by petitioner, was struck
by a barge owned by respondent Oliver J. Olson & Co. The barge
was being towed by the tugboat
San Jacinto, owned by
respondent Star & Crescent Towboat Co. Both vessels were
damaged. Petitioner commenced this admiralty action for damages to
the Santa Maria, and respondent cross-libeled for damages to the
barge. The District Court found the collision resulted solely
from
Page 409 U. S. 141
negligence on the part of the crew of the
San Jacinto,
and dismissed the cross-libel. 304 F. Supp. 519 (Ore. 1969). The
Ninth Circuit affirmed the finding that the
San Jacinto
had been negligent, but determined that the
Santa Maria
was also negligent in violating the "half-distance" rule, 30 Stat.
99, 33 U.S.C. § 192. That court therefore reversed with
directions that the District Court determine the amount of damage
sustained by the barge and assess damages under the divided damages
rule.
See The Schooner Catherine v.
Dickinson, 17 How. 170 (1855). We granted
certiorari, 405 U.S. 954 (1972), principally to consider
petitioner's request that we abandon the divided damages rule. The
orderly disposition of the issues presented by the petition for
certiorari, however, requires that we address ourselves to the
issue of liability before reaching the question of damages. Since,
in so doing, we conclude that the Court of Appeals was wrong in
holding the
Santa Maria liable at all, we do not reach the
issue of damages.
I
On the evening of December 24, 1967, the
Santa Maria,
loaded with 17,000 tons of petroleum products, was proceeding up
the Columbia River toward Portland. The ship was steaming on the
Oregon side of the channel, with clear visibility. At the same
time, the
San Jacinto was proceeding downriver, towing a
275-foot barge, fully loaded with lumber, by a 250-foot towline.
Proceeding on the Washington side of the channel, it had
encountered foggy weather conditions upriver. As the
San
Jacinto approached Cooper Point, the
Santa Maria,
steaming upstream, sighted the tug both visually and by radar. The
two vessels were more than a mile apart and on opposite sides of
the 500-foot-wide shipping channel. There was heavy fog, described
as "tule fog," around Cooper Point, but the fog was localized on
the Washington
Page 409 U. S. 142
side of the channel. Although there was haze and drizzle, there
was no fog on the Oregon side of the channel; the visibility from
the bridge of the
Santa Maria upstream was between one and
one-half and two miles.
As the
San Jacinto entered the fog on the Washington
side off Cooper Point, the
Santa Maria lost visual contact
with the tug and barge. The
Santa Maria's pilot did not
track the
San Jacinto on radar, believing that the tug
would remain on the Washington side of the channel and knowing that
there was ample room for a port-to-port passage. At this time, the
Santa Maria was proceeding at half-speed making
approximately seven knots.
The watch on the
San Jacinto had not sighted the
Santa Maria when the tug entered the heavy fog off Cooper
Point. The tug's captain testified that, after entering the fog, he
cut speed to three or three and one-half knots, and the visibility
dead ahead was approximately 50 yards. The
San Jacinto's
navigators were "navigating by visual sight of the Washington
coast," and the captain estimated that the tug passed between 50
and 75 yards off Cooper Point. At that point, the crew of the
San Jacinto heard one blast of a ship's horn (later
discovered to have been that of the
Santa Maria), and
responded with the fog signal for a tug with a barge in tow. No
visual sighting of a ship was made, however. Shortly thereafter,
the captain sighted range lights, which, he testified, he thought
were 20 degrees off his starboard bow. To avoid what he anticipated
to be a momentary collision, the captain swung the
San
Jacinto to port -- towards the Oregon side of the channel --
and executed a U-turn, hoping to run upriver and thus avoid a
collision.
The
San Jacinto started the U-turn while still in the
heavy fog, and the execution of the turn brought the tug on a
course directly across that of the
Santa Maria. The
Santa Maria sighted the
San Jacinto emerging from
the fog, at right angles to the
Santa Maria, at a distance
of
Page 409 U. S. 143
approximately 900 feet. Full astern was immediately ordered. The
San Jacinto, quickly completing the turn, headed safely
upriver. Before the
Santa Maria could completely stop,
however, the barge in tow sideslipped across the channel, crashing
into the port bow of the
Santa Maria; the force of that
blow drove the tanker aground.
The District Court found that the
San Jacinto and the
barge, and those in charge of navigation, were negligent in eight
respects, including navigating at excessive speed, failing to
maintain a proper lookout, and
"acting hastily and without sufficient cause in pulling the tow
across the channel when there was adequate clearance for the tug
and barge to pass port to port."
The court found that "the collision was proximately caused by
the sole fault and negligence" of the
San Jacinto and the
barge, and that the acts of negligence allegedly committed by the
Santa Maria did not "proximately [contribute] to the
collision and resulting damage." 304 F. Supp. at 521, 522.
The Ninth Circuit partially reversed, holding that the
Santa
Maria was proceeding at an immoderate speed in traveling at
three to seven knots "while approaching the edge of the fog bank."
That court reasoned that the
San Jacinto was only 900 feet
from the
Santa Maria when the tug emerged from the fog
bank, and the
Santa Maria's speed was such that she could
not stop within half that distance. The court, relying on
The
Silver Palm, 94 F.2d 754 (CA9),
cert. denied sub nom.
United States v. Silver Line, Ltd., 304 U.
S. 576 (1937), deemed it immaterial that the visibility
up the Oregon side of the channel -- the direction in which the
Santa Maria was headed -- was almost two miles, because,
in its view, the "relevant distance" for calculating the proper
speed under the half-distance rule was the distance between the
tanker and the fog bank -- to port of the
Santa Maria.
Finding
Page 409 U. S. 144
statutory fault, and ruling that petitioner had failed to prove
that that fault could not have possibly contributed to the
collision,
See The
Pennsylvania, 19 Wall. 125 (1874), the Court of
Appeals held the
Santa Maria liable for half the total
damages.
II
The question of the liability of the
Santa Maria turns
on the application of Art. 16 of the Inland Rules of Navigation, 33
U.S.C. § 192. That Rule provides in pertinent part:
"Every vessel shall, in a fog, mist, falling snow, or heavy
rainstorms, go at a
moderate speed, having careful regard
to the existing circumstances and conditions."
(Emphasis added.) Although the statutory test for determining
the proper speed at which a vessel should proceed in a fog is
phrased in general terms, our decisions have attached a
well-recognized gloss to that phrase. This gloss on the statutory
rule, variously referred to as the half-distance rule or the "rule
of sight," is that, in a fog, "a moderate speed" is that
"rate of speed as would enable [the vessel] to come to a
standstill, by reversing her engines at full speed, before she
should collide with a vessel which she should see through the
fog."
The Nacoochee, 137 U. S. 330,
137 U. S. 339
(1890).
See also The Colorado, 91 U. S.
692,
91 U. S. 702
(1876);
The Umbria, 166 U. S. 404,
166 U. S. 417
(1897). As stated in
The Chattahoochee, 173 U.
S. 540,
173 U. S. 548
(1899), "[t]he principal reason for such reduction of speed is that
it will give [both] vessels time to avoid a collision after coming
in sight of each other." If two vessels, upon sighting each other,
are proceeding at rates of speed such that
Page 409 U. S. 145
each can stop before it reaches the point at which the courses
of the two intersect, collision is impossible.
There can be no quarrel with the salutary purpose of this "rule
of thumb." It is premised on the notion that, when a ship is
traveling under foggy weather conditions in waters in which other
ships might be proceeding on intersecting courses, the speed of
each ship must be such as to enable her to stop within half the
distance separating the ships when they first sight each other.
Implicit in the rule, however, is the assumption that vessels can
reasonably be expected to be traveling on intersecting courses. If,
on the facts of the case, it is totally unrealistic to anticipate
the possibility that a vessel will travel on a particular heading
that would intersect the course of another ship, the reason for the
rule is rather clearly not present.
Those cases in which this Court has upheld a finding of
statutory fault because of a violation of the half-distance rule
involved ships proceeding in fog on established coastal shipping
lanes,
The City of New York, 147 U. S.
72 (1893);
The Nacoochee, supra; cf. The Colorado,
supra (Lake Huron), or ships traveling near or in a harbor,
The Umbria, supra; cf. The Ludvig Holberg, 157 U. S.
60 (1895) (no fault). We do not imply that, because a
vessel is running near fog, as opposed to running in it, the vessel
is not required to proceed at "a moderate speed" in relation to the
distance to the fog cover. That was, indeed, the circumstance in
The Silver Palm, supra, upon which the Ninth Circuit
relied. But there, a naval cruiser was traveling, with clear
visibility ahead but with fog banks on each side, on the busy
coastal shipping lane between San Francisco and Los Angeles. On
such a course, it is reasonable to expect that another ship might
steam out of the fog at right angles to, and on a collision course
with, the first vessel.
Page 409 U. S. 146
The rule of sight was applicable there precisely because of the
reasonable possibility that such an event might occur.
The facts of our case were significantly different. The
Santa Maria and the
San Jacinto were proceeding
on opposite sides of a well-defined and relatively narrow channel.
The
Santa Maria had last sighted the tug only a mile
ahead, proceeding along the Washington coast. Those in charge of
the navigation of the tanker cannot be faulted for not anticipating
the tug's totally unorthodox maneuver in darting across such a
channel.
The Victor & The Plymothian, 168 U.
S. 410 (1897). The visibility in the direction in which
the
Santa Maria was headed was almost two miles. There is
no evidence in the record suggesting that the speed of the tanker
would have prevented her from coming to a complete halt within half
the distance of sighting a vessel that was either proceeding on a
remotely foreseeable intersecting course or else being overtaken by
her. The tug emerged from a fog bank only 900 feet from the tanker
on a course and for reasons that no seaman could, under the
circumstances, have anticipated.
The District Court's finding that any negligence on the part of
the
Santa Maria did not "proximately [contribute] to the
collision" was but another way of saying that fault based on the
half-distance rule must have some relationship to the dangers
against which that rule was designed to protect. Here it did not.
We believe that the District Court, and not the Court of Appeals,
reached the correct result on the issue of liability.
Since, in our view, respondents alone were at fault, there is no
occasion to consider how damages should be apportioned were both
vessels at fault.
Reversed.
Page 409 U. S. 147
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR.
JUSTICE BRENNAN join, dissenting.
On a misty Christmas Eve, the petitioner's oil tanker -- the
Santa Maria -- was moving upstream along the Oregon side
of the channel of the Columbia River. The vessel was proceeding at
half speed with forward visibility of one and a half to two miles.
Both visually and by radar, the tanker's pilot sighted the
respondent tug, the
San Jacinto, which was moving
downstream along the Washington side of the channel more than a
mile ahead. The tug, with a heavily laden barge in tow, disappeared
from sight into a patch of fog. The inexperienced crew of the tug
became disoriented in the fog and mistakenly thought the tanker had
veered to the Washington side of the channel. To avoid what he
believed would be a collision, the master of the tug executed a
sharp leftward U-turn directly into the path of the oncoming
tanker. While the tug successfully completed its turn, the barge
swung around and smashed into the tanker, damaging her forward left
side and driving her aground.
In a complaint and cross-complaint, the owners of both vessels
sued, each charging the other with sole blame. The District Court
found that the collision was entirely the fault of the tug- -- in
navigating at an unreasonable speed in fog, in failing to maintain
a proper lookout, in failing to sound fog signals, in failing to
ascertain the risk of collision and sound the danger signal, in
failing to reduce speed or take any evasive action, in failing to
keep the tow in control, and in turning directly into the path of
the tanker. 304 F. Supp. 519. Finding that the tanker was also at
fault in proceeding at a rate in excess of that which would have
allowed her to stop in one-half the visibility before her, the
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit modified the judgment of the
District Court. 451 F.2d 1369. Though the tug's fault was
Page 409 U. S. 148
"more flagrant and shocking,"
id. at 1374, the tanker
was held liable for half the damages, since she was unable to prove
that her fault could not possibly have contributed to the
collision. [
Footnote 1]
I would reaffirm the continued vitality of the "half-distance"
rule and approve its application in this case. I cannot concur in
the Court's decision, which, while apparently approving the
"salutary purpose" of the rule, guts its certainty by making its
application turn on elusive concepts such as the reasonable
possibility of collision, or the particular bearing that a vessel
might be expected to take on emerging from a fog bank. In short,
the Court today allows a vessel to proceed at an immoderate speed
provided that its crew does not expect a collision. I cannot
agree.
The half-distance rule is a rational interpretation of the
command of Art. 16 of the Inland Rules that vessels shall proceed
at a "moderate speed" in fog with a "careful regard to the existing
circumstances and conditions." 33 U.S.C. § 192. The rule does
not simply require a vessel to be able to stop in one-half the
distance of her forward visibility, but rather
"to maintain only such a rate of speed as would enable her to
come to a standstill, by reversing her engines at full speed,
before she should collide with a vessel which she should see
through the fog."
The Nacoochee, 137 U. S. 330,
137 U. S. 339.
[
Footnote 2] As one scholar
phrased the rule: "the vessels must be able to stop not within the
distance of visibility, but
Page 409 U. S. 149
before they collide." J. Griffin, The American Law of Collision
295 (1949).
In this case, the crew of the
Santa Maria knew that the
San Jacinto had disappeared into a fog bank over a mile
ahead on the Washington side of the narrow channel. The tanker
nevertheless steamed ahead at half-speed as it approached the edge
of the fog bank. When the
Santa Maria sighted the tug
emerging from the fog and cutting directly across her course, no
more than 900 feet separated the vessels. The Court of Appeals
found a violation of the half-distance rule in that the tanker
could not stop within 450 feet. [
Footnote 3] Indeed, since the tug had turned back upstream
at the time of the tanker's collision with the barge, the
Santa
Maria covered considerably more than half the distance that
initially separated the vessels.
I agree with the Court of Appeals that the half-distance rule
correctly applies to the facts of this case. Not only was the
Santa Maria navigating near a fog bank in a narrow,
heavily traveled shipping channel, but she actually knew that a tug
was in the fog bank off the port bow; the tug might become
disoriented in the fog and emerge on a collision course. And, for
that reason, the
Santa Maria should not have been
proceeding at a rate in excess of the speed which would have
allowed her to stop in half the distance ahead. The tug emerged
from the fog and cut directly across the path of the tanker,
approximately 900 feet ahead. But surely the half-distance rule
does not apply only to head-on collisions.
See The Silver
Palm, 94 F.2d 754. Moreover, the tanker here should not be any
less at fault because the tug emerged tangentially to her course,
rather than on a
Page 409 U. S. 150
head-on collision course. If the tug had altered her course in
the fog and emerged steaming head on into the tanker, rather than
across her course -- which would have been quite possible, since
the channel was only 500 feet wide at this point -- the
Santa
Maria would still have had to stop within 450 feet. Since the
tug was not closing the distance between the vessels, the tanker
actually had more distance within which to stop than she would have
had if the tug had followed a more orthodox collision course. The
half-distance rule cannot mean that a ship can travel in the
direction of a fog bank, oblivious to the possibility that another
vessel might become lost there and steam out across or into the
first vessel's path.
Concepts such as "reasonable expectancy," "anticipated
possibility," and "reasonable possibility," do little service to
the half-distance rule. "[T]he genius of the Rules for Prevention
of Collision is their certainty."
Hess Shipping Corp. v. S. S.
Charles Lykes, 417 F.2d 346, 351 (Brown, J., dissenting). The
half-distance rule is effective precisely because it is a
measurable rule of thumb, a nautical speed limit. Speed limits
would serve no useful purpose if they applied only when there was a
foreseeable probability that an accident might occur.
Since I cannot say that the Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit incorrectly concluded that the
Santa Maria had
violated the half-distance rule, and that she was unable to prove
that her fault could not have contributed to the collision, I would
reach the question that we granted certiorari in this case to
consider -- the continued validity of the divided damages rule. The
Court, however, does not address that question, and I therefore
refrain from expressing my views upon it.
[
Footnote 1]
See The
Pennsylvania, 19 Wall. 125,
86 U. S. 136;
O/Y Finlayson-Forssa A/B v. Pan Atlantic S. S. Corp., 259
F.2d 11, 22.
[
Footnote 2]
"The general consensus of opinion in this country is to the
effect that a steamer is bound to use only such precautions as will
enable her to stop in time to avoid a collision, after the
approaching vessel comes in sight, provided such approaching vessel
is herself going at the moderate speed required by law."
The Umbria, 166 U. S. 404,
166 U. S.
417.
[
Footnote 3]
The District Court appears to have assumed as much:
"It is my view that any possible violation of Article 16 of the
Inland Rules by the SS
Santa Maria, or those in charge of
her navigation, were technical in nature, and were not a
contributing cause of the collision."
304 F. Supp. 519, 522.