In a collision which took place in the Chesapeake Bay between a
steamer and a sailing vessel, the steamer was in fault.
It was the captain's watch, and his duty to be on deck, which he
was not.
The only man on deck, acting as pilot, lookout, and officer of
the deck, was not in the proper place for a lookout to be.
A former decision of this Court referred to, indicating the
proper place for a lookout.
When the collision was impending, the order on the steamer was
to starboard the helm instead of porting it, the schooner having
previously kept on her course, as the rules of navigation required
her to do.
This was a case of collision occurring in the Chesapeake Bay
between the steamer
Louisiana and the schooner
William
K. Perrin, by which the schooner was sunk.
The libel was
in rem, filed by the appellants against
the steamer and George W. Russell master thereof. The Baltimore
Steam Packet Company intervened and answered as the owner of the
steamer.
The evidence in the case is so fully commented upon in the
opinion of the Court and in the dissenting opinion of MR. CHIEF
JUSTICE TANEY that any repetition of it is unnecessary.
The district court decreed in favor of the libellants in the sum
of seventeen hundred dollars, and of Charles Ogden, the master of
the schooner the additional sum of $173 and costs.
On an appeal to the circuit court, additional evidence was
Page 64 U. S. 288
offered, and the decree of the district court was reversed and
the libel dismissed.
The libellants appealed to this Court.
Page 64 U. S. 291
MR. JUSTICE GRIER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellants, owners of a schooner called the
William K.
Perrin, charge in their libel that between nine and ten
o'clock of the evening of 20th of February, 1858, as the schooner,
laden with oysters, was on her way down the Chesapeake Bay, she was
run into and sunk by the steamboat
Louisiana; that it was
a bright moonlight night, and the schooner, though of only
forty-three tons burden and deeply laden, could be and was seen at
the distance of a mile.
The answer admits the collision and the result of it. It admits
also the schooner was seen at a distance of two or three miles;
that the steamer was proceeding at a rate of fourteen miles an
hour, "heading due north," and the schooner holding her course
nearly due south. But it alleges as an excuse that while the
steamboat and schooner were meeting on parallel lines, the schooner
suddenly changed her course and ran under the bows of the
steamer.
This is the stereotyped excuse usually resorted to for the
purpose of justifying a careless collision. It is always
improbable, and generally false.
There is not the usual conflict of testimony in this case, for
the single person on board of the steamer who was able to give any
account of the collision, who acted as pilot, and by whose want of
vigilance and skill the collision was caused does not materially
contradict, but rather confirms, the testimony of the libellants.
The facts of the case are as follows:
Page 64 U. S. 292
The steamer
Louisiana, of eleven hundred tons burden
and five hundred horsepower, was on her way coming up the wide Bay
of the Chesapeake, steering a due north course, between nine and
ten o'clock at night. The small heavy-laden schooner is seen two or
three miles off, coming in an opposite direction. The captain of
the steamer, whose theory of action appears from his own testimony
to be that all small vessels are bound at their peril to get out of
the way of a large steamer carrying the United States mail,
although he had seen the schooner and knew that the vessels were
approximating at the rate of over twenty miles an hour, retires to
his cabin. It was his watch, and his duty to be on deck as officer
of the deck. He leaves on deck one man, besides the colored man at
the wheel, to act as pilot, lookout, and officer of the deck. These
two persons constituted the whole crew on duty besides firemen and
engineers. This person, who had to perform these treble functions,
was the second mate. His theory is that the best place for a
lookout is in the pilot house, where, he says, "I generally lean
out of the window, and have an unobstructed view." Accordingly, as
pilot, he remained in the pilot house to direct the steersman, and
as lookout he occasionally leaned out of the window.
The result shows the value of this theory with regard to the
place and person proper for a lookout. The schooner kept on her
course, as the rules of navigation required her to do, on the
presumption that the steamer would diverge from her course so as to
leave a free berth to the schooner, as it was the duty of the pilot
of the steamer to do. The boats were approximating at the rate of
six hundred yards a minute, or one hundred yards in ten seconds. A
slight turn of the wheel of the steamboat, if given in due season,
would have left a wide berth for the schooner. But this, by his own
account, was neglected by this pilot and lookout till within ten
seconds or less of a collision, and then the order was to starboard
the helm instead of porting it, in direct contravention of the
rules of navigation.
The steamer, it is true, had a right to pass on either side, and
it was her duty to keep clear and give a wide berth to the
Page 64 U. S. 293
sailing vessel, but having neglected this duty till the danger
of a collision was so imminent that it was probable the schooner
would be making some movement to avoid destruction, such a movement
only increased the danger of a collision.
The man at the wheel of the schooner had his orders to keep
steady on his course south. It is proved without contradiction that
this order was strictly complied with till the pilot or steersman
heard the noise of the steamer's wheels; and being warned of her
approach by the lookout, he looked under the boom and discovered
the steamer almost on him; when, in order to save his own life and
the lives of the crew, he ported his helm and received the blow on
the larboard side of the schooner, near the stern, instead of the
bow. The point of collision confirms beyond a doubt this view of
the case.
The hypothesis set forth in the answer to excuse this collision
-- that the boats were passing on parallel lines three hundred
yards apart, and that, when within one hundred or one hundred and
fifty yards of passing each other, the schooner turned round and
run herself under the bows of the steamer -- is not only grossly
improbable in itself, but contradicted by the testimony and is a
mathematical impossibility.
With this pregnant example of the value of the theory of
lookouts contended for in this case, let us compare it with the
rules established by this Court. Without referring to the numerous
cases, the correct doctrine on this subject will be found laid down
by MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD in delivering the opinion of this Court in
Chamberlain v.
Ward, 21 How. 570:
"Steamers navigating in the thoroughfares of commerce must have
constant and vigilant lookouts stationed in proper places on the
vessel.' They must 'be persons of suitable experience, and actually
and vigilantly employed on that duty.' 'In general, elevated
positions, such as the hurricane deck, are not so favorable
situations as those more usually selected on the forward deck, near
the stem.' 'Persons stationed on the forward deck are less likely
to overlook small vessels deeply laden, and more readily ascertain
their exact course and movement."
The entire disregard of these rules of navigation by the
Page 64 U. S. 294
steamer and the consequent destruction of property demonstrate
their correctness and utility.
In fine, we are of opinion that the collision in this case, and
destruction of the schooner
Perrin were caused wholly by
the negligence and inattention to their duties of the officers who
navigated the
Louisiana, and that the steamboat should be
condemned to pay the whole damage incurred by the said
collision.
Let the decree of the circuit court reversing the decree of
the district court be reversed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY dissenting.
I dissent from the judgment of the Court. It is a case of
collision on the Chesapeake Bay, and involves principles and rules
of decision of great interest in the navigation of its waters,
where sailing vessels and steam vessels are continually meeting and
passing each other in the night as well as in the day. I think it
my duty, therefore, to state the principles of law and the evidence
in the case, upon which my opinion has been formed.
The rules of law applicable to a case of this description, as
established by this Court, I understand to be the following:
1. The vessels, whether sailing vessels or steamboats, must be
manned and in charge of a crew competent to navigate them on the
voyage in which they respectively engaged.
2. It is the duty of each vessel to have a lookout acquainted
with his duty and faithfully discharging it, and stationed at that
part of the vessel which will best enable him to see any impending
danger and promptly warn the helmsman of the point from which it is
approaching.
3. It is the duty of a sailing vessel when meeting a steamboat
to keep on her course unless she is prevented by the change or
direction of the wind, and it is the duty of the steamboat to keep
out of her way, passing on the starboard or larboard side, as the
steamboat may prefer.
4. Each vessel has a right to act on the presumption that the
other knows its duty and will act accordingly. But if the steamboat
fails to shape her course to avoid the sailing vessel
Page 64 U. S. 295
in proper time and at a sufficient distance, the steamboat is
answerable for the disaster although the collision may in fact have
been produced by an erroneous movement made by the sailing vessel
in the moment of peril and intended to avert the impending
danger.
5. The distance at which a steamboat should pass must in some
degree depend on the wind and weather and on the light or darkness
of the time and the size of the respective vessels. And in order to
excuse an erroneous movement on the part of the sailing vessel, the
proximity of the steamboat and her course and speed must be such
that a mariner of ordinary firmness and competent skill and
knowledge would deem it necessary to alter his course to enable his
vessel to pass in safety. But in order to justify this, the
dangerous proximity must be produced altogether by the
steamboat.
These principles and rules of navigation are distinctly laid
down in the cases of
Genesee Chief v.
Fitzhugh, 12 How. 461, and
New
York & Liverpool United States Mail Steamship Company v.
Rumball, 21 How. 383,
62 U. S. 384,
and have been recognized and maintained by this Court in many other
cases of collision between steamboats and sailing vessels. It would
be tedious and is unnecessary to enumerate them, as they all affirm
the same rules of navigation.
I have stated them in separate propositions because it is of the
first importance that they should be clearly defined and
understood. And impartial justice requires that they should be
administered and enforced where they apply to the sailing vessel,
as well as to those propelled by steam. Indeed it is impossible for
the steamboat to perform its duty of keeping out of the way at a
safe distance unless the sailing vessel performs its duty by
keeping steadily on her course when the wind will permit. And those
who entrust their property in sailing vessels or their cargoes to
the care of persons ignorant of their duty or incompetent in any
other respect have no just right to ask that others who have
committed no fault should be compelled to share in their loss.
Keeping in view these established laws of navigation, I proceed
to examine as briefly as I can the testimony, and first
Page 64 U. S. 296
the conduct and management of the schooner
Perrin, the
sailing vessel.
The collision took place near the mouth of the Rappahannock, at
about ten o'clock on the night of the 28th of February, 1858. It
was a moonlight night, and a vessel under sail, without lights,
could be seen at the distance of three or four miles.
The schooner was an oyster boat of about 40 tons burden and
about sixty feet long and eighteen feet beam. She belonged to
Philadelphia, and had obtained a cargo of oysters in the Patuxent
River, and sailed from the river about two o'clock of the day above
mentioned, down the bay, for the capes of the Chesapeake, bound for
her home port. It was a cold night, the wind from the northwest, a
stiff breeze, nearly fair, but coming rather from the western land.
The sails of the schooner were consequently spread out on her
larboard side -- that is, on her eastern side -- as she went down
the bay. She moved at the rate of six or seven miles an hour. Her
crew consisted of Charles Ogden, captain, and five other persons,
including the oyster men on board, and the latter, when not
dredging for oysters, assisted in navigating the vessel.
At half past eight o'clock on the night of the disaster, the
captain and all of the crew, except the witnesses, William J. Miles
and Charles Cory, went below to sleep, and from that time until the
collision, no one but these two men were on deck or assisted in any
way to navigate the vessel, and therefore have no knowledge of what
led to the disaster.
In weighing the testimony given by these two witnesses, it must
be borne in mind that both of them have a direct interest in the
result of the case, and will share largely in the damages that they
may by their testimony recover from the steamboat. Cory says that
two-thirds of the oysters belonged to Miles and himself, and Ogden,
the captain, after one-third and the expenses were taken out. Each
of these witnesses, therefore, is giving testimony in his own cause
to support his own claim, and they are substantially parties
prosecuting the suit, although they appear only as witnesses in the
record. They may be admissible from necessity. But it is a
departure and
Page 64 U. S. 297
exception to the general rules of evidence, long and well
established in courts of common law and equity, and goes always
strongly to their credit, and the facts stated by such witnesses,
as well as their manner of stating them, are carefully scrutinized
by courts of justice in considering the case. The wisdom and
justice of the common law rule will, I think, be apparent when we
examine the testimony of Cory and Miles.
Cory's account of himself is this:
He has been following the water as an oysterman four years and a
half, during the oyster season, and on such occasions, when he is
not dredging for oysters, it is a part of his duty to help to
navigate the vessel and to help to lookout, and he is always in one
of the watches. But he had never before been down the bay below the
Patuxent. He was the lookout, and the only one, in this part of the
voyage. He says he saw the steamboat when about three or three and
a half miles off; that he was walking on the larboard -- that is,
the leeward and eastern side of the vessel -- and saw the steamboat
between the night-head and fore-shroud of the schooner, and she was
to the leeward, larboard and eastward, and that immediately upon
seeing her, he said to Miles, the helmsman, "hadn't you better keep
away?" and about five minutes afterwards, asked him again, if he
hadn't better keep away, and receiving no answer to either
question, he seems to have supposed that he had performed his whole
duty as a lookout, for he appears to have made no further effort to
communicate with the helmsman, and to have taken no further concern
in the navigation of the vessel, before the collision happened.
It is evident from this testimony, given by the witness himself,
that he was utterly unfit for a lookout, and performed none of its
duties. He was not at the bow or near the head of the vessel, nor
even on the windward side, where the sails would not have
obstructed his view ahead, but was walking on her larboard or
leeward side, and must have been aft of the foremast, as he first
saw the
Louisiana between the night-head and fore-shroud.
This was no place for a lookout, for the foresail and head sails
were directly before him, and made it
Page 64 U. S. 298
impossible for him to see the bearing or distance of any vessel
approaching directly ahead or on her larboard or eastern bow. And
although he swears that he did, notwithstanding these obstacles,
see her to the leeward and eastward of his vessel, he obviously
contradicts himself when he immediately after states that he twice
advised the helmsman to alter his course more to the east, for if
he really thought the steamboat bore to the east of south, his
advice to the helmsman was to put the schooner directly in her way,
instead of avoiding her; nor can the slightest reliance be placed
upon his statement that the steamboat was to the eastward, or that
the schooner was standing due south when he first saw the
steamboat, or that she did not change her course until she luffed
to the west a moment or two before the collision, for he had no
compass before him, had never before been in that part of the bay,
and under such circumstances could form no accurate judgment of the
cardinal points of the compass; it was simply impossible that he
could know whether the steamboat bore some points to the east or
west of south, or that his vessel was heading due south, or two or
three points to the east or to the west of south, or whether she
did not vary in her course two or three points as she was
approaching the steamboat before she changed directly to the
west.
It would seem that he placed himself on the larboard side under
the lee of the mainsail to shelter himself from the cold northwest
wind, and in that situation it is literally impossible that he
could know the precise course the schooner steered or the bearing
of the steamboat when he first saw her, and as he approached her,
and it is equally impossible that he should have given the advice
he did to the helmsman if he really thought the steamboat bore east
from the schooner.
The testimony of Miles, the only other material witness for the
libellants, will show that he was as unfit for a helmsman as Cory
was for a lookout, and that the facts he states are as little to be
relied on.
He says he has been following the water as an oyster man
thirteen or fourteen years, and accustomed to take the helm for the
last four or five years, and it does not appear that he
Page 64 U. S. 299
was ever before in that part of the Chesapeake Bay; he was
standing on the larboard side of the vessel, the same side with the
sails, with his right hand on the helm, and from his position could
see nothing ahead without going upon one knee and looking under the
boom; and when Cory told him there was a light ahead, he looked
under the boom, and saw the
Louisiana about one-half or
three-quarters of a point to the eastward of the schooner.
Now when he saw the steamer approaching, it was his duty,
according to the repeated decisions of this Court, to stand by his
helm, with his eye on the compass, and keep the vessel steadily in
her course, and rely on the lookout for information as to the
approach and bearing of the steamboat; his own course at the time,
he says, was due south.
But instead of doing this, he immediately took upon himself the
additional duty of lookout, under circumstances that made it
impossible he could perform either. He was on his knee from a half
to three-quarters of an hour before the collision took place,
watching the steamboat under the boom of his vessel. He says,
indeed, that he did not watch her all the time, but watched his
course; yet he tells us the boom was only 3 or 3 1/2 feet from the
deck, and therefore, in order to look under it, he was obliged not
only to go on his knee, but to bring his head down to within two or
three feet of the deck; and in that posture, while watching the
steamboat, it was absolutely impossible for him to know the exact
course he was then steering or form a correct judgment of the
distance or bearing of the steamboat, for the compass was hid from
him by the sides of the binnacle in which it stood, and his view
ahead, and on the eastern bow of his vessel, obstructed by the
foresail and head sails, which were spread out on the same side.
And when he speaks of bearings and distances, he speaks necessarily
not by the compass, but from vague conjectures and states facts of
which he could have no certain knowledge and was not in a situation
to form an opinion upon which any reliance could be placed; he
admits that where he stood with the compass before him, he could
not
Page 64 U. S. 300
see the
Louisiana, and consequently could not see how
she bore by the compass.
Again, he says Cory was looking out at the time of the
collision, and was a competent lookout; yet his own testimony shows
that he did not think so, nor places the slightest confidence in
him, for as soon as Cory reported the steamboat in sight, he took
upon himself the duty of lookout as well as helmsman, although he
was at the stern of the vessel, and could see nothing ahead except
under the boom. And from the time the
Louisiana came in
sight, he was so absorbed in these double duties, or confused and
bewildered by the appearance of the steamboat, that he does not
appear to have remembered there was such a person as Cory on deck;
he asked no information from him, and did not even hear him when he
twice advised him to keep his vessel off; yet Cory was standing
within a few feet of him, with nothing but the mainsail between
them, and he had heard readily and distinctly when he reported to
him that the steamboat was in sight.
He says he kept his course due south. I have already said he
could not know the fact, as a large portion of his time was passed
in watching the steamboat, with his head in a position which made
it impossible for him to see his compass. And with his right hand
on the helm, and stooping low on the larboard side to see under the
boom, his right arm would naturally and necessarily follow the
movement of his body to the larboard, and draw the tiller with it,
and cause the vessel from time to time, with such a strong wind
pressing on her mainsail, to head towards the west and edge nearer
and nearer to the due north line in which the
Louisiana
was moving, and thus, by his own incapacity and fault, produce the
proximity which so much alarmed him and induced him suddenly to
change his course to the west. It is true, the lookout on board the
Louisiana says she appeared to be standing south, and that
he did not observe any change until she suddenly luffed to the
west. But Captain Russell states, and every seaman knows, that you
cannot, in the night, determine the precise course which an
approaching vessel ahead is steering, and coming, as this schooner
did, with a free wind, she might
Page 64 U. S. 301
frequently vary from her general course from time to time one or
two points for two or three minutes and the most vigilant lookout
on the steamboat fail to discover it or observe it; yet, at the
speed at which she was going, she would, by the slightest movement
of the helm to the larboard, or the least relaxation of the hold of
the helmsman, head more to the west and approach nearer to the line
of the steamboat and increase the danger of a collision.
Indeed, Miles admits that his vessel did vary a little, but not
enough, he says, to take her from her course; he does not, however,
tell us how much she varied, nor what variance he thinks necessary
to take her from her course, nor how long it continued, nor in what
direction. It is obvious from what he says of his own position and
movements that every variation from her general course must have
been towards the west.
I do not think it necessary to comment further on the evidence
given by these two witnesses. Testifying in the manner I have
stated, and under the influence of a direct pecuniary interest in
the result, I cannot think their statements would be entitled to
any weight against the steamboat, even if uncontradicted by other
testimony; but in all of its essential parts it is contradicted by
disinterested witnesses who were on board of the
Louisiana, and I proceed briefly to state the testimony of
Captain Russell and Ward, the second mate, who are the only two
material witnesses on behalf of the steamboat. The disaster
happened in the captain's watch, during which the second mate,
Ward, was the lookout, and charged with the running of the vessel;
the wheelsman was a colored man, and could not, therefore, be
examined as a witness, but it is abundantly proved that he was an
experienced wheelsman, and accustomed to perform that duty on
steamboats, and was fully competent and trustworthy.
Captain Russell and the mate have for many years been engaged in
the navigation of steamboats up and down the bay at all seasons of
the year, are both pilots of long experience, and well acquainted
with the dangers to be apprehended, and are accustomed to meet and
pass vessels at all hours of the night
Page 64 U. S. 302
and of the day. Neither of them has any pecuniary interest in
the result of this controversy, and they are both men of undoubted
character for intelligence and veracity.
It has indeed been said that the answer of Captain Russell to
the libel, and his testimony as a witness, contradict one another
and that on that account credit ought not to be given to his
testimony; but I can see no discrepancy between them. In his answer
he speaks in general terms of the disaster and the causes which led
to it, and that is all that was proper or usual to state in an
answer. When examined as a witness, he enters more minutely into
the circumstances and mentions his momentary absence from the deck
just before the
Perrin changed her course to the west, but
there is no contradiction or discrepancy in this, and it is hardly
just to a witness to select a detached sentence from the answer and
another from the testimony to show an apparent contradiction when
the two papers, read throughout, are perfectly consistent with each
other and substantially the same, and in both his answer and his
deposition as a witness he supports and confirms the testimony of
Ward, the lookout, in every fact material to the decision of the
case. Ward says he was stationed in the wheelhouse, or pilot house,
as the place is indifferently called; the house is about sixty feet
from the bow, upon the upper deck, and elevated about twenty-five
feet; he stood by the side of the wheelsman on the larboard side of
the house, and the wheelsman on the starboard, about four feet from
him, and the compass was in the wheelhouse, in front of the
wheelsman.
It has been argued that the lookout ought to have been at the
bow, and some passages in the opinions of this Court in former
cases are relied on to support this objection. But the language
used by the Court must always be construed with reference to the
facts in the particular case of which they are speaking and the
character and description of the vessel. What is the most suitable
place for a lookout is obviously a question of fact, depending upon
the construction and rig of the vessel, the navigation in which she
is engaged, the climate and weather to which she is exposed, and
the hazards she is
Page 64 U. S. 303
likely to encounter, and must, like every other question of
fact, be determined by the court upon the testimony of witnesses --
that is, upon the testimony of nautical men of experience and
judgment. It cannot, in the nature of things, be judicially known
to the court as a matter of law. All that the law prescribes is the
rule that the lookout shall be stationed in that part of the vessel
where he can most conveniently and effectually discharge the duty
with which he is charged. And all of the experienced pilots who
have been examined as witnesses in this case, accustomed to the
navigation of the bay, well acquainted with the form and
construction of the
Louisiana, unite in testifying that
the place where Ward was stationed was the best and most suitable,
and they point out the serious disadvantages that might arise from
stationing him at the bow. There can hardly be a rule of law which
requires a steamboat to station a lookout in a place where he
cannot effectually perform his duty. In a vessel propelled by
sails, he is uniformly stationed at the bow, because, in any other
part of the vessel, his view ahead would be obstructed by the head
sails and rigging. But this reason does not apply to steamboats
constructed like the
Louisiana.
Taking it, therefore, as fully established by proof that Ward,
the lookout, was competent and stationed in the proper place, I
proceed to state his testimony, which is as follows:
He saw the schooner when about three or four miles off. The
steamboat was heading a due north course, and the schooner appeared
to be heading south, and bore by the compass north half east on the
starboard eastern side of the steamboat. When the two vessels
approached within the distance of 300 or 400 yards, the schooner
bore north one point east on the starboard side of the
Louisiana, and when within about 150 yards of the
schooner, in order to give a wider space in passing, he headed the
steamboat north by west, which left the schooner bearing two points
east on her starboard bow. He had just steadied his boat in this
course when he discovered that the schooner altered her course, and
was heading west across the bay, and continued to hold that course
until the collision took place. The moment he discovered
Page 64 U. S. 304
that the schooner had changed her course, he gave the signal to
stop and back, which was instantly obeyed. But the vessels came
together before the headway of the steamboat was entirely
stopped.
The testimony of this witness, supported as it is by that of
Captain Russell, can hardly be impeached by such testimony as that
which has been given by such witnesses as Cory and Miles.
And I regard this as the true history of the disaster, and of
the movements of the vessels by which it was produced.
The facts established by this proof, that the schooner bore
north half east when first seen at the distance of three or four
miles, and north one point east when at the distance of about 300
yards, show that, from the causes I have before mentioned, she had
not maintained her course due south during that time, but had been
luffing and edging to the west so as to bring her nearer and nearer
to the due north line in which the steamboat was steering, for if
they had approached each other in parallel lines, the schooner
would have borne more and more to the east, and would have been
directly east when they passed, and would therefore, when within
300 yards, have borne more than one point to the east of north. But
even then, if she had continued to hold her course due south, and
the steamboat had continued hers due north, they would have passed
in safety, but nearer, indeed, than a steam vessel of the size of
the
Louisiana ought to pass so small a vessel as the
oyster boat. But when the steamboat changed her course one degree
more to the west, it is evident that they would have passed each
other not only in safety, but at a convenient and sufficient
distance, for it will be observed that, for the distance of one
hundred and fifty yards at which the steamboat changed her course,
she was proceeding slowly, backing with all the force of her
machinery, and with so much effect that her headway was nearly
stopped when they came in contact. This is proved by the character
of the injury inflicted. It is true that the side of the schooner
was broken in, and an opening made, through which the water rushed
in, and filled and sunk her in a few minutes. The witnesses for the
libellants,
Page 64 U. S. 305
who examined the schooner at Norfolk after she had been raised
and carried into port, say that the blow "had hit the main beam
across the break of the quarter, and split it -- knocked the knees
out from each side of it, and cut her down to light water mark."
But it did not even upset her. Cory, indeed, says that her stern
was driven under the water. But Miles, who was at the stern, does
not support him. On the contrary, he says the blow threw him to the
windward -- that is, to the opposite side -- and that he went up
the rigging of his vessel until he got on the bow of the steamboat.
He does not intimate that he was in danger of being washed
overboard or plunged into the water. Now with the immense weight
and size of the
Louisiana coming stem on against the
broadside of the comparatively slender and frail timbers and planks
of this little oyster boat, if the headway of the steamboat had not
been very nearly stopped before she struck the schooner, the injury
inflicted must have been much greater than that described by the
witnesses. If she had been moving at even one-third of her ordinary
speed, she would unquestionably have buried this little boat in the
water and passed over her. These facts, of themselves, show that
her rate of speed for these 150 yards, taking it all together,
could not have averaged, at the outside, more than four or five
miles an hour.
Now the schooner changed her course to directly west almost
simultaneously with the reversal of the engine of the steamboat,
approaching her line of movement nearly at a right angle, and was
moving from east directly west during the time the steamboat was
passing over this 150 yards. She was moving, also, with equal or
greater speed, for all of the witnesses agree that she was sailing
at the rate of six or seven miles an hour, and when she changed her
course to west, she was in full headway, with all sails set, and
must have maintained, during that time, at least very nearly the
speed at which she had before been sailing; and this being the
case, she must, in order to bring the vessels into contact, have
passed nearly the same distance to the west which the steamboat,
while backing, had passed to the north -- that is, 150 yards -- and
consequently, if she had held on her course, would
Page 64 U. S. 306
have passed at that distance, or nearly so, to the eastward of
the steamboat.
It has indeed been said that the collision was immediate after
the change of course by the schooner and the backing of the
steamboat, and calculations have been presented to show that it
must have been so, because, from the combined speed of the two
vessels, taken together, the 150 yards would be passed over in a
few seconds. But this argument has no foundation in the evidence,
for the steamer was not proceeding at her ordinary speed, but
backing all the way, and had nearly stopped when she came in
contact with the schooner. And the latter vessel was not meeting
her from an opposite direction, but standing directly across her
path, leaving the steamboat to pass over these 150 yards, and at
the reduced rate of speed of which I have spoken before the vessels
could come together.
In reference to this part of the evidence, it is perhaps hardly
necessary to notice the evidence of Miles, who says they were
within thirty yards of the steamboat when he changed his course to
the west. No one, I presume, will think that his testimony in this
respect in entitled to any weight when in conflict with the
testimony of Captain Russell and the mate, Ward, who were both in a
position to see perfectly what was before them and accustomed by
long experience to measure distances on the water by the eye, while
Miles was looking under the boom of his mainsail with his head near
the deck and his vision obstructed by the sails and rigging of his
own vessel. He was in no position to form a correct judgment of
distances any more than of bearings, and even Cory contradicts him
and says that "we did not change our course until we were within
150 yards, if indeed we were more than 100 yards from the
Louisiana." He in effect corroborates the testimony of
Captain Russell and Ward.
It has been said also that the steamboat ought to have slowed
her speed before she approached so near as 150 yards to the sailing
vessel. But this argument loses sight of the fact that until the
schooner changed her course to the west, those on board of the
steamboat had no reason to suppose that
Page 64 U. S. 307
there was the slightest danger of collision or any reason for
slackening her ordinary speed. They had a right to presume and
indeed were bound to presume that the schooner would steadily hold
on the course she was steering, and the steamboat had shaped its
course to keep out of her way and pass her at a safe and convenient
distance. And the moment they discovered that the schooner had
changed her course and was heading in a direction that might
produce collision, she instantly stopped and backed and took every
measure in her power to avert the danger. But until the change of
course by the schooner, there could be no reason and no obligation
whatever to slacken her speed, for it can hardly be supposed that a
steamboat is bound to stop or slacken her speed whenever she sees a
sailing vessel coming in an opposite direction, and wait to see
whether she will conform to the rule laid down by this Court and
hold her course, or suddenly change it to cross the line in which
the steamboat is moving. Such a rule would make steamboat
navigation of very little value on the Chesapeake. But unless such
is to be the rule, I can see no ground for imputing it as a fault
to the steamboat that she did not slacken her speed until she came
within 150 yards, when it is admitted that the schooner did not
change her course to the west until she had come within that
distance of the steamboat.
As relates to the general rate of speed of the steamboat, no one
acquainted with the navigation of the Chesapeake has ever suggested
or supposed that it was dangerous to life or property on that wide
bay, and there is no evidence from which such an inference can be
drawn. The fact that the
Louisiana carried the mail and
was obliged to proceed at the rate of fourteen or fifteen miles an
hour in order to fulfill her contract certainly gave her no rights
or privileges beyond those of any other steam vessel, nor exempted
her in any degree from the care, caution, and watchfulness, in
speed as well as in everything else, required of others. The fact
that a contract was made is perhaps some evidence that the public
authorities of the United States, having all the means of
information within their reach, were satisfied that the rate
Page 64 U. S. 308
of speed required was not dangerous to the life or property of
our citizens who are accustomed to navigate the bay.
It is unnecessary to remark upon the testimony given by the
captain of the
Keyser, which sailed from the Patuxent in
company with the
Perrin. He was, he says, three-quarters
of a mile off, and could in the night, even by moonlight, have no
certain and accurate knowledge of the bearing of the colliding
objects towards each other as they approached or the particular
incidents of the collision, the more especially as both vessels
were ahead of him and to leeward, and hidden from him by his own
sails as he stood at his helm. He says, too, that before the
collision, he paid very little attention, and what he did see was
by looking under his boom.
Neither do I attach any importance to conversations and
statements made on board the
Louisiana after the
collision. Declarations made in conversation are apt to be loose
and unguarded -- are often misunderstood, and, in my judgment,
entitled to very little weight in any case, and least of all in a
case like this, where the minds of all had been excited and
agitated by the scene through which they had so recently
passed.
There is no other evidence in the record which appears to be
material to the points I am discussing, and I forbear therefore to
refer to it. This opinion already occupies more space than I
anticipated. But as the full statement of the testimony cannot be
given in the report of the case, I have found myself unable to
present the facts truly and fairly, as I understand them, in fewer
words.
I fully agree with the Court that the strictest supervision
should be held over steamboats. But it is impossible for them to
perform the duty of keeping out of the way unless the sailing
vessel is held to the correlative duty of keeping her course.
Even-handed justice requires that the law of navigation should be
as obligatory upon the sailing vessel as it is upon the steamboat.
This is a question of property, and the rights of the parties are
to be ascertained and determined by the rules of law. And where the
evidence shows, as I think it does, that the
Louisiana
performed her duty and took
Page 64 U. S. 309
proper measures to keep out of the way, and her efforts were
counteracted and defeated by the sailing vessel, and a collision
forced upon the steamboat by the incapacity and misconduct of those
in charge of the
Perrin, I cannot think that the steamboat
should be charged with any part of the damage which the sailing
vessel brought upon itself. Those who entrust their property on the
water to incompetent hands have no just right to complain of
disasters, and claim indemnity for losses arising altogether from
the incapacity and unfitness of those to whom they have confided
it, and still less have Cory and Miles, whose incapacity and
misconduct were the sole cause of disaster.
And entertaining this view of the controversy, I dissent from
the judgment of the Court.