1. The rule requiring a sailing vessel to keep her course when
approaching a steamer in such direction as to involve risk of
collision does not forbid such necessary variations in her course
as will enable her to avoid immediate danger arising from natural
obstructions to navigation.
2. Where well known usage has sanctioned one course for a
steamer ascending, and another for a sailing vessel descending, a
river, the vessel, if required by natural obstructions to
navigation to change her course, is, after passing them, bound to
resume it. Failing to do so, and continuing her course directly
into that which an approaching steamer is properly navigating, she
is not entitled to recover for a loss occasioned by a collision,
which the steamer endeavored to prevent, by adopting the only means
in her power.
This was a libel by the owners of the sloop
Venus
against the steam propeller
John L. Hasbrouck, to recover
damages for the sinking of the sloop by a collision with the
propeller on the Hudson River near West Point on the night of Nov.
27, 1869. The district court held that the collision was caused by
the sole fault of the
Venus, and entered a decree
dismissing the libel; which decree having been affirmed by the
circuit court, the libellant brought the case here.
Page 93 U. S. 406
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Rules of navigation are ordained, and required to be observed,
to save life and property employed in marine pursuits, and not to
promote collisions, or to justify the wrongdoer where such a
disaster has occurred.
The Sunnyside, 1 Otto 210.
Ships and vessels engaged in commerce ought to observe the rules
of navigation in all cases where they apply, and it is safe to
affirm that they always apply when there is impending risk of
collision, except in special cases where their observance would
tend to promote what they were ordained to prevent or where special
circumstances render a departure from them indispensably necessary
to avoid immediate danger. 13 Stat. 61.
Both parties admit that the collision described in the record
occurred at the time and place alleged in the pleadings, and it
appears that the owner of the sloop, having suffered pecuniary loss
by the disaster, instituted a libel
in rem in the district
court against the steamer, to recover compensation for the value of
the sloop and her cargo.
Enough appears to show that the sloop was laden with flagging
stone, and that she was bound on a voyage from Catskill, on the
Hudson River, to the City of Brooklyn; and that the steamer was
bound on a trip up the river, with a barge lashed to her starboard
side. Proper signal lights were displayed by both vessels, and it
is not controverted that they both had competent lookouts, nor that
they were both well manned and equipped.
Precisely what took place before the sloop reached Newburg does
not appear, nor would it be of much importance if it were known.
When they left that place, they took in the mainsail and jib, for
the reason that the wind blew pretty hard, and it appears that they
did not hoist those sails again until they went past Magazine
Point, which is on the east shore of the river. Before they reached
West Point, all agree that the course of the sloop was well over to
the west side of the channel of navigation. Throughout the same
period the steamer was
Page 93 U. S. 407
proceeding up the river on the east side of the channel, which
is the usual pathway of steamers navigating in that direction.
Sailing vessels, especially when descending the river, usually
keep well over to the western side of the channel, leaving the
eastern side of the same for the uninterrupted passage of vessels
propelled by steam. Usage has sanctioned that course of navigation,
where there are no impediments or natural obstructions in the
pathway of ascending or descending vessels. Vessels of all kinds,
whether propelled by steam or sails, are allowed and expected to
vary their respective courses to correspond with the well known
sinuosities of the navigable portion of the river, and to avoid the
dangers of navigation arising from rocks, shoals, and sand bars, as
well as from curves and bends in the banks of the river or the
channel of navigation.
Steamers running up the river may make such necessary variations
in their course as is necessary to avoid every such natural
obstruction to navigation; nor are sailing vessels descending the
river required to hold their course at the hazard of being grounded
or shipwrecked by natural obstructions, even though they are
required to adopt that precaution in all cases where a steamer is
approaching, if the navigation is free from such difficulties.
Instead of that, every mariner knows that a sailing vessel
descending the river from above West Point, if her course has been
well over to the right bank of the river, must, as she approaches
the bend in the river there, incline to port sufficiently to round
the projection at that place, even if those in charge of her deck
intend to continue down the river on the west side, in the same
general course as the vessel pursued before they arrived at that
locality.
Variations of the kind in the course of the vessel are
allowable, because they cannot be avoided without imminent danger
of immediate destruction; nor is a sailing vessel under such
circumstances forbidden to yield to such a necessity, even though
those in charge of her deck are aware at the time that a steamer is
coming up the river on a course which involves risk of collision,
if it appears that a change of course is reasonably necessary to
prevent the sailing vessel from running into the bank, or
encountering any other natural obstruction to the
Page 93 U. S. 408
navigation. Necessary changes made in the course of the voyage
to avoid such obstructions are not violations of the sailing rule
which requires the sailing vessel to keep her course whenever an
approaching steamer is required to keep out of the way. Departures
of the kind from the general requirements of the sailing rules are
rendered necessary to avoid impending peril and immediate danger,
which can only be justified in such an emergency, and to the extent
that the immediate danger demands their adoption.
Tested by these suggestions, it is clear that the sloop, when
she found herself in the cove just above West Point, might properly
incline to port sufficiently to clear any obstruction there and to
round that point in safety; but it is equally clear that it was her
duty, when that object was safely accomplished, to incline to
starboard sufficiently to resume her regular course down the river,
well over on the west side of the channel. Three considerations
should have induced those in charge of her deck to adopt that
course:
1. Because it was her regular course, as shown by the usages of
the river.
2. Because the steamer was coming up on the opposite side of the
river.
3. Because there were no vessels in view coming up on the
western side of the channel.
Enough appears in the consequences which followed from the
adoption of the opposite course to show that the preceding
suggestions should have been adopted and followed, and that, if
they had been, the disaster never would have happened. Proof of
that is seen in the fact that the steamer, when the sloop emerged
from the cove and her lights came in view as she rounded the point,
was fast coming up on the eastern side of the river, without the
least warning of approaching danger. For a moment the red light of
the sloop came in view, but it soon disappeared, and was
substituted by the green light, which indicates very clearly that
the sloop held her course across the channel instead of inclining
to the starboard, as she should have done, under a port helm, in
order to resume her regular course down the river on the western
side.
Danger being manifest from those indications, the steamer ported
her helm and stopped her engine, which was all she could do in the
emergency to prevent a collision. Her course
Page 93 U. S. 409
was already well over on the eastern side of the channel, and
with a barge lashed to her starboard side she could not bear away
much under a port helm, without being in danger of departing from
the navigable channel of the river. Witnesses estimate the channel
at that point as five hundred yards in width, and all agree that it
is a good boating channel.
Hearing was had, and the District Court entered a decree
dismissing the libel. Due appeal was taken by the libellant to the
circuit court, where the decree of the district court was affirmed,
and the libellant appealed to this court.
Proof of a satisfactory character shows that those in charge of
the sloop did not change the course of the vessel subsequent to the
time when they first saw the lights of the steamer, and the mate of
the sloop testifies to the effect that he first saw the lights of
the steamer over the starboard bow of the sloop, that they were not
then far enough around the point to see straight down the river,
and that the steamer at that time was heading to the eastward of
the sloop, which shows conclusively that the steamer was so far
advanced when the mate made that observation that she could not
prevent the collision by stopping her engine.
Conclusive support to the proposition that the sloop did not
change her course from the time those on board of her first saw the
lights of the steamer to the collision is also found in the
testimony of the master of the sloop, in the allegations of the
libel, and in the propositions of fact submitted by the libellant.
Nothing appears in the record to justify the conclusion that the
libellant even pretends that the sloop changed her course
subsequent to the discovery of the lights of the steamer, or that
those in charge of her deck did any thing to prevent a collision,
unless it was to hold her course across the channel, towards the
left bank of the river. Evidence to support any thing of the kind
is entirely wanting. Opposed to that, the libellant contends that
it was the duty of the sloop to hold her course, and insists that
the steamer was in fault because she did not keep out of the way,
as required by the fifteenth sailing rule. 13 Stat. 60.
Beyond doubt, a steamer must keep out of the way of a sailing
ship,
Page 93 U. S. 410
where the two are properly sailing in such directions as to
involve risk of collision; but neither that regulation, nor any
other sea law, will justify a sailing ship in unnecessarily leaving
her pathway for the purpose of taking a course directly into the
pathway of a steamer in order to compel the steamer to abandon the
pathway in which she is properly navigating and seek another
usually navigated by sailing vessels, or incur the peril of an
immediate collision.
Litigations of the kind prior to the present have come here, in
which the evidence tended to show that steamers, in passing the
locality where the collision in question occurred, usually navigate
the eastern side of the channel, and that sailing vessels, whether
ascending or descending, usually pass on the opposite side.
Testimony tending to prove such a usage in respect to the locality
of the collision is exhibited in the case before the court; but the
court here is not inclined to rest the decision of the case
entirely upon that ground, for the reason that the evidence is
satisfactory and uncontradicted, that the steamer was ascending on
a course well over to the east side of the channel, and that the
sloop, prior to reaching West Point, was descending the river on
the western side, in the regular course of navigation.
Neither of those propositions can be successfully controverted,
and if not, the Court is of the opinion that the sloop was not
authorized to cross the channel to the eastern side; that all she
had a right to do in that regard was to incline to port
sufficiently to round the point in safety; and that it was
negligent seamanship to continue to hold her course across the
channel, or to deviate from her regular course, beyond what was
necessary to correspond with the sinuosity of the channel; and that
it was her duty, when that object had been safely accomplished, to
have inclined to starboard, and have resumed her regular course
down the river on the western side of the channel of
navigation.
Necessary deviation to avoid the obstruction is plainly
allowable; but to admit that the deviation may be continued after
the necessity for it ceases, would be to concede that the sailing
vessel under such circumstances may hold her course across the
channel, and force a collision with a steamer coming up on the
Page 93 U. S. 411
eastern side of the channel, or compel the steamer, if she can,
to abandon her accustomed pathway and seek another pathway usually
navigated by sailing vessels.
Attempt is made in argument to exonerate the sloop, or those in
charge of her, from all culpable negligence in the premises, by an
appeal to the evidence, by which it appears, as the libellant
contends, that the wind was not sufficient to enable the sloop to
go to starboard after she rounded West Point. Support to that
proposition, however, is not derived to any considerable extent
from the libel, which, though it describes the wind as very light,
nevertheless alleges that there was a strong ebb tide running; and
the manifest theory of the libel is, not that those in charge of
the sloop made any effort to port the wheel after the sloop rounded
West Point, but that she held her course from the time the lights
of the steamer were first seen to the moment of the collision.
Considerable conflict exists in the evidence as to the state of
the wind; but the great weight of it shows that the wind was from
the northwest, and that the theory of the libellant, that it was
not sufficient to give steerage-way to the sloop, is not well
founded. Important facts are disclosed in the testimony given by
the libellant inconsistent with the theory that there was a calm.
He or his witnesses admit that the wind blew hard before they got
down to Magazine Point, so that they took in all sail; and it also
appears from the testimony that when they had passed that point
they again hoisted the mainsail to the reef, showing very
satisfactorily that the wind was still too strong for a full
sail.
Four witnesses, including the two pilots and the master and
lookout, called by the steamer, testify that the wind was
northwest, and that it was blowing a stiff breeze; and they are
confirmed by one of the witnesses of the libellant, to the extent
that there was a good strong breeze blowing down the river. Two
witnesses from the barge were also examined in behalf of the
steamer; and they also testified that the wind was blowing a good
stiff breeze, and one of them stated that he inquired of the mate
of the sloop why he did not have up all sail, and that the mate
replied that it was because the wind was so heavy that they came
down under bare poles. Five other witnesses
Page 93 U. S. 412
from other crafts were also examined by the steamer, and they
all contradict the theory set up by the libellant, that there was a
calm which disqualified the sloop from adopting the proper
precaution to prevent a collision.
Conclusive evidence, if more be needed, is also found in the
injuries which the sloop caused to the steamer by the blow, to show
that the theory of the libellant as to the wind is incorrect. That
the sloop held her course across the channel has already been
shown, and it also appears that she struck the steamer on her port
side some forty feet from the stem, the two vessels coming together
nearly at right angles. Convincing proof is exhibited to that
effect; and it appears that it was the bowsprit of the sloop that
first struck the port side of the steamer, and the evidence shows
that the force of the blow was such that it broke a hole through
the outside planking, which was three inches thick, and also broke
a hole through the inside planking, which was also three inches
thick, and broke through on oak timber eight inches in
diameter.
Viewed in the light of these facts and circumstances, we are all
of the opinion that the decree of the circuit court is correct, and
that there is no error in the record.
Decree affirmed.