A ship in tow of a steam tug, each having its own master and
crew, collided with and sunk a steam dredge lying at anchor at a
proper place, displaying good signal lights, and having competent
lookouts stationed on her decks. The tug and the ship having been
libeled and seized, the former gave a stipulation for value for
$10,000. Both were found to be at fault, and the court below
entered a decree awarding the libellants $24,184.67 damages, with
interest and costs, and directing that one-half of the amount be
paid by the ship, and the remaining half by the stipulators for the
tug.
Held that the decree should be modified so as to
further provide that any balance of the moiety decreed against
either vessel, which the libellants shall be unable to collect,
shall be paid by the other, or by her stipulators, to the extent of
her stipulated value beyond the moiety due from her.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 97 U. S. 310
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Ship owners, if their ship is without fault, are entitled in a
cause of collision, except where it occurs from inevitable
accident, to full compensation for the damage their ship receives,
provided it does not exceed the value of the offending vessel and
her freight then pending, and the same rule applies where the
injury is caused by the joint action of a tug and tow, if it be so
alleged in the libel, and it appears that both were in charge of
their own master and crew, and that each was in fault in not taking
due care, or was guilty of negligence or of unskillful or improper
navigation.
Litigations of the kind depend very much upon the facts and
circumstances that attended the disaster, which it is often
difficult to ascertain with sufficient certainty on account of the
conflict in the statements of the witnesses; nor is the present
case by any means free of that embarrassment, which is somewhat
intensified by the triplicate character of the controversy. Damages
are claimed both of the steam tug and her tow by the libellants,
who are the owners of the steam dredge which it is alleged and
admitted was sunk by the collision and became a total loss.
Prior to the collision, the dredge was employed under a contract
with the United States in deepening and widening what is known as
the Craigill channel, one of the approaches to the port of
Baltimore, and it is alleged that she was lying on the night in
question at her proper berth on the western edge of the improved
channel, carefully and skillfully anchored, with three anchors
properly set to keep her in position to prosecute her work, and
with two signal lights brightly burning. While the dredge was so
lying at anchor, the charge of the libel is that the ship, being in
tow of the steam tug, by the neglect and want of care and skill on
the part of the masters and crews of both those vessels, ran into
and sunk the anchored dredge in the channel where she was
lying.
Both the steam tug and the ship admit the collision, and
that
Page 97 U. S. 311
the dredge was sunk and lost, and the libellants allege that the
ship was unskillfully navigated, and that the steam tug was in
fault in sailing with her two dangerously near to the dredge,
notwithstanding there was plenty of deep water on either side of
the dredge, into which she might have taken the ship without
danger.
Service was made, and the owners of the respective vessels
appeared and filed separate answers. Separate answers became
necessary, because the owners of the steam tug differed widely in
the defense of their vessel from that set up by the owners of the
ship which the steam tug had in tow.
For the ship the defense is, that she was being towed by the
steam tug up the bay to the port of Baltimore; that she was
attached to the steam tug by a hawser fifty fathoms long, running
from the bow of the ship to the stern of the steam tug; that the
master and crew of the ship were entirely ignorant of the channel
leading to the port, and that they assumed no control or direction
over the ship; that the ship followed closely in the wake of the
steam tug as she sailed up the bay; that as they proceeded in that
direction those in charge of the ship perceived that they were
passing in close proximity to a dredging machine heading to the
south, similar to that described in the libel; that just as they
passed that object they perceived at a distance in the rear of the
same a second dredging machine about midway the channel, but a
little nearer to the western edge of the same than the one they had
just passed; and the answer for the ship alleges that the steam tug
would have run directly into the second dredge had she not
starboarded her helm just in time to prevent a collision, but not
in season to enable the ship to adopt the necessary corresponding
precaution.
Two causes for the disaster are assigned in the answer filed by
the owners of the steam tug:
1. That the dredging machines were improperly anchored in the
middle of the channel, and on the line of the lights intended for
the guidance of ships when using the channel and under way, and
that the dredges should have been located nearer to the edge of the
channel, which, as they allege, is only about three hundred feet
wide.
2. That the collision was caused by the gross mismanagement of
the ship,
Page 97 U. S. 312
and by the drunkenness, incompetency, and negligence of the
pilot in charge of her navigation, and they also allege that the
ship had a fair and free wind, with her topsails drawing and under
full headway, and that she was not dependent upon the steam tug
either for her motion or her course.
Testimony was taken on both sides; and both parties having been
fully heard, the District Court dismissed the libel as to the steam
tug, entered a decretal order in favor of the libellants as against
the ship, and sent the cause to a commissioner to ascertain and
report the amount of the damages.
Due report was made by the commissioner that the libellants are
entitled to recover as damages the sum of $24,184.57. Exceptions to
the report were filed by the claimants of the ship, which were
subsequently overruled by the district court, and a final decree
entered in favor of the libellants for the amount reported by the
commissioner.
Prompt appeal was taken by the owners of the ship and by the
libellants to the circuit court, where the parties were again
heard; and the circuit court being of the opinion that both the
steam tug and the tow were in fault, reversed the decree of the
district court dismissing the libel as to the steam tug, and
entered a decree in favor of the libellants against both of the
respondent vessels for the amount of the damages allowed by the
district court, and adjudged and decreed that the same, together
with the interest and cost, be equally divided between the ship and
the steam tug; and from that decree all the parties appealed to
this Court.
Conflicting theories are still maintained by the respective
appellants.
1. Throughout, the owners of the steam dredge have contended
that both the steam tug and the ship were in fault, and they still
insist that the decree of the circuit court is correct, except that
it fails to make provision that if either of the parties adjudged
to be in fault is unable to pay the whole amount of the moiety
decreed against such party, that the libellants may collect the
balance of such moiety of the other respondent party.
2. On the part of the steam tug the proposition is still
maintained, that the steam dredge was anchored in a wrong
place,
Page 97 U. S. 313
and that the collision was caused by the gross mismanagement of
the ship, arising from the drunkenness, negligence, and
incompetency of her pilot.
3. Opposed to that, it is contended by the appellants in behalf
of the ship, as follows: 1. that the steam dredge is responsible
for the accident, by reason of the place and manner of her
anchorage; 2. that in any view, if the ship is held liable at all,
the decree of the circuit court dividing the damages between her
and the steam tug should be affirmed.
Cases arise undoubtedly where both the tug and the tow are
liable for the consequences of a collision, as when those in charge
of the respective vessels jointly participate in their control and
management, and the master or crew of both vessels are either
deficient in skill, omit to take due care, or are guilty of
negligence in their navigation.
Sturgis v.
Boyer, 24 How. 110;
The Mabey
and Cooper, 14 Wall. 204.
Official directions as to the position of the steam dredges
employed in making the excavation were given by the engineer to the
superintendent, and it appears that the superintendent carried the
directions into effect. They were placed in their positions
pursuant to those directions; and it appears that the orders given
required that they should remain in that position during the night,
in order that the work could be resumed in the morning, without
inconvenience or delay.
Three steam dredges were employed by the libellants in making
the excavation under their contract with the principal official
engineer. By their contract they were to prosecute the work under
the directions of the engineer in charge, and it appears that he,
the afternoon before the collision occurred in the evening,
directed the dredges to be placed in the respective positions where
they were when the steam tug, with her tow, attempted to sail up
the channel, which is straight, and runs nearly north and south.
They were employed in deepening the channel in the bay, below the
mouth of the Patapsco River, as before remarked, under a contract
with the United States. Being employed in the same work, they were
located as follows, to-wit, the first between two and three miles
above the mouth or southern end of the channel; the second, which
is the one that was sunk and lost, was located about a quarter of a
mile
Page 97 U. S. 314
further north; and the third and last, about a mile and a
quarter north of the second. Buoys were set on the eastern edge of
the channel, as guides for mariners by night, and the steam dredges
were anchored on the western edge of the excavated channel, leaving
about two hundred feet of excavated channel between the steam
dredge lost in the collision and the buoys located on the eastern
edge of the same.
Evidence of the most satisfactory character was given that the
steam dredges were properly moored, and it shows that each was held
in position by three anchors having two quarter lines, one from
each side, running towards the front six hundred feet, at an angle
as claimed of about forty five degrees, and a stern line running
out about four hundred feet, which it is not denied were sufficient
to hold the dredges firmly in position. Though securely moored, it
appears that the steam dredges were not exactly in line with each
other, the second, which is the one lost in the collision, having
been located half her width further to the west than the first,
which was anchored a quarter of a mile lower down in the
channel.
Enough appears to show that the contract of the libellants for
deepening the channel was completed for the whole length between
the steam dredges and the buoys, and that the dredges were located
with a view to prosecute the work of excavation on the west side of
the centre line of the work for the same width, or, in other words,
the channel was to be deepened to the width of four hundred feet --
two hundred feet on each side of the centre line, the eastern half
of which only was completed; from which it follows that the water
in the channel east of the steam dredges was four feet deeper than
the water in the channel west of the dredges, which had only the
natural depth of water. Either channel had sufficient depth of
water for the steam tug and the ship, as the testimony clearly
shows that the water west of the dredges was eighteen or twenty
feet deep, and that the ship did not draw more than fourteen
feet.
Examined in the light of these suggestions, as the case should
be, it is clear that the proposition that the steam dredge was
anchored in an improper place utterly fails, as the proofs are
clear that the steam tug with the ship in tow had plenty of sea
room to pass up either side of the anchored dredges. Such
Page 97 U. S. 315
being the case, it follows that the steam dredge was without
fault, as the proofs show that she displayed good signal lights,
and that she had competent lookouts properly stationed on her deck.
Securely anchored as she was on the western edge of the excavated
channel, there was an unobstructed passage of water east of her
about two hundred feet in width and twenty four feet deep, and with
a passage west of her of equal width, where the water was eighteen
or twenty feet in depth.
Vessels in motion are required to keep out of the way of a
vessel at anchor, if the latter is without fault, unless it appears
that the collision was the result of inevitable accident; the rule
being that the vessel in motion must exonerate herself from blame,
by showing that it was not in her power to prevent the collision by
adopting any practicable precautions.
The Batavia, 40
Eng.L. & Eq. 25;
The Lochlibo, 3 W. Rob. 310;
Strout v.
Foster, 1 How. 89, 94 [argument of counsel --
omitted];
Ure v. Coffman,
19 How. 56;
The Granite
State, 3 Wall. 314;
The
Bridgeport, 14 Wall. 119;
The John Adams,
1 Cliff. 413.
Concede that and it follows that the ship was clearly in fault,
as the proofs show to a demonstration that if she had starboarded
her helm after she passed the first steam dredge, the collision
would not have occurred, and they furnish no excuse for the
omission. Instead of that, the better opinion is that the ship had
no lookout, and that her helm was put to port at the very moment
when it should have been put to starboard. Explanations to show how
the mistake happened are unnecessary, as the ship is equally in
fault whether it was because the pilot was intoxicated or because
the ship was without a lookout. Suffice it to say the mistake
occurred, and the evidence shows that the ship is without just
excuse, as the night was light and the sea was smooth. Collisions
under such circumstances find no excuse where there is a good wind
and a berth of sufficient width, as nothing short of bad seamanship
in such a case could bring the two vessels together.
Nothing of much importance remains to be considered except the
question whether the steam tug was also in fault.
Negligence, it is alleged, was the cause of the collision, and
the libellants charge that those in charge of the steam tug were
guilty of want of skill and care, as well as those in charge
Page 97 U. S. 316
of the ship, and that both the steam tug and the ship are
responsible to the owners of the steam dredge for the damages which
the collision occasioned.
Gross negligence, it is insisted, is imputable to the master of
the steam tug in attempting to tow a ship two hundred and eighteen
feet long up that channel in the night on either side of the steam
dredges, especially without more knowledge of the same than was
possessed by the master of the steam tug, according to his own
testimony. His knowledge of the channel appears to have been very
imperfect; but he knew that the steam dredges were there, as he
admits that he saw them there when he came down from the port the
same afternoon. He took the ship in tow off Annapolis, and at the
time he entered into the engagement he said he would take her up
the excavated channel; but when the steam tug and tow reached the
first steam dredge, he took them the west side of the dredge, which
both the tug and tow passed in safety, though not more than thirty
five or forty feet west of the starboard side, as she was lying
heading south.
As before explained, the second steam dredge was moored half her
width or more further to the west than the first, so that in order
to pass her in safety it was necessary that both the steam tug and
the two should incline to port; and it appears that the steam tug
did so, and that she passed the steam dredge without collision, but
that the ship, either because she neglected that precaution or
because she ported her helm, ran into the steam dredge, striking
her end on, eight or ten feet from her starboard side, with such
violence that she broke and cut into the heavy timbers of the
dredge for the distance of six feet, causing her to sink in the
channel.
Without doubt, it was practicable for the steam tug, with due
care and good seamanship on the part of those in charge both of the
steam tug and the tow, to take the tow up to the port on either
side of the steam dredges; but we all concur with the circuit judge
that it was a rash act and bad seamanship to attempt to do so in
such close proximity to the anchored steam dredge, when there was
plenty of room to have given the same a wider berth.
Attempt is made to excuse the master for having selected
Page 97 U. S. 317
the western side of the steam dredges for his passage, upon the
ground that he was influenced by a signal from the first dredge;
but the evidence introduced for the purpose fails to satisfy the
court that any such signal was given; nor would it afford any
satisfactory excuse for the steam tug even if it appeared that the
fact was so, as it was still the duty of the steam tug to have
given a wider berth to the anchored steam dredges. Such an
experiment was wholly inexcusable, as there was plenty of searoom
still further to the west to have enabled the tug and tow to have
passed up the channel without danger of collision with the anchored
steam dredges.
Certain exceptions were taken to the commissioner's report in
the district court, but inasmuch as they were not pressed in the
circuit court nor assigned for error here, they are overruled.
Innocent parties in a case of collision are entitled to full
compensation for the injuries received by their vessel, unless it
occurred by inevitable accident, provided the amount does not
exceed the amount or value of the interest of the other party in
the colliding ship and her freight then pending. 9 Stat. 635;
The Atlas, 93 U. S. 302;
The Alabama and the Gamecock, 92 U. S.
695;
The Washington and the
Gregory, 9 Wall. 513.
Where the charge in such a case is joint, it is correct to
divide the damages; but still the injured party, if without fault,
is entitled to full compensation, and it follows that if either of
the faulty parties is unable to pay the whole of his moiety, it is,
in general, the right of the injured party to collect the balance
of the other faulty party. No such provision is contained in the
decree of the circuit court, probably for the reason that the
stipulation for value given in behalf of the steam tug greatly
exceeds the amount of a moiety of the damages and costs awarded to
the libellants. But such a stipulation is merely a substitute for
the vessel, and in view of all the circumstances it is deemed
proper that the decree shall conform to the settled practice.
Tested by these suggestions, it follows that the decree of the
circuit court must be modified in that particular.
Decree, as modified, affirmed.