Opinion
THE BELLHAVEN. THE FREDERICK C. UNDERWOOD. BALTIMORE & O. R. CO. v. UNITED STATES.
Nos. 454, 455.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
July 23, 1934.
Bigham, Englar, Jones & Houston, of New York City (Leonard J. Matteson, of New York City, of counsel), for libelant.
Martin Conboy, U. S. Atty., of New York City (Charles B. Wythe, Sp. Asst. U. S. Atty., of New York City, of- counsel), for the United States.
Before L. HAND, AUGUSTUS N. HAND, and CHASE, Circuit Judges.
[MAJORITY ā L. HAND, Circuit Judge.]
L. HAND, Circuit Judge.
This suit arises out of a collision in the Upper Bay at about 6:30 on the evening of October 10, 1928, between the steamer, āBell-haven,ā and the tug, āUnderwood,ā which had in tow on her starboard hand the loaded earfloat, āNo. 162.ā As usual, there is little harmony between the two versions, but some things are agreed. The tide was flood, the night clear, the place of the collision was 1,500 feet south from the entrance to āBig Tomā pier; and 600' feet south from the eastward buoy which marked the wreck of āEl Sol.ā The āBellhavenā was bound out at. her full harbor speed of about seven or eight knots; the āUnderwoodā was bound north for the Manhattan piers, at about six and a half. The bow of the steamer struck the starboard side of the float about midships at an angle of between forty-five and ninety degrees, and cut in far enough to sink it with all the cars. The āBellhavenā had blown one single blast before the collision, and ported somewhat; had backed and let go her anehor; the āUnderwoodā had blown at least one two-blast signal, and blew alarms in extremis. In all else the stories diverge; we must state them separately.
The tug says that she came up on the west side of the channel, holding the āBrasegonā wreck close aboard on her port hand. The easterly buoy of that wreck was very little short of two thousand yards, a nautical mile, from the eastern buoy of āEl Solāsā wreck. She laid her course for āEl Solās buoy,ā meaning to give it just enough berth for safety. When opposite the āBessegenā wreck she saw the āBellhavenā on the west side of 'die channel, bound out, but headed somewhat easterly of the thread, as though she might be crossing to the outside. At a distance of two miles she gave her a signal of two Masts; getting no answer, she bore on, holding her course until she got within half a mile, or perhaps three-quarters, when she gave the āBell-havenā a second signal of two blasts. The āBellhavenā had meanwhile como down to nearly opposite the wreck of āEl Sol,ā and had ported a little, straightening in the channel; she did not answer. So matters stood, safely for a starboard passing with a wide berth, when quite unaccountably the āBell-havenā blew a single blast, ported and came down upon her. There was nothingā to do but keep on, and try to cross her oncoming bows. This the tug did, putting- on all possible speed, and in extremis harrl-a-porting to kick away her stem. The āBellhavenā hit tho middle of the float at about forty-live degrees, nearly cut it in two, and so far careened the tug as almost to make her turn turtle.
The āBellhavenā says that she was coming down straight and only a little to tho west of the thread of the channel. When above āEl Solā she made out the tugās red light and towing staff lights about a point on Tier port bow and some one or two thousand feet below her, safely over for a port passing. Accordingly the tug sounded a single blast, to which she replied, porting a little, very little, sav two degrees. The tug, disregarding this agreement, shortly thereafter hard-a-star-boarded, changed her heading ninety degrees and crossed the āBellhavenāsā course at right angles. Of this mad navigation she gave warning by a double blast; some of tho witnesses say she repeated it. The āBellhaven,ā with great address adapting herself to this monstrous behaviour, stopped, backed and let go her starboard anchor. Hot only had she stopped, but she must have backed far enough to be over the anchor, for the ehain led straight down; one witness says it led forward. The tug, at last awake to her danger, east off the float which the floodtide carried upon the bows of the stationary āBellhaven.ā
Two witnesses, not directly eonccmed in the collision, in part corroborated tho tugās story, but ono was in the libellantās employ, and the judge discredited the other, though, so far as we can see, without any. reason. This witness, a ferryman, spoke of a ship coming up on the east sido of tho channel ahead of his ferry, and about even, with tho tug, win eh he put near to the west edge of the channel. There certainly was such a ship, the āWythoville,ā and she was where this witness says, but the āBellhavenā put hex and tiie ferry well below the tug. But the āBellhavenāsā witnesses wexe not originally sure just what was the vessel that gave her the singlo blast; they only ātook itā to be the tug; and while the āāWythevilleā was indeed rather fax below the āBellhavenā to signal her, she might have done so. It is therefore quite possible that it was she who gave the signal which the āBellhavenā answered.
The judge disposed of the case, in part at any rate, on the assumption that the-tug was at Fault for attempting to carry out a starboard passing without getting the āBoll-havenāsā assent. He appears to have assimilated such a passing to a crossing situation, or to a passing caso where the vessels are head and head, for he cited, our decisions in The John King, 49 F. 469, and The Dauntless, 3 F.(2d) 529, in support of his conclusion. This was a mistake. If the vessels are in position to pass starboard to starboard, the rulo does not require an assent to the proposal SO' to pass; they must do so; the rule does not require one to start across the otherās bows, or to stop and back. In The Dauntless, supra, we had before us a case where the vessels were head and head, and where one tried to pass starboard to starboard without an agreement. That is a totally different situation from, that at bar, where, if the facts aro as the tugā says, she needed no assent to' keep on unless she was uncertain about the other vesselās navigation. Again, while the judge was right in putting the burden upon the tug to excuse coming up on the wrong side of a narrow channel, he was wrong in not clearing her; her lights were all visible in the clear night and she could have been made out in ample season if the lookout had been good. We have often held that if the offend in g vessel is visible by the other in time to shape her movements accordingly, and if she does not impede the otherās navigation by her unlawful position, her fault has not contributed. La Bretagne (C. C. A.) 179 F. 286; Commonwealth, etc., Line v. Seaboard Transp. Co. (D. C.) 258 F. 707; The Socony No. 19 (C. C. A.) 29 F.(2d) 20; The Perseverance (C. C. A.) 63 F.(2d) 788; Eastern Steamship Lines v. Tug Syosset (C. C. A.) 71 F. (2d) 666. Thus there is really no question of law involved. If the tug did indeed come up on the west side and in full view, and if the āBellhavenā ported into her, the āBellhavenā alone is guilty; if on the other hand the āBellhavenā was coming down on her own side of the channel, and after an exchange of single blasts the tug starboarded across her course, the āBellhavenā was blameless and the tug has herself to thank.
The judge further found as matter of fact that the vessels had agreed upon a port to port passing, and quite correctly concluded that if that were once settled, the rest followed. In making this conclusion he seems to have depended altogether upon his impression of the witnesses, for he declared that he could find nothing to choose in probability between the*two versions. There was indeed an improbability in either, yet, if the āBell-havenāsā story be taken at its face, it is decidedly the less likely; indeed it is impossible to accept it at all without some reconciliation of its glaring inconsistencies. The tug is represented as about a point off the āBell-havenāsā port bow when one or two thousand feet away, headed if not on a parallel course, then off more to the eastward. From this position under a starboard helm she swung, across the āBellhavenāsā bows so much as to make the collision at a right angle, the āBellhavenā holding substantially to her old course. The absurdity of this is apparent when we consider that the float was nearly three hundred feet long, and that at one thousand feet the tug would have been only two hundred to the east of the āBell-havenāsā projected course, and at two thousand feet, four hundred feet. The manreuvre ascribed to the tug would therefore involve a turn of ninety degrees in a lateral movement of little more than the floatās own length. As between anything of the sort and an unaccountable sheer to starboard of the āBellhaven,ā the probabilities seem to us strongly to favor the second. However, it has long been the custom of admiralty judges to accept a story generally, of which they are obliged to reject the particulars, mending it, as it were, in its weaker spots. Indeed, it would often be quite impossible otherwise to reach any decision at all, for the ardor of each side frequently colors both versions too much for the complete acceptance of either. Here, for example, we might say that the swing of the tug to port was nothing like so much as the āBellhavenā supposed, and that the angle of collision instead of being ninety degrees was forty-five, as the tug puts it. One might also assume that the āBellhavenā had ported more than she says. Even then the improbability of the tugās navigation remains very great. It is the first impulse of any master when confronted with a vessel ahead to port his helm; no conceivable reason can be suggested here, why the tug, if passing safely by a margin of two hundred feet, should swing across the river. She was by hypothesis on her own side of the channel; she was bound for the New York shore; her crossing would bring her into the wreck of āEl Sol,ā or at best upon the anchorage ground just below; quite off her course. The āBellhavenā says that there was a tow to the west of her and one in front of her. Surely in the light of all this, any such manoeuvre is highly improbable. Indeed the pilot and master of the āBellhavenā regarded it as a crazy freak.
On the other hand the tugās version, though ascribing to the āBellhavenā a port helm at the -wrong moment, is not entirely unreasonable. That the tug gave a double blast when opposite the āBessegenā wreck, two miles off, we do not believe; but it is not important to the result. That she was in fact coming up along the west side of the channel seems to us almost certain; both sides agree that the collision took plaee about six hundred feet south of āEl Sol.ā If she had come across to that spot on a starboard helm she put herself quite needlessly into a pocket from which there was no escape; not so, if she was bound straight up as she says. This being conceded, it is entirely possible that the āBellhavenā exchanged signals with the āWytheville.ā Why, if she did, being safely off to port, she should have ported still further remains unexplained, as indeed this collision must on any theory. But we need not suppose that she had ported so much as the tug says. She may have been suddenly confronted with the tow because of a bad lookout, and having ported, have supposed that she was in extremis. ' To let go her starboard anchor would turn her head to that side; which would be further augmented by backing, for she backed to starboard. If meanwhile she was still moving, she would be in fact gaining ground into the tugās waters, changing her heading all the time. The collision would thus appear to be due to a wanton change of helm, when it was really caused by quite unnecessary action in extremis. This mitigates the extravagance of the shipās navigation; but on any showing it is far less improbable than that of the tug as the ship gives it.
We are indeed not ordinarily given to reversing the District Court upon an issue of fact, though of course we have an eventual responsibility for the facts as well as for the law. But there are a number ox considerations which take this ease out of the ordinary rule. The judge did not see any of the āBellhavenāsā witnesses except the pilot; and he was not so much impressed as we cannot help being by the absurdity of their story on its face; especially by the extreme hardihood of saying that the collision happened because the tug cast off the float to drift down upon the flood tide against the hows of the anchored āBellhaven.ā Such a yarn discredits all who share in it; no plausibility in the telling of it can give credence to it or to them. Further, as we have said, the opinion depends in some part anyway upon the burdens of the tug; errors of law.
Decree reversed; decree to he entered on the libel and dismissing the cross-libel.