The Hypodame, 73 U.S. 216 (1867)

Syllabus

U.S. Supreme Court

The Hypodame, 73 U.S. 6 Wall. 216 216 (1867)

The Hypodame

73 U.S. (6 Wall.) 216

Syllabus

1. In cases of collision depending on fact, where the evidence is conflicting, this Court will not readily reverse a decree made by the district and affirmed by the circuit court. It declares that the district court, which can examine witnesses ore tenus, and summon, if it pleases, experienced masters of vessels to help them, as Trinity masters do the English courts in cases depending on nautical experience, has better opportunities than any other courts can have for examining such cases, and for forming correct conclusions on them.

2. When a steam vessel proceeding in the dark hears a hail before it from some source which it cannot or does not see, it is the duty of the steam vessel instantly to stop and reverse her engine, not simply to "slow."

3. The captain of a steam propeller is not a competent lookout, though the propeller be a river propeller, and not a steamer of the larger size. There should be a lookout specially placed to see what is ahead.


Opinions

U.S. Supreme Court

The Hypodame, 73 U.S. 6 Wall. 216 216 (1867) The Hypodame

73 U.S. (6 Wall.) 216

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR

THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

Syllabus

1. In cases of collision depending on fact, where the evidence is conflicting, this Court will not readily reverse a decree made by the district and affirmed by the circuit court. It declares that the district court, which can examine witnesses ore tenus, and summon, if it pleases, experienced masters of vessels to help them, as Trinity masters do the English courts in cases depending on nautical experience, has better opportunities than any other courts can have for examining such cases, and for forming correct conclusions on them.

2. When a steam vessel proceeding in the dark hears a hail before it from some source which it cannot or does not see, it is the duty of the steam vessel instantly to stop and reverse her engine, not simply to "slow."

3. The captain of a steam propeller is not a competent lookout, though the propeller be a river propeller, and not a steamer of the larger size. There should be a lookout specially placed to see what is ahead.

Page 73 U. S. 217

4. Where a collision at night between a steamer and a sailing vessel is the consequence of a sudden and unexpected change of course on the part of the steamer which produces a sudden peril and leaves no time to the sailing vessel to display a light before a collision -- or do more than shout -- where the steamer, if it had had a sufficient lookout, might easily have avoided the collision, it has no right to demand that the damages should be divided as where both are in fault.

5. Though damages for collision ought not to be awarded to an amount beyond the stipulation given on the release or discharge of the offending vessel from attachment, yet within that amount they may be given though exceeding those claimed by the libel originally, and while it was uncertain what the damages would be, if the libel have been properly amended.

Chapin libeled the propeller Hypodame for a collision which had occurred on the Hudson River on a December night, 1862, a little below Dunderberg, between the propeller just named, then going up the river, and a schooner of his descending it, by which the schooner was struck on its port side near the cathead, split open for ten feet or more, and sank before she could be towed into shallow water.

His allegation was that the propeller, ascending the river on its east side, at the rate of eleven or twelve miles an hour, with no proper lookout stationed or attending to his duty, with plenty of room to have passed safely, had not done so, but, making a rank sheer from her previous course, though hailed by the schooner, and though the hail was heard, had run at full speed into the schooner, descending the river on its west side at the rate of but a mile and a half an hour, and sank her; that by reason of the collision, he had been put to great expense to raise and recover the vessel and cargo, to repair the one and save the other, "the amount and particulars whereof could not as yet be correctly stated," but would as believed "exceed in the aggregate $6,000."

On the other hand, the answer denied that the propeller was going at any such rate of speed as that pretended by the libel, averring that the speed was much slower than even six miles an hour -- in fact, "very slow;" that she had one bright light on the stem forward, which shone right ahead, and four

Page 73 U. S. 218

points on either bow; two bright lights on the flagstaff aft, which shone all around; a red light on the larboard side, and a green light on the starboard, with a competent lookout placed in a proper position on the forward part of the propeller and attentive to his duty, as was the master, and also the other officers; that to avoid an apprehended danger with a steam tug and tow descending the river, she had changed her course to the westward, giving the usual signal of such intention by two blasts of her steam whistle; that shortly after this change of course had been made, a hail was heard on board the propeller from some boat or vessel on the river, but that no boat or vessel could be seen from the propeller by reason of the darkness of the night and from the omission on the part of the vessel to show any light; that the propeller's engine was immediately slowed, and then stopped, when, at that same moment, the headlights of the propeller, shining on the sails of a vessel, revealed for the first time the schooner; that the bells of the propeller were rung to reverse the engine, and that this was promptly done, and the steamer's helm ported to ease the blow of the collision; inevitable, now, however, by any effort on the part of the propeller, from the close proximity and course of the schooner at the time of the hail and of the discovery on the propeller of her critical position.

The facts as assumed by both the courts below, were essentially these:

The night was dark. Those in charge of the schooner discovered the lights of the steamer after she had rounded Verplanck's Point, about two miles below the place of collision. The schooner was moving very slowly down the river, west of the middle of the stream, the steamer coming up at the rate of six to eight miles on the east side, a course which, if it had been continued, would have carried her clear of the schooner. After the steamer had passed Verplanck's Point, she discovered a tow descending the river, and was about to go to the eastward when, seeing the light of a vessel on the east, the master decided to pass to the westward of the tow, and starboarded his vessel for that purpose, making in fact

Page 73 U. S. 219

a rank sheer. He had hardly got her head turned so as to clear the tow when he heard a shout, and he told the man at the wheel to slow the boat. Supposing that the sound came from some small boat, he asked the helmsman where the boat was. The man replied that he saw nothing; the steamer's headlights the next moment shining full upon the sails of a schooner, not till this moment thought of, but now seem immediately under the bow, and someone on board of her shouting out, "In the name of heaven, are you coming into us? are you going to sink us?" The helmsman testified that when he heard the first shout, he told the captain to stop the boat, that there was something ahead, and that the captain did not stop her. The steamer had no lookout except the captain, who had charge of navigating her. Though the night was dark, the court "could not conclude from the evidence that a proper lookout on the bow of the steamer would not have discovered her in time to have cleared her." Witnesses from the schooner testified that by a good lookout she might have been seen half a mile off.

The schooner was neither carrying a light at the time of the accident nor exhibited one; no statute at that time compelled her to carry one. She had, however, a lookout. It did not appear that she understood the meaning of steam signals.

Though a hawser was thrown from the steamer at once, and made fast to the schooner, with a view of towing her into shoal water, the blow from the steamer had so laid her open, that she went down almost immediately. She was, however, ultimately raised and repaired at large cost, as hereafter mentioned.

On this case, the district court considered that the propeller was the sole cause of the collision, and should be made liable for all the damages.

As respected these, the libel, as already said, alleged that they would exceed $6,000, and stipulations for costs and value were entered into and accepted for $7,250. But upon the reference, the proof showed and the commissioner reported that they amounted to a larger sum. The claimant

Page 73 U. S. 220

filed various exceptions to the commissioner's report, the most important one having been that he had erred in allowing any greater amount of damages than what had been claimed in the libel, viz., $6,000, whereupon the libel was amended by increasing the sum originally claimed by it. The district court entered its decree for $7,513.07. Upon appeal to the circuit court, it appearing that that sum with interest and costs exceeded the stipulations, the excess was struck out, thus reducing the recovery to $7,250 for the damages and costs, that being the amount of the stipulation, and with this reduction the circuit court affirmed the decree of the district court.

The whole case was now here for review.

Page 73 U. S. 223

MR. JUSTICE GRIER delivered the opinion of the Court.

In cases of collision, the testimony is often conflicting and irreconcilable. Each party can make out a plausible case supported by some evidence. In such cases, we have frequently decided that where the district and circuits concur in opinion on the facts and there is testimony supporting their decision, we will not reverse it on doubts raised by ingenuity of counsel. [Footnote 1]

Page 73 U. S. 224

The district courts have better opportunities for examining such cases and forming a correct conclusion than any other. They may examine witnesses ore tenus, and although they may not have Trinity masters to assist them, yet in difficult cases depending on nautical experience the judge may call to his aid experienced masters of vessels (as is done in one district at least), [Footnote 2] whose report will greatly assist the court in coming to a correct conclusion.

In the case before us, we see no reason to doubt that the conclusions of both courts below on the facts in the case are correct.

We concur also with the court below that the propeller had no competent lookout, as required by the frequent decisions of this Court. [Footnote 3] The evidence shows that the schooner might have been seen a half-mile off if there had been a competent lookout.

When the propeller made the sudden sheer towards the western shore, the man at the wheel told the captain "to stop the boat, there was something ahead; he did not stop her; her wheel was then put to port. I then pulled the bell," &c.

The sheer was abrupt and totally unexpected. Previous to that, there was no danger calling for any peculiar precautions. The schooner was in her proper place, and could not possibly anticipate such a sudden change of course. All they could do under the circumstances was to shout -- they were heard -- but no attention was paid to the warning. Producing a light at that time would have been equally unavailing.

The defense relied on here was that the schooner was in fault in not exhibiting a light on the propeller's change of direction towards her. The collision took place before the passage of the Act of the 20th of April, 1864. This act (article 5) requires sailing ships, "under way or being towed, to carry the same lights as steamships under way, with the exception of the white masthead lights, which they

Page 73 U. S. 225

shall never carry," an exception justified by experience, which showed that it caused many collisions, arising from mistaking it for a light on shore; the case of Propeller Monticello v. Mollisson, [Footnote 4] being an example. There, the steamer was running on a course a mile wide of the schooner, but mistaking her masthead light for a lighthouse, she steered with such accuracy of aim as to strike the schooner exactly and with such force as to sink her.

By the customs and rules of navigation, every vessel at anchor in a harbor or roadstead is bound to keep a light suspended on board. But previous to the passage of this act, sailing vessels on the rivers and on the ocean were not bound by any law or custom to carry lights. The case of The Osprey, cited by the appellant's counsel, applies to vessels meeting in the same line, where one party can plainly see the other and yet keeps dark. But where the danger of collision is the consequence of a sudden and unexpected change of course which produces a sudden peril and leaves no time to the sailing vessel to display a light before a collision -- or do more than shout -- where the steamboat, if it had had a sufficient lookout, might easily have avoided the collision, it has no right to complain or demand that the damages should be divided as where both are in fault.

The exceptions to the master's report are without just foundation after the circuit court had reduced the damages to the amount of $513.

Decree of the circuit court affirmed.

[Footnote 1]

See Norton v. Newell and Ship, 3 Wall. 267.

[Footnote 2]

The Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

[Footnote 3]

See The Ottawa, 3 Wall. 268.

[Footnote 4]

58 U. S. 17 How. 152.