1. A steam tug making between seven and eight knots an hour was
towing a ship by a hawser leading astern two hundred and seventy
feet. The course which they were sailing crossed that of a schooner
moving at the rate of from two to three knots an hour at a point
just ahead of the tug, or between her and the ship. The schooner
had a competent man at her wheel and a lookout, both of whom did
their duty faithfully. Her lights were properly set and brightly
burning, and she kept her course about northeast. There was a pilot
upon the ship, to whose orders the tug was subject. He, however,
gave none. The tug did not slow her engine until the schooner was
up to her, nor stop it until the schooner was about to strike the
hawser. The course of the tug and the ship had then been changed
about a point to the south. The ship struck the schooner on her
port side, at about the fore-rigging, and sank her.
Held
that the ship and the tug, being in contemplation of law but one
vessel under steam, were bound to keep out of the way of the
schooner, and are liable for the damages which she sustained.
2. The form of decree sanctioned in
The Alabama and the
Gamecock, 92 U. S. 695,
approved.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for damage by collision, begun by the owners and
master of the schooner
Magellan against the ship
Civilta and the tug
Restless. The libel alleges
that the schooner was heading about northeast, having her booms on
her port side, and making about two and a half or three knots an
hour, and that
"the tug was towing the ship at the rate of about eight or nine
knots an hour and headed for the schooner until she was very near
to her, when she suddenly sheered to port across the bows of the
schooner and just cleared her, but brought the ship down on the
schooner."
The answers both of the tug and the ship state that the
Page 103 U. S. 700
course of the tug with the ship following in her wake was
southwest and that of the schooner about northeast, which if kept
would have carried her at a safe distance on the starboard side of
the tug and ship; that the tug and ship kept steadily on their
course, until the tug passed the schooner, when the schooner
suddenly kept away to the right between the tug and the ship, ran
on to the hawser, and was sunk. In this way was presented the
principal issue of fact in the case.
The findings were substantially as follows: the tug was towing
the ship from New Haven to New York by a hawser about two hundred
and seventy feet long, leading astern from the tug. The ship had on
board a pilot and the tug was subject to his orders. The night was
clear and pleasant and lit by the moon. The wind was light and a
little to the west of south. The ship and tug were going between
seven and eight knots an hour. The collision occurred a little to
the westward of Sand's Point.
The schooner was bound to Boston. She was sailing free with her
booms off to port, and was making from two to three knots an hour.
Her lights were properly set and burning brightly, as required by
law. She had a competent man at her wheel and a competent lookout,
and each of them faithfully performed his duty. Her course was
about northeast, and it was not changed before the collision.
The ship and tug were seen by those on the schooner bearing a
little on their port bow, and the schooner was seen by those on the
ship and tug bearing a little on their starboard bow. The courses
of the schooner and the ship and tug and the each other just ahead
of the tug or between the tug and the ship. The tug did not slow
her engine until the schooner had got up to her, and did not stop
till the schooner was just striking the hawser. The tug did not
change her course until the schooner was up to her or nearly so,
and the tug and ship had changed their course about a point to the
south before the collision.
The ship struck the schooner on her port side at about the
fore-rigging and sunk her. The lights of the schooner were not
observed by those on board the tug or those on board the
Page 103 U. S. 701
ship, and those on board the tug and ship mistook the course of
the schooner. The pilot on the ship gave no orders to the tug.
Upon these facts, the court below gave a decree against both the
ship and tug and apportioned the damages, one-half to each, with a
provision that if either of the vessels should prove insufficient
to pay its share the residue might be collected from the other.
The ship and the tug have taken separate appeals.
It was substantially conceded in the argument that upon the
findings the schooner is entitled to recover her damages either
from the ship or the tug. The effort of each of the respondents has
been to throw on the other the entire responsibility for the loss.
On the part of the tug, however, it was contended that the findings
do not meet the issues raised by the pleadings, but in this we
think counsel are in error. It is quite true the finding is that
the courses the vessels were on crossed each other just ahead of
the tug, or between the tug and the ship, when there is no express
averment to that effect either in the libel or the answer, but the
finding is certainly not inconsistent with anything that is
alleged. A southwest course would be parallel with a northeast
course, and the two could not cross; but in the libel it is averred
that the schooner was heading about northeast. Such, also, is the
statement in the answers, and the finding is the same. A course
which varied even a little from northeast might cross one that was
southwest. The libel charges the tug with suddenly sheering to
port, while the tug and ship say the schooner suddenly kept away to
the right. The finding is that the schooner did not change her
course, and that the ship and tug only went off their course one
point to the south. Upon the findings courses crossed each other
with occurred because the original courses crossed each other with
the vessels in dangerous proximity, and not because of a sudden
change of course by the tug as alleged. This we think
sufficient.
Upon the findings as they stand we think the decree below was
right. The ship and the tug were in law one vessel, and that a
vessel under steam. It was their duty, therefore, to keep out of
the way. Whether the one vessel, which the two
Page 103 U. S. 702
constituted for the purposes of the case, was the ship, or the
tug, or both, is the important question.
The tug furnished the motive power for herself and the ship.
Both vessels were under the general orders of the pilot on the
ship, but it is expressly found as a fact that the tug actually
received no orders from him. Being on the ship, which was two
hundred and seventy feet astern of the tug, it is not to be
presumed that he was to do more than direct the general course to
be taken by the ship in getting to her place of destination. The
details of the immediate navigation of the tug, with reference to
approaching vessels, must necessarily have been left to a great
extent to those on board of her. She was where she would ordinarily
see an object ahead before those on the ship could, and having all
the motive power of the combined vessels under her own control, she
was in a situation to act promptly and do what was required under
the circumstances. That this was expected is clearly shown by the
fact that down to the time of the collision the pilot on the ship
had found no occasion to direct her movements. Her own pilot or
master seems to have managed the navigation satisfactorily. We do
not entertain a doubt that, situated as the tug was, in the night,
so far away from the ship, it was her duty to do what was required
by the law of a vessel under steam, to keep herself and the ship
out of the way of an approaching vessel, particularly if the pilot
of the ship did not assume actual control for the time being of the
navigation of the two vessels.
Such being the case, we think it clear both vessels were in
fault. Both mistook the course of the schooner, and neither those
on the ship nor those on the tug observed the lights on the
schooner, although they were properly set and burning brightly. It
was for this reason undoubtedly that neither those on the ship nor
those on the tug took any steps in time to avoid the collision.
They evidently thought the course they were on would take them by
in safety, until it was too late. Both vessels were responsible for
the navigation, as has already been seen: the ship because her
pilot was in general charge, and the tug because of the duty which
rested on her to act upon her own responsibility in the situation
in which she was placed. The tug was in fault because she did not
on her own
Page 103 U. S. 703
motion change her course so as to keep both herself and the ship
out of the way; and the ship because her pilot, who was in charge
both of ship and tug, neglected to give the necessary directions to
the tug, when he saw or ought to have seen that no precautions were
taken by the tug to avoid the approaching danger. Had either the
ship or the tug done its duty under the circumstances, there could
have been no collision.
The decree is in the form sanctioned by this court in
The
Alabama and the Gamecock, 92 U. S. 695.
Decree affirmed.