Court Opinion

ID: 8741741
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 10:51:09.441287+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:00:26.642475
License: Public Domain

THOMAS, District Judge.
The schooners William Churchill, in cargo, north bound, and Freddie Hencken, unladen, south bound, collided about 6 o’clock in the afternoon of January 22, 1899, north of Barnegat, on the Atlantic coast. The wind was westerly. The Churchill was sailing free on a course north by east one-half east; the Hencken was closehauled on a course southwest by south one-half south. Both vessels carried proper lights, and the lights as well as the vessels themselves could be seen at a sufficient distance to avoid accident. The evidence shows conclusively that a proper lookout was not kept on the Churchill, and that she did not discover the Hencken until the danger of a collision was considerable, and that she was then roused to activity by the horn sounded on the Hencken. Hence the Churchill, by her negligence^ contributed to the injury of the Hencken, and, as she was the burdened vessel, she alone must respond for the damage, unless the Hencken, without ..excuse, failed, to keep her course. The substance of the claim of the Churchill is that she did not see the Hencken earlier on account of the obstruction *691caused by another schooner, and that when she did discover the Heneken tin1 latter's red light appeared a little on the Churchill’s starboard bow, and that the Ohureliiirs jibboom was heading for about the foremast of the Heneken; that the Ohureliiirs wheel was put hard up, and that she went off several points, the spanker sheet being let go to aid the maneuver; that; the Churchill struck the Heneken on her starboard side, near the main rigging, within a point of abeam; that the collision was caused by the failure of the Heneken to keep her course, and by reason of her paying off some three points to avoid the collision, which maneuver was undertaken by the Heneken as soon as the Churchill tried to go off. If the Churchill went off , and the Heneken followed in the same direction,' — of which there is much evidence, — the Heneken was negligent unless she1 acted in extremis. But the evidence of the Heneken is that she kept her course without deviation, and her evidence is as credible as that of the Churchill, although certain evidence of the mate is unacceptable. He states that from first seeing her the Churchill “kept off, and showed her red light, and she luffed up, and showed her green light, and then kept off, and showed her red light again.” This may be true, hut he further states that when she allowed her green light she fully crossed the Heneken's bow, so ihat her stern cleared by about 60 feet, and that she “turned around and showed her red light, and shut out her green” light, and struck the Heneken amidships. This seems impossible. But the mate’s erroneous estimate of the distance is not controlling. The captain of the Heneken is dead, and the court is deprived of his evidence, hut the truth seems to be that the Churchill was, in the first instance, the offender, and the burden is upon her to show that the Heneken changed her course. Considering the evidence with all its confusion and inconsistencies, the court is .not convinced that the Heneken changed her course, and therefore the fault must rest with the Churchill, who vvas clearly a wrongdoer. Her negligence Avas the primary cause of Ihe accident, and without reasonably clear evidence she should not be permitted to bring the Heneken into fault upon the plea that the latter, in trying to avoid a threatening collision, departed from her duty to keep her course. There should be a decree for llie damages caused the Heneken, and dismissing the cross libel, Avith costs