06-0591
Otal Investments, Ltd. v. M.V. Clary


                          UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                              FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
                                        _____________________

                                    August Term, 2006
    (Argued: December 21, 2006                                   Decided: July 6, 2007)
       Docket Nos. 06-0591-cv(L), 06-0675-cv(con), 06-0789-cv(con), 06-0790-cv(con)

                                        _____________________

    OTAL INVESTMENTS LIMITED, as Owner of the M/V Kariba, for Exoneration from or
                           Limitation of Liability,

                                 Plaintiff-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Appellant,

 UNITED SERVICES AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION, ASI AUTO SHIPMENT GmbH, TED
   L. RAUSCH CO., CHARLES BROOMFIELD, MORGAN MOON, PATRICIA YORK,
   AUGUSTA ASSICURAZIONI S.p.A., CHN ITALIA S.p.A., CNH TRADE N.V., NEW
       HOLLAND NORTH, INC., FEDEX TRADE NETWORKS TRANSPORT AND
 BROKERAGE, INC., O & K ORENSTEIN & KOPPEL A.G., CASE CORPORATION AND
 TOWER GROUP INTERNATIONAL, ZURICH INSURANCE CO., ALPINA INSURANCE
 CO., GERLING INSURANCE CO., as subrogee and/or assignee of Schempp-Hirth Flugzeug-
 Vertriebs-GmbH, DAVID GREEN HILL, LIEBHERR-WERK NENZIG GmbH, LIEBHERR-
 MISCHTEKNIK, LCT LIEBHERR CONCRETE TECHNOLOGIE, LIEBHERR AMERICA,
           INC., E.H. HARMS GmbH & CO., BMW OF NORTH AMERICA LLC,

                                                                                Claimants-Appellants,

                                                    -v.-

      M.V. CLARY, MINERAL SHIPPING CO. PRIVATE LTD., MST MINERALIEN
      SCHIFFAHRT SPEDITION UND TRANSPORT, CLARY SHIPPING PTE LTD.,
     WALLENIUS WILHEMSEN LINES AS, WILH. WILHEMSEN ASA, ACTINOR CAR
            CARRIER I AS CAPITAL BANK PUBLIC LIMITED COMPANY,

                                                                   Third-Party-Defendants-Appellees,

                                            M/V TRICOLOR,

                                                                              Consolidated Defendant,


                                                     1
                           N.V. FORTIS CORPORATE INSURANCE,
                                                                                         Claimants.
                                   _______________________

BEFORE:

               HON. JON O. NEWMAN,
               HON. PETER W. HALL,
                                              Circuit Judges.

               HON. DORA L. IRIZARRY1,
                                      District Judge.

                                   _______________________

       Appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New

York (Baer, J.) finding the M/V Kariba to be exclusively at fault for a collision that resulted in

the loss of the M/V Tricolor and its cargo. We reverse and remand. Judge Newman concurs in

the judgment and opinion of the Court and files a separate concurring opinion in which Judges

Hall and Irizarry join.


                                   _______________________

               John D. Kimball, Healy & Baillie, LLP, 61 Broadway, New York, NY for
                      Plaintiff-Third-Party-Plaintiff-Appellant.

               Raymond P. Hayden, Hill, Rivkins & Hayden, LLP (John Eric Olson and
                    Kipp C. Leland on the brief), 45 Broadway, New York, NY for
                    Claimants-Appellants.

               Chester D. Hooper, Holland & Knight, LLP (James T. Shirley and
                      Francesca Morris on the brief), 195 Broadway, New York, NY for
                      Third-Party-Defendants-Appellees.



       1
       The Honorable Dora L. Irizarry, United States District Court for the Eastern District of
New York, sitting by designation.

                                                 2
               Lawrence G. Cohen, Vandeventer Black, LLP (Edward James Powers on
                     the brief), 500 World Trade Center, Norfolk, VA for Third-Party-
                     Defendants-Appellees.

                                   _______________________

HALL, Circuit Judge:

       The owner of the vessel the M/V Kariba, and owners of cargo on the M/V Tricolor,

appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York

(Baer, J.). The district court found the M/V Kariba solely liable for a collision off the coast of

Dunkerque, France. We reverse and remand.



                                          I. Background

A.     The Collision

       Before dawn on December 14, 2002, three vessels, the M/V Kariba (the “Kariba”), the

M/V Tricolor (the “Tricolor”) and the M/V Clary (the “Clary”) were navigating a Traffic

Separation Scheme (“TSS”) in international waters north of Dunkerque, France (generally known

as the English Channel). At the relevant point of the TSS, two branches intersect at

approximately right angles, one branch cutting roughly North-South, the other roughly East-

West. On the night in question, the fog was thick and visibility was low. The Kariba was

proceeding westward at about 16 knots. The Tricolor was also proceeding westward at 17.9

knots, one-half mile to the starboard aft of the Kariba, and in the process of gradually overtaking

her. At the same time, the Clary was moving northward, along the intersecting branch of the

TSS, at 13 knots, on a collision course with the Kariba.




                                                  3
       Noticing that it was on a collision course, the Clary planned to turn starboard and steer

astern of the Kariba. Before the Clary began to turn, however, the Kariba initiated its own

evasive maneuver. The Kariba, seeking to avoid a collision with the Clary—and perhaps

unaware of the proximity of the Tricolor—made an abrupt turn to starboard. The Kariba struck

the port side of the Tricolor, rending the Tricolor’s hull below its bridge. The Tricolor along

with its cargo then sank.2 There were no human casualties.

       In the quarter-hour leading up to the collision, none of the vessels sounded its foghorn or

communicated with any other vessel via radio.

B.     The Collision from the Perspective of the Three Different Ships

1.     Onboard the Kariba

       The Kariba is a 175.75 meters-long Bahamian flagged container ship, built in 1982, with

a carrying capacity of about 1200 standard containers. Having left port in Antwerp, Belgium, the

Kariba was bound for Le Havre, France, and travelling westward in the East-West Branch of the

TSS. There were three men present on the bridge at the time of the collision: Captain Kamola,

making his first restricted-visibility voyage as a Master; Second Officer Szymanski; and Able-

Bodied Seaman Ignacio. The bridge featured an Automatic Radar Plotting Aid (“ARPA”),

described as a computer system that “automatically tracks and plots target vessels and calculates

their courses and speeds,” thus predicting the “closest point of approach” of other vessels.

       Captain Kamola first noticed the Clary on his radar at 1:55 a.m. At 2:00 a.m., upon

making a planned adjustment to his course by rounding a point called the Fairy South Buoy,



       2
        We include in an appendix to this opinion a depiction of the positions of the vessel in
the moments leading up to the collision.

                                                 4
Captain Kamola noticed he might be headed for a collision with the Clary. Captain Kamola did

not act, however, because he expected the Clary to steer astern of him. At 2:04 a.m., when his

ARPA would have shown he was approximately 3.5 miles3 and eight minutes away from

colliding with the Clary, Captain Kamola asked Syzmanski to go onto the port wing of the ship

and to check for the Clary’s lights. After looking for approximately two minutes, Syzmanski did

not see anything. At this point, the Kariba was 2.8 miles away from a collision with the Clary.

       By 2:09 a.m., Captain Kamola’s radar still indicated the Clary had not changed course.

Concerned about a collision, and now only 2.0 miles away from a collision with the Clary,

Captain Kamola ordered a 10 degree turn to starboard (registered on the Dunkerque radar at

2:09:45 a.m.). Fifteen or 20 seconds later, Captain Kamola ordered another 20 degree turn to

starboard. Seconds later, Captain Kamola saw the lights of the Tricolor and ordered the rudder

full to starboard. It was too late, however; Kamola exclaimed, “Oh my God, we will hit them.”

Within the next minute or so, the Kariba’s bow struck the Tricolor broadside. The Tricolor listed

hard, capsized and sank.

2.     Onboard the Tricolor

       Built in 1987, the Tricolor was a 190 meters-long roll-on roll-off Norwegian flagged

carrier, with a capacity to carry over 3,000 cars. On the day of the collision, the Tricolor was on

a voyage from Zeebrugge, Belgium to Southampton, England, and headed westward in the East-



       3
          These distances are taken from a computer simulation of the collision based on data
collected by radar in Dunkerque, France. A compact disk (“CD”), showing the positions and
movements of the three ships, was presented at trial by the Clary’s expert, Captain Boyce, and is
agreed by all parties to closely reflect the occurrences of the night in question. The CD permits
plotting alternative courses and speeds and reveals the consequences of various combinations of
actions.

                                                 5
West branch of the TSS. There were three men on the bridge of the Tricolor: Captain Knutsen,

Second Officer Cabanda and Able-Bodied Seaman Matel.

       After 2:00 a.m., Captain Knutsen was aware of the Kariba, as well as two other ships,

ahead of him. At 2:12 a.m., Captain Knutsen noticed he was beginning to overtake the

Kariba—and indeed, could see her lights. Knutsen was also aware of the Clary and its being on a

collision course with the Kariba. Then suddenly, Captain Knutsen noticed the Kariba had

abruptly and without warning turned to starboard, and was heading straight for him. In the

moments leading up to the collision, Captain Knutsen had the Tricolor on autopilot. Seeking to

avoid the collision, Captain Knutsen and Cabanda simultaneously converged on the wheel,

hurriedly disengaged the autopilot and sent the vessel hard to starboard. Despite their efforts, the

Kariba struck the Tricolor, which listed hard, capsized and sank.

3.     Onboard the Clary

       The Clary, a 138.5 meters-long Singaporean flagged bulk carrier, was built in 1979. On

the day of the collision, the Clary had been on a voyage from Savannah, Georgia to the

Netherlands. In the moments leading up to the collision, there was only one man on the bridge:

Second Officer Toncic. While the Clary’s bridge did not include an ARPA system, it did have a

device that calculated closest points of approach, but only for vessels selected by Toncic.

       By 2:00 a.m., Second Officer Toncic noticed the Tricolor and the Kariba on his radar. By

2:02 a.m., if Toncic had plotted the point of possible collision, he would have noticed that only

3.1 miles separated the Clary from the point of collision with the Kariba. At 2:11:15 a.m.,

Toncic decided it was time to make his starboard turn in order to pass astern the Kariba and the

Tricolor, as suggested by basic navigational rules. According to the findings of the district court,


                                                 6
Toncic then “moved away from his radar, plotted his position on the chart table,” then

disengaged his autopilot and made a “dramatic” turn to starboard. In making his turn “dramatic,”

Toncic had sought to ensure the maneuver would register on the radars of other ships. In their

brief and at oral argument, counsel for the Clary stated an appropriately dramatic turn would be

50 or 55 degrees in magnitude. By the time the Clary turned to starboard, had the Kariba been

able to maintain its westward course, the two ships would have been only about two miles apart

while both were on a collision course. Two minutes later, Toncic heard “collision, collision,

collision” on his VHF radio. Realizing the blips representing the Kariba and the Tricolor had

coalesced and ceased to move, Toncic readjusted his course to sail northward, west of the

collided ships. Toncic did not answer the distress call.

       Toncic later explained he thought the ships had only “kissed.” After passing through the

area of the collision, Toncic erased his chart. At trial, Toncic admitted that “someone” had

altered the Clary’s logbook pages so as to reflect that conditions were clear, and that there were

two other men on deck at the time of the collision—an Able Bodied Seaman at the wheel, and a

lookout.

C.     The Procedural Posture

       In June 2003, Otal Investments, Ltd., the owner of the Kariba (hereinafter, Otal and the

Kariba together will be called the “Kariba”), filed a complaint in the Southern District of New

York “seeking Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability.” See 46 U.S.C. App. § 183 et seq.,

replaced by 46 U.S.C. § 30505, et seq., and Fed. R. Civ. P. Supplemental Admiralty Rule F. In

response to this complaint, numerous claimants filed claims against the Kariba, seeking damages

for the loss of their cargo, which had sunk along with the Tricolor (hereinafter, the claimants will


                                                 7
be called the “cargo owners”). Meanwhile, the Kariba impleaded the Clary and the Tricolor as

third-party defendants.

       The Kariba and the cargo owners settled their disputes before trial, and the Tricolor

agreed to resolve its disputes against the Kariba in Belgium. For the district court, this left only

the disputes between the Kariba and the cargo owners, on the one side, and the Clary and the

Tricolor, on the other. After a bench trial, the court ruled in favor of the Clary and the Tricolor,

finding the Kariba to have been the sole cause of the collision. See In re Otal Investments Ltd.,

No. 03-4304, 2006 Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *1 (S.D.N.Y. January 9, 2006).

       Both the Kariba and the cargo owners appealed from this judgment, seeking a reversal of

the district court’s determination that the Kariba was solely liable. The Clary and the Tricolor

seek to preserve that decision.



                                           II. Discussion

A.     The Applicability of the Rule in The Pennsylvania

       All parties agree the substantive law governing this case derives from treaties ratified by

the vessels’ flag states. Specifically, the navigational duties are contained in The International

Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea, Oct. 20, 1972, 28 U.S.T. 3459, codified by

Congress at 33 U.S.C. § 1602, et seq. (the “COLREGS”). In addition, the parties have stipulated

their claims should be adjudicated “in accordance with” the Brussels Convention for the

Unification of Certain Rules of Law with respect to Collisions between Vessels, 1910 (the “1910

Collision Convention”). See In re Otal Investments Ltd., No. 03-4304, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS

21580 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 29, 2005). Of course, while these treaties govern the substantive law, the


                                                  8
law of the forum—federal maritime law—governs procedural law. The Mandu, 102 F.2d 459,

463 (2d Cir. 1939); In re Seiriki Kisen Kaisha, 629 F. Supp. 1374, 1394 (S.D.N.Y. 1986).

        Appellants the Kariba and cargo owners argue this procedural law includes the rule in

The Pennsylvania. The rule in The Pennsylvania, 86 U.S. 125 (1874), is the subject of much

debate. In its original form, it stated:

                when . . . a ship at the time of a collision is in actual violation of a statutory
                rule intended to prevent collisions, it is no more than a reasonable
                presumption that the fault, if not the sole cause, was at least a contributory
                cause of the disaster. In such a case the burden rests upon the ship of
                showing not merely that her fault might not have been one of the causes, or
                that it probably was not, but that it could not have been.

Id. at 136. In other words, the rule operates in a manner reminiscent of negligence per se; it

establishes a presumption based on a statutory duty of care. Unlike negligence per se, however,

the rule in The Pennsylvania creates a presumption only as to causation, and not as to “fault” or

negligence. See George Rutherglen, Not with a Bang But a Whimper: Collisions, Comparative

Fault and the Rule of The Pennsylvania, 67 Tul. L. Rev. 733, 736 (1993). Originally, the rule in

The Pennsylvania stated quite a harsh presumption, requiring the party against whom the

presumption operated to show their wrongdoing “could not have been” the cause. The

Pennsylvania, 86 U.S. at 136. But since then, our Circuit has interpreted the presumption more

permissively; now, a party must prove its wrongdoing “could not have been” the cause within the

bounds of “reasonable probability.” The Mabel, 35 F.2d 731, 732 (2d Cir. 1929); The Aakre, 122

F.2d 469, 474 (2d Cir. 1941); Nicholas J. Healy & Joseph C. Sweeney, The Law of Marine

Collision 47-48 (1998). Widely criticized, the rule in The Pennsylvania appears to be, today,

rejected by all maritime states other than the United States. See Marsden on Collisions at Sea 53



                                                    9
(13th ed. 2003) (“It is submitted that the critics of the Pennsylvania Rule are correct, and that it

should be abrogated, either by the Supreme Court or by an act of Congress.”); Craig Allen,

Farwell’s Rules of the Nautical Road 37 (8th ed. 2005); Michael Ben-Jacob, The Pennsylvania

Rule: Murky Waters Revisited, 19 Cardozo L. Rev. 1779, 1812-21 (1998); Rutherglen, 67 Tul. L.

Rev. at 735; William Tetley, The Pennsylvania Rule—An Anachronism? The Pennsylvania

Judgment—An Error?, 13 Journal of Maritime Law & Comm. 127 (1982).

        The district court found the rule in The Pennsylvania did not apply in this case.

“Generally,” the court held, “United States courts will apply the 1910 Collision Convention when

a collision occurs in international waters between vessels that fly flags of signatory states.” In re

Otal Investments, Ltd., 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21580 at *6. Article 6 of that Convention states

“[a]ll legal presumptions of fault in regard to liability for collision are abolished.” If the rule in

The Pennsylvania is substantive, the court noted, Article 6 of the Convention would override it.

Id. at *8. Relying on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Ishizaki Kisen Co. v. United States, 510 F.2d

875, 881 (9th Cir. 1975), the district court held that because the rule in The Pennsylvania “is

outcome determinative,” it must be substantive. In re Otal Investments, Ltd., 2005 U.S. Dist.

LEXIS 21580 at *9; cf. In Re G & G Shipping Co., 767 F. Supp. 398, 405-06 (D.P.R. 1991).

Because it is substantive, the rule cannot apply in a case where the 1910 Collision Convention

governs. In re Otal Investments, Ltd., 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21580 at *9.

        We agree the rule in The Pennsylvania is not a mere procedural rule; it is, instead,

substantive. The question of whether a rule is procedural or substantive depends on its effect at

trial. “The forum will apply its own local law in determining which party has the burden of

going forward with the evidence . . . unless the primary purpose of the relevant [foreign] rule . . .


                                                  10
is to affect decision of the issue rather than to regulate the conduct of the trial.” Restatement

(Second) of Conflict of Laws, § 134 (1971). Under the rule in The Pennsylvania, a vessel that

violates a navigational rule not only must show that her fault did not cause the collision, but also

must persuade the court that her own explanation of the collision is correct. Ishizaki Kisen, 510

F.2d at 880 (citations omitted). This is an imposing burden. It does not serve simply to

determine who moves forward with the evidence, or to narrowly regulate the conduct at trial. To

the contrary, the rule in The Pennsylvania is so significant as to substantially “affect the decision

of the issue” of liability in a collision. Moreover, the purpose of the rule in The Pennsylvania

extends beyond regulating evidentiary burdens at trial. As its author, Justice Strong, proclaimed,

the rule “is necessary to enforce obedience to the mandate of the statute,” The Pennsylvania, 86

U.S. at 136, an aim that exceeds mere evidentiary concerns.

       Although it escaped the attention of the district court and the parties to this case, one of

our precedents suggests our Circuit may have adopted the view that the rule in The Pennsylvania

is a procedural rule. In The Aakre, 122 F.2d at 469, we determined whether a Norwegian vessel

stranded itself on Cheney Island in Canada as the result of unseaworthiness or navigational error.

Ultimately, our decision rested on the strength of the standard of review; we decided that none of

the district court’s factual determinations was clearly erroneous, and the vessel was seaworthy.

Id. at 474. In arriving at this conclusion, we stated that questions surrounding the rule in The

Pennsylvania, “in so far as they need affect this case, are easily settled.” Id. “Indeed, however

The Pennsylvania rule was originally stated, the history of its application shows that it has done

no more than shift the burden of proof with regard to causality.” Id. But we believe The Aakre

does not control here simply because that panel’s statements concerning The Pennsylvania


                                                 11
constituted obiter dicta. Moreover, these dicta largely concern the force of the presumption—and

not the distinct, though related, question of whether the rule is procedural. Thus, The Aakre does

not detain us. We hold that under our modern conflict of laws jurisprudence, the rule in The

Pennsylvania is a substantive, not procedural, rule.

       Appellants cargo owners urge that even if the rule in The Pennsylvania is substantive, it

still should apply because the 1910 Collision Convention only abolished presumptions of “fault”

and not presumptions of “causation.” This argument must fail. If the Convention did refer only

to fault, and not causative fault, appellants cargo owners argument still would lack traction. The

parties to this case have agreed that various international instruments contain the substantive law

in this case. If the rule in The Pennsylvania is substantive, then appellants cannot succeed by

showing the 1910 Collision Convention does not abolish the rule in The Pennsylvania. Rather,

appellants must show one of the instruments affirmatively embraces the rule in The

Pennsylvania. This, appellants have not done. Thus the district court did not err in declining to

apply the rule in The Pennsylvania.4



       4
           In any case, appellants incorrectly read Article 6. The English version of the 1910
Collision Convention appears to use “fault” in two different senses of the term. While for our
purposes, exact linguistic exegesis is unnecessary, suffice it to say that in some provisions of the
Convention, “fault” appears to mean “causative fault,” e.g., Article 4, a term of art encompassing
fault to which liability attaches. But in other provisions, e.g., Article 3, “fault,” appears to mean
“error or defect . . . of conduct,” Black’s Law Dictionary 641 (8th ed. 2004), quite apart from the
matter of causation.
         This ambivalence is resolved, however, by reference to the coeval French version of the
Convention; in that document, Article 6 states: “Il n’y a point de presumptions légales de faute
quant à la responsibilité de l’abordage” (emphasis added). In spite of the English version of the
Convention, a more accurate translation would read: “There shall be no [legal] presumptions of
fault in regard to liability for collision.” See, e.g., Ishizaki Kisen, 510 F.2d at 882; accord 4
Benedict on Admiralty, § 620 at 246-5 (1940); Healy & Sweeney at 51-52 n.38. The limiting
language “in regard to liability” (“quant à la responsibilité”) plainly refers to causative fault.

                                                 12
B.      Violation of the COLREGS

        Having concluded the district court correctly declined to apply the rule in The

Pennslyvania, we now must consider whether the district court erred in finding the “collision was

the sole and exclusive fault of the Kariba.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *35. The

relevant navigational duties are contained in the COLREGS, a treaty ratified by the flag states of

all vessels-parties.5 We affirm the district court’s findings to the extent they determine that the

Kariba was responsible for the collision. We reverse, however, the findings that determined that

the Kariba was solely responsible, as well as the finding that the Tricolor and the Clary bore no

responsibility for the collision.

1.      The Kariba

        We begin by noting that the Kariba concedes it was at fault, but maintains that its fault

was not the sole cause of the collision. We agree with both contentions. With regard to the

Kariba’s violations, we conclude the district court correctly assessed the Kariba’s actions as

violating COLREGS 19(e) and 19(d) on avoiding collision and abaft-the-beam turns. We affirm

the district court’s determination that special circumstances did not inhere; further, contrary to

appellant Kariba’s assertions, the district court did not apply COLREG 15 in its findings of

liability.




        5
          As noted above, the COLREGS, Oct. 20, 1972, 28 U.S.T. 3459 were codified by
Congress at 33 U.S.C. § 1602, et seq. In this case, we consider the COLREGS as an
international instrument, and not necessarily as a treaty adopted by Congress. We nevertheless
note the detailed legislative history memorialized at H.R. Rep. No. 95-447 (1977), reprinted in
1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 509.


                                                 13
       a.      Cautious Navigation

        COLREG 19(e) requires vessels in conditions of restricted visibility to slow down or

“take all her way off and in any event navigate with extreme caution until danger of collision is

over.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 19(e). Instead of turning abruptly to starboard, the Kariba

should have slowed down until the danger of collision had passed. Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS

5293 at *23. The district court’s gloss on Rule 19(e) is correct as a matter of law; and its

underlying factual determinations are not clearly erroneous.

       b.      Avoiding Action

       The district court also determined the Kariba violated COLREG 19(d)(ii), which states:

“[I]f a close-quarters situation is developing and/or a risk of collision exists,” then a vessel must

avoid the collision, taking care not to steer “toward a vessel abeam or abaft the beam.” 33 U.S.C.

foll. § 1602 R. 19(d). The district court found the Kariba had steered directly into a vessel abaft

its beam in violation of COLREG 19(d). Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51 at *24. The district

court correctly interpreted Rule 19(d), and its underlying factual determinations are not clearly

erroneous.

       c.      Special Circumstances

       At trial, the Kariba attempted to justify its otherwise illegal abaft-the-beam turn by

appealing to COLREG 2(b) on “special circumstances.” COLREG 2(b) states: “In construing

and complying with these Rules due regard shall be had to . . . any special circumstances,

including limitations of the vessels involved, which may make a departure from these Rules

necessary to avoid immediate danger.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 2. The district court rejected

the Kariba’s defense, noting it is not at all unusual or “special” for three ships to pass the


                                                  14
juncture of a TSS simultaneously. Moreover, the danger was not “immediate” insofar as several

minutes separated the Kariba from the expected collision. The district court did not err in

applying COLREG 2(b), and its underlying factual findings are not clearly erroneous.

       d.      The Applicability of COLREG 15

       Appellants cargo owners insist the district court erroneously applied COLREG 15 as

between the Kariba and the Clary. COLREG 15 provides that when two vessels “are crossing so

as to involve risk of collision, the vessel which has the other on her own starboard side shall keep

out of the way . . . .” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 15. This COLREG only applies to “vessels in

sight of one another.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 11. At one point in its opinion, the district court

stated: “At trial, the testimony of every witness underscored the belief that the Clary, as the give-

way ship in this crossing situation, was obligated to turn starboard.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist.

LEXIS 5293 at *26. The court’s reference to “the give-way” ship, the cargo owners argue,

reveals that it erroneously applied COLREG 15 in substance, if not in name. This argument

lacks merit. The district court did not apply COLREG 15; rather, the district court’s opinion,

read as a whole, makes clear that the court understood the Clary’s obligation to turn starboard

derived from COLREG 19(d).

       e.      Conclusion

       We affirm the district court in its findings of liability with respect to the Kariba.

2.     The Tricolor

        We conclude the district court misinterpreted COLREGS 13 and 16 on overtaking, and

COLREG 6 on safe speed. We clarify those rules and hold that, as a matter of law, the Tricolor

violated the rules on both overtaking and safe speed.


                                                 15
       a.      Overtaking and Overtaken Vessels

        COLREG 13 states: “[A]ny vessel overtaking any other shall keep out of the way of the

vessel being overtaken.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 13. A related rule, COLREG 16, states:

“Every vessel which is directed to keep out of the way of another vessel shall, so far as possible,

take early and substantial action to keep well clear.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 16. As the district

court acknowledged, an overtaken vessel may “make predictable adjustments in course and speed

necessary for safe navigation.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *28.

       Some courts have suggested that the overtaking vessel not only must avoid predictable

adjustments, but all adjustments, predictable or not. A district court in the Fifth Circuit typified

the latter absolutist approach when it held that a “leading vessel is under no obligation to keep

out of the way.” Bockenheim Unterweser Reedereibeteiligungs Schiffahrtsges, MBH v. M/V

Voyager, 495 F. Supp. 521, 525 (E.D. La. 1980) (construing the Pilot Rules for the Western

Rivers, 33 U.S.C. § 301 et seq., currently codified as part of the Inland Navigational Rules, 33

U.S.C. § 2001 et seq.). Indeed, that court continued, “[t]he overtaking vessel takes the risk of

necessary alteration of course or checking of speed by the leading vessel to avoid a third vessel or

stopping to let another vessel pass.” Id. We reject this absolutist approach. Under COLREGS

13 and 16, an overtaking vessel has a duty to maintain such a distance from the overtaken vessel

so as to allow the overtaken vessel to conduct reasonably predictable adjustments. The Iran

Torab, 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 38 (1988); Marsden 258.

       We note further that Rule 13 does not govern only the conduct of vessels in an overtaking

situation. It also governs the very choice to overtake. Specifically, Rule 13 obliges an

overtaking vessel to select a safe place to overtake another vessel in the first instance. Healy &


                                                 16
Sweeney 177; In Re Tug Ocean Queen, Inc., 398 F. Supp. 1062, 1067 (S.D.N.Y. 1974) (finding

“because of the strong tide and the sharp bend in the [Hell Gate, New York] channel, it was

unsafe to attempt to overtake”). Whether or not it is safe to attempt to overtake under COLREG

13 depends on contextual factors, including visibility, sea conditions, the space that confines the

overtaking and overtaken vessels, the vessels’ speed and the vessels’ capabilities.

       In this case, the district court found the Tricolor did not violate COLREGS 13 and 16 in

overtaking the Kariba when positioned “.4 to .5 miles” off its starboard aft. In analyzing the

overtaking situation, the district court determined the overtaking vessel only needed to keep clear

of the overtaken vessel’s predictable adjustments. To this extent, the district court correctly

interpreted COLREGS 13 and 16. The district court erred, however, in failing to consider

whether the Tricolor breached its COLREGS 13 and 16 duties in attempting to overtake the

Kariba in the first place or at least, in not adjusting its speed and course as it proceeded with the

overtaking. Here, the Tricolor first became aware of the Kariba at 2:00 a.m. and at 2:12 a.m. the

Tricolor’s Captain noticed he was beginning to overtake her. At this point, the Tricolor did not

slow down but instead attempted to overtake the Kariba in a fog, at 17.9 knots, in a heavily

trafficked TSS, with the knowledge the Kariba was on a collision course with a northbound

vessel, the Clary. We deem this a strikingly precarious situation: attempting to overtake without

slowing or altering course in anticipation of adjustments that the overtaken vessel reasonably

could be expected to make in response to a third approaching vessel. We hold that as a matter of

law, the Tricolor violated COLREGS 13 and 16 in attempting to overtake under these conditions.




                                                  17
        b.      Safe Speed

        COLREG 6 states: “Every vessel shall at all times proceed at a safe speed so that she can

take proper and effective action to avoid collision and be stopped within a distance appropriate to

the prevailing circumstances and conditions.” 33 U.S.C. foll. § 1602 R. 6. Rule 19(b) restates

this same rule in the context of restricted visibility conditions: “Every vessel shall proceed at a

safe speed adapted to the prevailing circumstances and conditions of restricted visibility.” Id.

Traveling at a safe speed is not just the fiat of COLREGS 6 and 19(b); it is also a matter of good

seamanship. The Nordic Ferry, 2 Lloyd’s Rep. 591, 596 (1991); Marsden, 6-170.

        Whether a speed is “safe” depends on the circumstances. In determining safe speed, a

vessel must take into account various factors, including “visibility,” 6(a)(i), and “traffic density,”

6(a)(ii), as well as vessels’ capabilities, 6(a)(iii), sea conditions, 6(a)(v), and draught relative to

total depth, 6(a)(vi). Among other things, vessels with radar must consider “the number, location

and movement of vessels detected by radar.” 6(b)(v). Traditionally, courts often analyzed the

question of speed largely as a function of stopping distance. See Union Oil Co. v. The San

Jacinto, 409 U.S. 140 (1972) (endorsing circumstantial application of the “half-distance” rule,

which requires ships to travel at a speed permitting them to stop within half the distance the

lookout could see ahead); The Cherokee, 45 F.2d 150, 151 (2d Cir. 1930) (asking a ship to travel

“at such speed that she could stop within the [full] distance that she could see ahead”). The

conjunctive formulation—“avoid collision and be stopped”—of COLREG 6 suggests the

COLREGS have preserved this emphasis on stopping distance. Marsden, 6-171. Healy &

Sweeney even suggest that under the COLREGS, courts must always apply the half-distance rule:

“[T]o be considered ‘safe,’ the vessel’s speed should generally be sufficiently slow to enable her


                                                   18
to stop within half the limit of visibility.” Healy & Sweeney at 117. But the better view holds

that safe speed does not depend on stopping distance alone, but on the peculiar circumstances of

every case. To be sure, stopping distance is a major factor for considering whether a speed was

safe; and in considering the factor of stopping distance, a court might usefully consult the half-

distance rule for frame of reference. Ultimately, however, a court also must consider the full

range of other factors, including visibility, sea conditions, traffic and the vessels’ capabilities in

determining whether a vessel has violated COLREGS 6 and 19(b) on safe speed.

        In this case, the district court misinterpreted COLREGS 6 and 19(b) on safe speed. The

district court held that the Tricolor’s speed was not unsafe because it was overtaking the Kariba

at a “fairly low relative speed of 1.9 knots.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *15. In

reducing the question to one of relative speed only, the district court failed to consider the

absolute speed of the Tricolor, as well as all the relevant surrounding circumstances, such as

visibility, traffic and stopping distance. In this case, the district court found the Tricolor chose to

overtake the Kariba, .4 to .5 miles to its starboard, at the speed of 17.9 knots. The Tricolor did

this under conditions of heavy fog, in a TSS known for its traffic congestion, with the knowledge

the Kariba was on a collision course with the Clary. The district court did not enter findings on

the appropriate speed under the half-distance rule. Nevertheless, we hold that as a matter of law,

the Tricolor’s speed under these conditions constituted a violation of COLREGS 6 and 19(b).

        d.      Conclusion

        The district court erred in its determination of the Tricolor’s liability. The Tricolor

violated COLREGS 13 and 16 on overtaking, and COLREGS 6 and 19(b) on safe speed.

3.      The Clary


                                                  19
        We affirm the district court’s determination that the Clary violated COLREG 5 on proper

lookout. The district court erred, however, in its interpretation and application of COLREG

19(d) on avoiding action. Further, the district court erred in failing to apply an important

presumption regarding the unexplained alteration of logbooks.

        a.      Proper Lookout

        COLREG 5 states: “Every vessel shall at all times maintain a proper look-out by sight

and hearing as well as by all available means appropriate in the prevailing circumstances and

conditions so as to make a full appraisal of the situation and of the risk of collision.” 33 U.S.C.

foll. § 1602 R. 5. COLREG 2(a), concerning the “ordinary practice of seamen” encompasses this

same command. 33 U.S.C. foll. 30 § 1602 R. 2; Marsden 6-25. The district court held that the

Clary violated both of these COLREGS in staffing its bridge with a lone mariner. Otal, 2006

U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *29. The district court correctly interpreted COLREG 5 and its factual

determinations are not clearly erroneous.

        b.      Avoiding Action

        COLREG 19(d) requires a vessel not in sight of another, upon entering “close-quarters”

or realizing a “risk of collision,” to “take avoiding action in ample time . . . .” 33 U.S.C. foll. §

1602 R. 19. The Ninth Circuit has held that for “large, ocean going vessels, objective estimates”

of close-quarters “range from two miles . . . to almost five miles.” Alkmeon Naviera, S.A. v. M/V

“Marina L”, 633 F.2d 789, 795 n.10 (9th Cir. 1980); see also Socony Vacuum Transp. Co. v.

Gypsum Packet Co., 153 F.2d 773, 775-76 (2d Cir. 1946); Hellenic Lines, Ltd. v. Prudential

Lines, Inc., 730 F.2d 159, 164 (4th Cir. 1984) (finding that “any passing distance under two miles

is close quarters in a fog”).


                                                  20
       The district court sought to distinguish these cases: “[T]hese cases describe ships on the

high seas where it is reasonable to expect vessels to remain further away from each other . . . but

the West Hinder TSS is a different story.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *32. The West

Hinder TSS is “heavily trafficked and despite the late hour there were quite a few other vessels in

the area. It would be naive to assume that a vessel was obligated to maneuver when it was ten or

more minutes away from collision, because to avoid one collision could serve only to put it on a

collision course with another.” Id. at 32-33 (footnote omitted).

       We reject this reasoning. Most important, it contains a faulty premise; it was not the case

that if the Clary turned ten minutes before the collision such “could serve only to put it on a

collision course” with another vessel. To the contrary, the record discloses a number of

alternative routes—encompassed by starboard turns of various degrees and reduction of

speed—none of which would have entailed colliding with another vessel. Moreover, in focusing

on the term “close-quarters,” the district court failed to interpret correctly COLREG 19(d).

COLREG 19(d) functions to prevent collisions by urging action at an early stage, requiring

vessels to “take avoiding action in ample time” whenever a “risk of collision” exists or a “close-

quarters situation is developing” (emphases added). In this case, the risk of collision arose when

the Kariba steadied on its westward course after rounding the Fairy South Buoy. At this

point—approximately ten minutes before the Kariba decided to make its fateful turn—the Clary

had a COLREG 19(d) duty to take avoiding action.

       The avoiding action under COLREG 19(d) could have taken either one of two basic

forms. First, the Clary could have slowed. Second, the Clary could have made a starboard turn

astern the Kariba and the Tricolor. The Clary argues it made its starboard turn at the earliest


                                                 21
possible moment because it was limited by its desire to make a “dramatic” 50 or 55 degree turn

so that its change of course would register on other vessels’ radar. At the same time, asserts the

Clary, the COLREGS prohibited it from crossing outside the bounds of the TSS. The point at

which it actually turned, the Clary notes, was the earliest point at which it could make a

“dramatic” turn while staying within the bounds of the TSS.

       This argument is unpersuasive. Certainly, the avowed custom of making a “dramatic” 50

or 55 degree turn is wise. But nothing in the COLREGS mandates a turn of this magnitude; the

COLREGS only mandate avoidance. Thus it makes no sense for a vessel to try to reach the

magical 55 degree angle, all while increasing the risk of collision ahead. Further, the COLREGS

do not prohibit turns that lead a vessel to cross out of a TSS. According to COLREG 10, vessels

must “so far as practicable keep clear of a traffic separation line or separation zone.” 33 U.S.C.

foll. § 1602 R. 10(b)(ii). “[N]ormally,” a vessel should “join or leave a traffic lane at the

termination of the lane . . . .” 10(b)(iii). The conspicuous qualifying language—“normally,” “so

far as practicable”—demonstrates the relative flexibility of COLREG 10. COLREG 10 even

includes guidance for those obliged to cross out of a TSS; those who “do so shall cross on a

heading as nearly as practicable at right angles to the general direction of traffic flow.” 10(c).

See also Marsden 6-272 (opining that vessels must balance the risk of staying within the TSS

against the risk of crossing out of it). In other words, the text of COLREG 10 specifically

anticipates that vessels sometimes must cross out of the TSS. It is clear from the record the Clary

faced no particular risks in crossing out of the TSS; while there was traffic in the TSS, no vessels

were proceeding on the North-South branch near the Clary. Meanwhile, the Clary encountered




                                                 22
great risk in continuing on its collision course with the Kariba—a risk that contributed to the

collision in this case.

        We hold, therefore, that the Clary violated COLREG 19(d) in failing to take avoiding

action promptly. As soon as the Kariba steadied on its collision course with the Clary, the Clary

could have reduced its speed or made a starboard turn astern the Kariba and the Tricolor. In

making this starboard turn, the Clary could have chosen to make a shallow turn of perhaps 10 or

15 degrees and stayed within the bounds of the TSS. Alternatively, the Clary could have

executed a 50 or 55 degree starboard turn that would have led it to cross out of the bounds of the

TSS. In failing to take either type of avoiding action, the Clary, as a matter of law, violated

COLREG 19(d).

        c.      Unexplained Alterations of Ships’ Records

        Appellants the Kariba and cargo owners note the Clary’s logbooks had been altered. The

district court gave no legal effect to this fact: “It is true that the Clary . . . was at best sloppy and

at worst dishonest in its on-board log-keeping, but none of these violations appear causative of

the collision.” In re Otal Investments, Ltd., 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *29. Although the

alteration of the logbook obviously did not “cause” the collision, the fact of the alteration has

relevance to the ultimate allocation of liability for damages.

        Our admiralty jurisprudence is especially sensitive to the unexplained alteration of

logbooks. Where a logbook is altered, we “cannot avoid the conclusion that it had been dressed

up to excuse the ship’s faults.” Warner Barnes & Co. v. Kokosai Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha, 102

F.2d 450, 453 (2d Cir. 1939) (Learned Hand, J.). Such alterations should give rise to a

presumption the logbook contained entries adverse to the vessel’s contentions at trial. The


                                                    23
inference “goes much further than merely to discredit the document itself; it is positive evidence

upon the very issue” of liability. Id. “When a party is once found to be fabricating, or

suppressing, documents, the natural, indeed the inevitable, conclusion is that he has something to

conceal, and is conscious of guilt.” Id. We join the Fifth Circuit: “The unexplained alteration of

a ship’s record of maneuvers not only casts suspicion on the whole case of the vessel, but creates

a strong presumption that the erased matter was adverse to her contention” Tokio Marine & Fire

Ins. Co. v. Flora MV, 235 F.3d 963, 971 (5th Cir. 2001) (citations and internal quotations

omitted); see also Hal Antillen N.V. v. Mount Ymitos MS, 147 F.3d 447, 452 (5th Cir. 1998); The

Silver Palm, 94 F.2d 754, 762 (9th Cir. 1937); The Etruria, 147 F. 216 (2d Cir. 1906); Andros

Shipping Co. v. Panama Canal Co., 184 F. Supp. 246, 259 (D.C.Z. 1960); Craig Allen at 32;

Healy & Sweeney 56. Much of the case law concerning unexplained alteration of logbooks

emphasizes the distinct force of the attendant adverse presumption. The presumption is a strong

one because it serves not only to engender truth in evidence, but also to deter vessels from

engaging in an act of obfuscation that threatens the disposition of interests of vessel and cargo

owners and impedes civil and criminal investigations into the cause of the collision. See, e.g., 46

U.S.C. § 6101 (requiring the reporting of marine casualties within United States jurisdiction); 46

U.S.C. § 6304 (granting the Coast Guard the power to subpoena vessels’ logbooks); United

States v. Kostakis, 364 F.3d 45 (2d Cir. 2004) (reviewing the guilty plea and sentence of a

merchant mariner prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for using a falsified ship’s record within

the jurisdiction of the United States Coast Guard). This presumption is a rule of evidence; as an

evidentiary rule of the forum, it applies in this case.




                                                  24
       Here, Toncic erased his chart after passing through the area of the collision. At trial,

Toncic admitted that “someone” had altered his logbook pages so as to reflect that there were

three men on deck at the time of the collision—Toncic, an Able Bodied Seaman at the wheel,

and a lookout—when in fact, Toncic had been alone on the bridge at the relevant times. In

addition, Toncic’s logbook reflected that conditions were clear, when conditions in fact had

been—at least for part of his shift—foggy.

       Toncic’s admissions sharply diminish, if not eliminate, the relevance of the presumption

normally arising from the alteration of a logbook. The presumption is especially useful in cases

where the facts that should have been entered are not known, or at least are in dispute. See, e.g.,

Tokio Marine & Fire Ins. Co. v. M/V Flora, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 267, *30-31 (E.D. La. Jan.

11, 1999); General Trading Co. v. S.S. Hellenic Carrier, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9462, *19

(S.D.N.Y. April 14, 1982). Here, however, those facts are known, indeed, admitted by the

Clary’s officer. Thus, as to these facts, which were deemed adverse to the Clary by the district

court, the presumption would add nothing. In some cases an issue might arise as to whether the

fact of an alteration gives rise to a presumption that facts, other than those concealed by the

alteration, are adverse to the party responsible for the alteration, but none of the parties adverse to

the Clary has made such a claim in this case. Thus, although the fact of alteration may have a

bearing on the ultimate issue of allocation of liability for damages, the presumption that the

logbook contains facts adverse to the vessel responsible for the alteration need not be assessed.6

       d.      Conclusion


       6
          The Kariba’s owner contends that falsification is “positive evidence, not just a
presumption, that the matter falsified would weigh heavily against the vessel doing the
falsifying.” Br. for Otal Investments Ltd. at 40 (emphasis added).

                                                  25
       The district court correctly determined the Clary violated COLREG 5 on proper lookout.

The district court erred in its interpretation and application of COLREG 19(d) on avoiding

action; as a matter of law, the Clary violated COLREG 19(d). The Clary’s alteration of its

logbook will have some bearing on the ultimate issue of allocating liability for damages and the

district court must take it under consideration.

C.     Causation

       There remains the question whether these violations of COLREGS caused the collision.

Put another way, we still must determine whether the violations of the COLREGS constitute

causative fault. We review findings of causation for clear error. Ching Sheng Fishery Co. v.

United States, 124 F.3d 152, 157 (2d Cir. 1997). Yet, a district court’s understanding of the

standard of causation is a question of law, reviewed de novo. Id. at 158. In its decision, the

district did not articulate a standard of causation. Though we do not quarrel with the district

court’s reticence in this regard, we do infer from the district court’s reasoning that it applied an

incorrect legal standard of causation. To the extent the district court’s unspoken conception of

the standard might have been correct, we deem its findings on causation to have been clearly

erroneous. Typically, in a case exhibiting such an error, we would remand for further fact

finding. We believe, however, that this case presents a record sufficiently well-developed, and

circumstances so paradigmatic, as to allow us to render conclusions concerning causation as a

matter of law. We do so, after framing the proper standard of causation.

1.     The Proper Standard of Causation

       The standard of causation under COLREGS and the Collision Convention mirrors the

standard of causation under American maritime tort law. Marsden 503; see, e.g., Tokio Marine,


                                                   26
235 F.3d at 966. To show causation, a plaintiff must demonstrate the defendant’s act was a

factual or but-for cause of a harm and the defendant’s act proximately caused the harm. See

Zuchowicz v. United States, 140 F.3d 381, 388 (2d Cir. 1998) (Calabresi, J.) (thoughtfully

discussing the general requirements of causation in the context of Connecticut law); Draft

Restatement (Third) of Torts § 26 (2002).

       An action is a factual cause of harm when the harm would not have occurred absent that

action. Draft Restatement (Third) of Torts § 26. Put more concretely, a navigational error is a

factual cause of a collision when “the collision would not have suffered the damage . . . but for

the defendant’s” error. Marsden 503. Factual cause may inhere even when the actions of a third

party or another force intervene. Zuchowicz, 140 F.3d at 390-91.

       The inquiry into proximate cause is less straightforward. In general, proximate cause

limits liability to those “harms whose risks made the actor’s conduct tortious.” Draft

Restatement (Third) of Torts § 29. Beyond this, “[t]he requirements of proximity are many and

varied, and are not simply linked to questions of closeness in time and space.” Zuchowicz, 140

F.3d at 389 n.8. We find one principle particularly pertinent to this case. “When an actor’s

tortious conduct is a factual cause of harm that is among the harms whose risks made the actor’s

conduct tortious, the actor is subject to liability for the harm even if an unforeseeable7

intervening act, including [a] . . . nonculpable human act, is also a factual cause of the harm.”

Draft Restatement (Third) of Torts § 33(a). An actor will not be liable, however, for a

“superceding” act—that is, an act that is “‘extraordinary,’ . . . defined as neither normal nor

reasonably foreseeable.” Exxon Co. v. Sofec, Inc., 54 F.3d 570, 574 (9th Cir. 1995) (quotation


       7
           Or, a fortiori, foreseeable.

                                                 27
marks omitted); aff’d Exxon Co. v. Sofec, Inc., 517 U.S. 830 (1996). In applying a principle such

as this, courts necessarily exercise “common sense and reasonable judgment.” Blaine Richards

& Co. v. Marine Indemnity Ins. Company of America, 635 F.2d 1051, 1055 (2d Cir. 1980)

(discussing the somewhat more restricted doctrine of causation applicable to maritime insurance

cases).

          The district court did not articulate a standard of causation. But in summating its

causation analysis, the district court implied a relatively narrow framework: “There may have

been other faults which led up to this single fault [of the Kariba’s abaft-the-beam turn], but none

w[as] causative.” Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293 at *23. This statement, coupled with the

district court’s failure to articulate a causation standard, leads us to believe that it erred in

conceiving the standard of causation.8 To the extent the district court conceived the correct

standard, we hold that its findings are clearly erroneous. We principally track the doctrine of but-

for and proximate causation as embodied by § 33(a) of the Draft Restatement and Sofec, 517 U.S.

at 830, in analyzing the causative actions of the Kariba, the Tricolor and the Clary in turn.

2.        The Causative Impact of the Kariba

          The district court correctly found the Kariba to have caused the collision. If the Kariba

had not made its abaft-the-beam turn, the collision with the Tricolor would not have occurred;




          8
          The district court’s approach to causation might be explained by presuming it had
adopted the more attenuated standard of causation applicable in maritime insurance cases, where
“the horrendous niceties of the doctrine of so-called ‘proximate cause’ . . . apply in a limited
manner.” Blaine Richards & Co., 635 F.2d at 1054. In those cases, our Circuit does apply
“rather strictly the doctrine of causa proxima non remota spectatur (‘the immediate not the
remote cause is considered’)” reminiscent of the district court’s above-quoted statement. Id.

                                                   28
the vessels would have continued on roughly parallel westward courses. Therefore, the Kariba’s

turn was a factual cause of the collision.

       As noted above, the district court correctly determined this abaft-the-beam turn

constituted a violation of the COLREGS. This abrupt abaft-the-beam turn caused a risk that the

Kariba might collide with other vessels in close proximity—the same risk of harm as makes

abaft-the-beam turns illegal under the COLREGS. No “extraordinary” action occurred thereafter.

Thus the district court was correct to consider the Tricolor’s violation a cause of the collision.

3.     The Causative Impact of the Tricolor

       As for the Tricolor, the district court erred in failing to find its violations to have caused

the collision. If the Tricolor had not chosen to overtake in an unsafe place and in an unsafe

manner, the collision would not have occurred; the Kariba would have passed across the

Tricolor’s bow. The Tricolor’s decision to overtake and the manner of overtaking was thus a

factual cause of the collision.

       As noted above, the Tricolor violated the COLREGS in choosing to overtake the Kariba

at an unsafe place and time and in an unsafe manner. This choice to overtake created a risk that

other vessels, particularly the Kariba, would have less space, and less time, to avoid navigational

exigency leading to a collision—the very same risk as makes inopportune overtaking a violation

of the COLREGS. The Kariba and the Clary themselves might have increased the risk of

collision to which the Tricolor contributed, but these actions were not “extraordinary.” Rather,

these actions or similar actions intended to avoid a collision were foreseeable under the

circumstances, and thus did not supercede the Tricolor’s causative impulse. Commonsense and




                                                 29
reasonable judgment dictate the Tricolor was both a factual and proximate cause of the collision.

We thus hold, as a matter of law, the Tricolor’s overtaking was a cause of the collision.

        It is possible the Tricolor also caused the collision through its violation of the COLREG

on safe speed. Here, however, a distinction must be made. True, the Tricolor’s violation of the

COLREG on safe speed was a but-for cause of the collision; if the Tricolor had been travelling

slower, the Kariba would have turned safely in front of its bow. But under the familiar Berry v.

Sugar Notch Borough, 191 Pa. 345 (1899), line of cases, we nevertheless cannot consider the

factor of the Tricolor’s speed, when taken in isolation, to have “caused” the collision. As we

have consistently reaffirmed, under Berry v. Sugarnotch Borough, “the issue . . . is whether, even

after the event, we can say that the risk of such an accident was increased by the defendant's

behavior.” Moore v. PaineWebber, Inc., 189 F.3d 165, 176 (2d Cir. 1999) (Calabresi, J.,

concurring.); Zuchowicz, 140 F.3d at 389. In this case, the Tricolor’s unsafe speed, taken in

isolation, is not the kind of transgression that leads a vessel to find itself in close proximity to

another, abruptly turning vessel. In this sense, the Tricolor’s unsafe speed alone did not stand as

a cause of the collision.

        Yet, the Berry v. Sugarnotch line of cases notwithstanding, the Tricolor’s unsafe speed

still might have been a cause of the collision. This question hinges entirely on whether the

Tricolor, had it not been proceeding at an unsafe speed, would have been able to stop soon

enough to avert or mitigate the harm of the collision. In other words, the question hinges not on

the factor of the Tricolor’s speed in isolation, but whether that speed reflected an inability to

stop, or slow, in time to avoid the Kariba’s abrupt abaft-the-beam turn. As the record does not

reveal the answer to this question, we must remand for further findings.


                                                  30
4.     The Causative Impact of the Clary

       The district court also erred in failing to find the Clary caused the collision. If the Clary

had not understaffed its bridge and failed promptly to take avoiding action, the collision would

not have occurred. That is, the Clary would not have persisted in its collision course, and the

Kariba would not have found the need to make its fateful turn. The Clary was thus a factual

cause of the collision. As noted above, the Clary violated the COLREGS in failing to keep a

proper lookout. In failing to keep a proper lookout, the Clary created a risk it could not swiftly

and adequately compensate for a navigational exigency and avoid a collision—the same risk of

harm as makes failure to keep a proper lookout a violation of the COLREGS. The Clary also

violated the COLREGS in failing promptly to take avoiding action. In delaying its avoiding

action, the Clary constrained the space and time in which the Kariba and the Tricolor could

maneuver, thus creating a risk of collision—the same risk of harm as makes failure to take

prompt avoiding action a violation of the COLREGS. The Kariba and the Tricolor themselves

might have increased the risk of collision to which the Clary only contributed, but their actions

were not so extraordinary as to supercede the Clary’s causative impact. Commonsense and

reasonable judgment dictate the Clary was both a factual and proximate cause of the collision.

We thus hold, as a matter of law, the Clary’s violations were a cause of the collision.

5.     Conclusion

       The district court correctly held the Kariba’s violations of the COLREGS to have been a

cause of the collision. The district court erred, however, in determining the Tricolor’s and the

Clary’s violations of the COLREGS did not cause the collision. In reversing, we conclude all

three vessels committed violations of the COLREGS that caused the collision. It is unclear


                                                 31
whether the Tricolor’s unsafe speed was a cause of the collision; to the extent the answer to that

question requires further findings, the district court must make those findings as part of its

inquiries into allocation of liability for damages, an issue to which we now turn.

D.     Allocation of Liability for Damages

       Since we have ruled that all three vessels were at fault and that, at least to some extent,

their respective fault caused the collision, the issue remains for the district court on remand to

allocate liability for damages among the three vessels. In United States v. Reliable Transfer Co.,

421 U.S. 397 (1975), the Supreme Court replaced the admiralty rule of equally divided damages

with a rule that “when two or more parties have contributed by their fault to cause property

damage in a maritime collision or stranding, liability for such damage is to be allocated among

the parties proportionately to the comparative degree of their fault,” unless such measurement is

not possible. Id. at 411. The phrase “degree of their fault” created an ambiguity as to whether the

Court meant the comparative degree of their culpability or blameworthiness, i.e., how extensively

each ship departed from a proper standard of care, or the comparative causative effect of each

ship’s conduct, i.e., the extent to which each ship’s culpable conduct contributed to causing the

collision. American courts have understood Reliable Transfer to mean liability “according to

relative culpability of the parties’ actions rather than their respective degrees of physical

causation.” Afran Transport Co. v. S/T Maria Venizelos, 450 F. Supp. 621, 636 (E.D. Pa. 1978);

see Maritime & Mercantile International L.L.C. v. United States, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19792,

*66 (S.D.N.Y. February 28, 2007); In re Seiriki Kisen Kaisha, 629 F. Supp. at 1381 n.3

(collecting cases).




                                                  32
       However, as Judge Sand pointed out in Seiriki Kisen Kaisha, Article 4 of the 1910

Collision Convention, which allocates liability “in proportion to the degree of the faults

respectively committed,” has been understood by the courts of Great Britain to assess

comparative fault on the basis of both relative culpability and relative causative effect of each

party’s acts.” Id. at 1381 (citing cases). Courts in France, Germany, and Italy have done the

same. See Healy & Sweeney at 311. We agree with Judge Sand’s two-component analysis in

Seiriki Kisen Kaisha, followed by Judge Baer in the pending appeal, Otal, 2006 U.S. Dist.

LEXIS 5293 at *20-21, and interpret the Convention, which applies in the pending case, to

require consideration of both culpability and causative effect.

       Thus, on remand the district court will have to consider the relative culpability of each

vessel and the relative extent to which the culpability of each caused the collision. In making the

culpability comparison, the district court should include in its consideration of the fault of the

Clary the fact that its logbook was altered. We hasten to add, however, that allocation of liability

for damages, requiring consideration of matters not readily amenable to precise analysis, does not

oblige an admiralty judge to do more than provide ultimate percentages of allocation,

accompanied only by sufficient explanation to provide a reviewing court with some general

understanding of the basis for the decision. See, e.g., Seiriki Kisen Kaisha, 629 F. Supp. at 1382

(allocating responsibility on a 60%-40% basis).

E.     The Limitation of Liability

       Under the Limitation of Liability Act, a vessel owner may seek to limit its liability by

filing a complaint in district court. See 46 U.S.C. App. § 183, revised at 46 U.S.C. § 30505, et

seq. and Fed. R. Civ. P. Supplemental Admiralty Rule F. The Kariba asked the district court to


                                                  33
extend an order limiting liability to all parties to this case, enjoining further litigation both inside,

and outside, the United States. Although it entered an order limiting liability, it did so only with

respect to litigation “in the United States.” In re: Otal Investments, Ltd., No. 03-4304 at *4

(S.D.N.Y. Feb. 16, 2006). The Kariba contends this was error. We disagree. See In re

Complaint of Bowoon Sangsa Co., 720 F.2d 595, 599 (9th Cir. 1983) (“[T]he decree in a

limitation proceeding is given merely a domestic and not an international recognition.”) (quoting

Gilmore & Black, The Law of Admiralty 944 (2d ed. 1975)); Petition of Bloomfield S.S. Co., 422

F.2d 728, 736 (2d Cir. 1970).



                                           III. Conclusion

          The district court did not err in declining to apply the rule in The Pennsylvania. The

Kariba, the Tricolor and the Clary all committed violations of the COLREGS. Moreover, each

vessel committed at least one violation that constituted a cause of the collision. The district court

did not err in declining to extend its limitation of liability order to parties outside the United

States.

          REVERSED and REMANDED.




                                                   34
                                    Appendix




                                                     The Tricolor


               The Clary                   The Kariba




This diagram, taken from appellee the Clary’s brief and intended only as a guide to
aide the reader’s visualization of the events surrounding the collision, illustrates the
positions of the three vessels at approximately 2:09 on December 4, 2002. The
dashed lines represent the bounds of the Traffic Separation Scheme. The arrows
represent the vessels and their directions.




                                          35
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, with whom Judges Hall and Irizarry join, concurring:

        I fully concur in Judge Hall’s comprehensive opinion, and write these additional words to

urge the development of some form of sea traffic control system for crowded sea lanes to lessen the

risk of a ship collision of the sort illustrated by this appeal. A sea traffic control system need not be

as elaborate as modern air traffic control systems, but the lack of even a rudimentary nautical

counterpart to the systems that monitor and control crowded air spaces cries out for a remedy. Such

a system seems especially needed for sea lanes like the English Channel or at least for narrow

portions of it like the Dover Straits, where many ships frequently travel in crossing patterns.1

        The undisputed evidence in this case shows that several ships were sailing through the Hinder

1 buoy intersection in the English Channel at the same time on a foggy night in 2002. The Kariba

and the Tricolor were heading from east to west, and the Clary was heading from south to north. The

speed and course of the Clary and the Kariba were such that, in the absence of some adjustments by

either vessel, they would collide. Ultimately, as detailed in Judge Hall’s opinion, the Kariba, trying

to avoid being struck by the Clary, turned to starboard and collided with the Tricolor, which was

overtaking the Kariba.

        Judge Hall fully discusses the legal issues concerning the liability of each ship. My

additional concern is the lack of a system for effectively alerting ships in crowded waterways to

appropriate steps to be taken to avoid impending perils of collision. If air traffic controllers can

monitor airplanes in crowded air spaces and require them to adjust speed, course, or altitude to avoid

a collision, surely some similar system for requiring adjustment of speed or course can be


        1
           As the District Court noted, “On a typical day there are 124 vessels crossing the traffic
lane . . . and 131 vessels following the traffic lane.” In re Otal Investments Ltd., 2006 U.S. Dist.
LEXIS 5293, at *32 n.7 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 6, 2006).

                                                   36
implemented for crowded sea lanes like many of those in the English Channel.

        The evidence discloses that some technology was in use on the night of the collision in this

case, but it clearly was not sufficient. The Tricolor and the Kariba, but not the Clary, used an

Automatic Radar Plotting Aid (“ARPA”), which shows the course and speed of nearby ships and

calculates, for any two ships, their Closest Point of Approach (“CPA”). ARPA does not identify

nearby ships by name or any other distinguishing characteristic that might facilitate communication.

Clary’s even less effective radar system showed nearby ships, but displayed their course and speed

and calculated a CPA only when a radar operator manually sought such data for a particular ship.

        A shore-based radar facility at Dunkerque on the French coast, known by the name of its

manufacturer, Solfrelog, S.A., tracked the three vessels, but the Solfrelog station provided no

communication to the ships it was tracking, communication that might have instructed on steps to

avoid impending perils, or at least of the fact that such perils exist. From data stored in the Solfrelog

system, the District Court was supplied with a series of video images of the various positions of the

three ships in the minutes prior to the collision. Even these images, available after the fact, are

inexact, as the District Court noted, because of a time lag in reflecting speed and course changes.

See In re Otal Investments Ltd, No. 03-4034, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5293, at *7-*8 (Jan. 6, 2006).

And the images are recorded at intervals, rather than continuously.

        A significant deficiency in collision avoidance, as of the date of the collision in this case, was

the ineffectiveness of communications capability among nearby ships. The VHF radios on board the

ships were customarily not used because they did not enable direct communication with only one

vessel, the ship sending a message could not be certain whether nearby ships were receiving the

message, and, if the signal was received by nearby ships, they could not determine from which ship


                                                   37
it came.2 It is not clear whether these deficiencies are remedied even by the radiotelephone bridge-

to-bridge requirements applicable to certain classes of vessels on navigable waters of the United

States. See 33 U.S.C. §§ 1201-1208 (2000).

       Since 2002, some improvements have been made. A notable development has been the

introduction of automatic identification systems (“AIS”) permitting identification of vessels by name

and other information, now required for some vessels on navigable waters of the United States, see

46 U.S.C. § 70114 (Supp. II 2002); 33 C.F.R. § 164.46 (2003), especially when used in connection

with the orbiting satellites of the Global Positioning System (“GPS”). See


       2
        Captain Torbog, the expert for the Tricolor, when asked at trial whether Second Officer
Toncic on the Clary could have called Captain Kamola on the Kariba and alerted the Kariba to
the Clary’s planned turn, answered:

           I don’t know if Kamola and Toncic would have understood each other on the
           VHF, would have been able to make a complete call without knowing who the
           other guy was or where he was. There were five vessels in that traffic lane that
           the Kariba was in, and this is why the British Government, the Chamber of
           Shipping and all the governments in that area of the world do not want people
           talking on VHFs because you get one ship talking to the wrong ship and then
           everybody gets, somebody gets messed up.

Tr. 857.

       Captain Torborg amplified his views in a report as follows:

       The U.S. Radio Telephone Act requires radio contact between vessels
       approaching one another when they are within 50 miles of the United States.
       Europeans discourage the use of VHF for collision avoidance, and expect vessels
       to follow the COLREGS without attempting to communicate with vessels whose
       watch officer may not be completely fluent in the English language. It is in their
       training to limit all VHF radio communications. The United Kingdom Maritime
       and Coast Guard Agency has issued notices requesting the limitation of VHF use
       and a similar admonition is published in the Bridge Procedures Guide published
       by the International Chamber of Shipping.

Ex. 364, at 20.

                                                 38
http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/enav/ais/default.htm (last visited June 27, 2007) (AIS);

http://www8.garmin.com/aboutGPS/ (last visited June 27, 2007) (GPS).

         Internationally, Chapter V of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea

(“SOLAS”) has been amended to begin requiring AIS on large cargo vessels and all passenger ships.

See http://www.imo.org/Conventions/contents.asp?topic_id=257&doc_id=647 (last visited June 27,

2007).

         To improve after-the-fact understanding of what happened in the minutes prior to a collision,

the International Maritime Organization, the United Nations sponsored agency concerned with

shipping safety, has issued regulations requiring Voyage Data Recorders, but these are currently

implemented only for passenger vessels. See

http://www.blankrome.com/index.cfm?contentID=37&itemID=1270 (last visited June 27, 2007).

         It would seem imperative for maritime nations and vessel owners to cooperate in establishing

some system to monitor ships in crowded sea lanes, especially those with ship crossing patterns, and

require maneuvers to avoid collisions. For the English Channel, for example, sea traffic control

centers might be established at a few points along the English and French coasts, handing off control

of ships to adjacent stations, just as air traffic controllers hand off airplanes to nearby air traffic

control centers. Proper radar and communications equipment could be more extensively required

(at least for ships of sufficient size to preclude rapid adjustments of course and speed), and non-

complying ships could be denied access to crowded sea lanes. Perhaps the appropriate international

bodies might take the lead in developing such a system.




                                                   39
       The perils of the sea have been with us since Noah sailed his ark, and some will always

remain, but in the 21st century, I think we can do better at reducing the risk of ship collisions.




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