Langrick1
Well-Known Member
The person responsible need not necessarily be the skipper. In the example given, of a negligent helmsman who kills four children, I think it is a little far fetched to think he would be able to pass all blame onto someone who was sleeping at the time and whose sole qualification for being skipper is likely to be "could afford to buy boat"
May not be an exact parallel but when Titanic sailed into the iceberg it was Captain Smith held responsible despite being asleep at the time.
Had he not gone down with his ship it would have been him before the court not the helmsman.
I'm not a lawyer but I believe that to be the situation - I may be wrong. What I do know is that if I were the skipper in that situation I would FEEL responsible.
If no-one owned up to being the skipper the first thing would be to look at the log and who made the entries. If that was not completed I suspect some degree of reponsibility would fall upon the owner. In most privately owned yachts they are one and the same.
To go back to begining - the crew are "subordinate" to the skipper in that the skipper is the one making the decisions and the crew execute them. More significantly it is the skipper who is responsible, morally and legally, if things go badly wrong. Even if its the crew at fault, its the skipper who is responsible. This does not need to be a Cptn Bligh situation, as most of my sailing is with SWMBO it could not be. 99.9% of the time it does not matter. We agree where to go, when to go and whether or not to go. On the very very few occasions where things have turned a bit nasty I decide what we are going to do and SWMBO is happy with this. Usually.
Its situations where a "single controlling mind" is essential, and "controlling" is the critical word in any emergency.
May not be an exact parallel but when Titanic sailed into the iceberg it was Captain Smith held responsible despite being asleep at the time.
Had he not gone down with his ship it would have been him before the court not the helmsman.
I'm not a lawyer but I believe that to be the situation - I may be wrong. What I do know is that if I were the skipper in that situation I would FEEL responsible.
If no-one owned up to being the skipper the first thing would be to look at the log and who made the entries. If that was not completed I suspect some degree of reponsibility would fall upon the owner. In most privately owned yachts they are one and the same.
To go back to begining - the crew are "subordinate" to the skipper in that the skipper is the one making the decisions and the crew execute them. More significantly it is the skipper who is responsible, morally and legally, if things go badly wrong. Even if its the crew at fault, its the skipper who is responsible. This does not need to be a Cptn Bligh situation, as most of my sailing is with SWMBO it could not be. 99.9% of the time it does not matter. We agree where to go, when to go and whether or not to go. On the very very few occasions where things have turned a bit nasty I decide what we are going to do and SWMBO is happy with this. Usually.
Its situations where a "single controlling mind" is essential, and "controlling" is the critical word in any emergency.