Al Johnson Construction Co. v. S.S. Rio Orinoco

249 F. Supp. 182, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7626
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 20, 1965
DocketNo. 419 of 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 F. Supp. 182 (Al Johnson Construction Co. v. S.S. Rio Orinoco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Al Johnson Construction Co. v. S.S. Rio Orinoco, 249 F. Supp. 182, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7626 (E.D. Pa. 1965).

Opinion

KRAFT, District Judge.

On June 23, 1960, at or about 5:30 P.M. (1730) the S. S. RIO-ORINOCO, moving upstream struck the dredge ATLAS while the latter, spudded down, was dredging a new channel in the upper Delaware River, known as the New Enterprise Channel. The dredge owners filed a libel against the RIO-ORINOCO in rem and her owner in personam. The vessel interests answered and filed a cross-libel against the dredge in rem and her owners in personam.

After trial to the Court, oral argument and examination of the requests for factual findings, legal conclusions and briefs in support thereof, we make these

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The libellants and cross-respondents, A1 Johnson Construction Co. and Peter Kiewitt Sons’ Co., Inc., corporations organized and existing under the laws of the states of Minnesota and Nebraska, respectively, were, at all relevant times, joint venturers doing business as Delaware River Dredgers and were the owners and operators of the dredge ATLAS.

2. Trans-World Carriers, Inc., the respondent and cross-libellant, a Liberian corporation with its principal place of business in Nassau, British West Indies, was, at all relevant times, the owner of the S. S. RIO-ORINOCO.

3. On June 23, 1960, and for some time theretofore, the libellants were engaged, under contract with the United States Corps of Army Engineers, in dredging a new channel in the upper Delaware River to a width of 400 feet and a minimum depth of 42 feet, to be known as the New Enterprise Channel.

4. The New Enterprise Channel overlapped a portion of the existing Mud Island Channel in an area opposite Andalusia, Pa. and Delanco, New Jersey. Mud Island Channel had a mean low water width of 300 feet and a minimum depth of 25 feet.

5. In addition to the dredge ATLAS, the dredge flotilla, all units of which were under libellant’s operational control, consisted of a drill boat (HORNET), 3 tugs (NORTH STAR, JAMES A. and DOTSIE), a derrick (“3900”) and a sweep.

6. The ATLAS was a dragline dredge 175 feet long and 70 feet wide, with a 200 foot boom extending from its bow. Its boom, dragline and appended clam shell bucket were controlled by a drag-line operator. This dredge was equipped with 3 spuds, which were lowered into the river bottom to secure it when it was digging. One spud was located at the stern and another on each side. The spuds were raised and lowered by machinery aboard.

7. The sweep (a barge without means of self-propulsion) was also equipped with spuds to secure it in position. It was 100 feet long and 25 feet wide. Its function was to sweep the area already dredged by the ATLAS to verify the contract minimum depth of 42 feet, or, otherwise, to report any high spots encountered.

The sweeping operation was accomplished by a series of 5 bars, each 20 feet long and 3 inches in diameter, suspended to the desired depth over one side of the sweep by cables attached to a rig, which could raise or lower the bars as the sweep was moved sideways across the channel.

8. The HORNET (a barge incapable of self-propulsion) was used to drill holes in the river bottom for explosive charges.

9. The S. S. RIO-ORINOC9 was an ocean-going ore carrier 657 feet long, 87.4 feet wide, with a dead weight of 35,000 tons.

10. On June 17, 1960, the Corps of Army Engineers gave written notice to all affected navigational interests of the presence of the HORNET and the ATLAS in the New Enterprise Range opposite Delanco, New Jersey. The notice [184]*184regarding the HORNET read in part, as follows:

“Drillboat will be anchored in the ship channel 24 hours per day. Mariners are cautioned ,to slo%v down and proceed with care in this area. Radio and radar transmitters should not be used while in the vicinity of this plant.” (emphasis ours)

The notice further stated, in part:

“NOTE: The west half of the 25-foot channel, Mud Island Range, opposite the HORNET NO. 4 and the ATLAS, will be unobstructed by the plant and open for traffic at all times.” (emphasis ours)

11. On June 23, 1960, about 2:04 P.M. (1404), the S. S. RIO-ORINOCO, inbound from Venezuela, having stopped first at Philadelphia to lighten cargo, departed therefrom for Morrisville, Pa., with a cargo of iron ore. Richard Rutherford, a licensed Delaware River Pilot, was in charge of navigation.

The draft of the vessel on departure upriver was 24 feet 6 inches. Then, and at all later relevant times, visibility was excellent and the weather clear and fine.

12. On its upstream voyage, the RIO-ORINOCO was escorted by 2 tugs, H. C. JEFFERSON and NORTH POINT. The tugs assisted the ship through the Delair Railroad Bridge and followed her to assist in docking at Morrisville.

13. Pilot Rutherford had read the notice issued by the Corps of Army Engineers, dated June 17, 1960, and was anticipating that the western half (150 feet) of the Mud Island Channel (300 feet) would be open for his transit past the dredge ATLAS and its flotilla.

14. Between 5:00 P.M. (1700) and 5:30 P.M. (1730) the tide was ebbing in the Mud Island Range and the ship was stemming an ebb tide of about 1% knots.

15. About 5:00 P.M. (1700), after the RIO-ORINOCO had passed beneath the Tacony Palmyra Bridge, and had slowed her engines to pass several yacht clubs, Pilot Rutherford, from his observation point in the wheelhouse 85 feet above the water, mistakenly concluded that the ATLAS was in the center of the Mud Island Channel.

This observation was made when the ship was about one-half hour below the ATLAS and about 5 minutes below the intersection of the upper end of Torres-dale Range with the lower end of the Mud Island Range, which was approximately 2 miles down river from the point of the subsequent collision.

At this point, Pilot Rutherford made a radio call to the ATLAS for clearance to pass and requested that the ATLAS move from the center of the channel. This message was relayed by the dredge ALAMEDA for transmission to the ATLAS because the ATLAS was on a different radio frequency from the RIO-ORINOCO. The ATLAS replied that there was plenty of room on the Pennsylvania (western) side of the channel and that the dredge was not going to move. At this time the RIO-ORINOCO was operating on a “slow” bell with an engine speed of 4y% knots and an over-the-ground speed of about 3 knots, as it stemmed the ebb tide of about 1 y2 knots.

16. When the RIO-ORINOCO entered the Mud Island Range Pilot Rutherford observed that the ATLAS was not on the center line of the channel, as he had earlier erroneously believed, but was approximately 50 feet east of the center line toward the New Jersey shore. He then concluded that he had at least 200 feet to complete the RIO-ORINOCO’S passage by the ATLAS, which he regarded as a “normal, natural passing situation” without abnormal hazards, absent the presence of other vessels in mid-channel.

17. Pilot Rutherford had, without difficulty, passed the ATLAS on numerous prior occasions, when it was in the same or a similar location.

18. Upon turning onto the Mud Island Range, Pilot Rutherford also observed another' piece of floating equipment in view upriver (the sweep), which appeared to him to be right on the center [185]*185line of the channel with some overhang on either side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 F. Supp. 182, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/al-johnson-construction-co-v-ss-rio-orinoco-paed-1965.