Alva Steamship Co., Ltd. v. City of New York

616 F.2d 605, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 20961
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1980
Docket677
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 616 F.2d 605 (Alva Steamship Co., Ltd. v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alva Steamship Co., Ltd. v. City of New York, 616 F.2d 605, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 20961 (2d Cir. 1980).

Opinion

616 F.2d 605

In the Matter of the Amended Petition of ALVA STEAMSHIP CO.,
LTD., Owner of the
M/T ALVA CAPE, for exoneration from or limitation of
liability. ALVA STEAMSHIP CO., LTD., Petitioner
and Third Party Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
The CITY OF NEW YORK, Third Party Defendant-Appellee-Appellant,
and
Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corporation, Third Party
Defendant-Appellee-Appellant,
and
Walter A. Kidde & Co., Inc. et al., Third Party Defendants.

Nos. 578, 677 and 678, Dockets 79-7621, 79-7653 and 79-7681.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued Dec. 13, 1979.
Decided Jan. 30, 1980.

William P. Kain, Jr., New York City (Haight, Gardner, Poor & Havens, James M. Hazen, Robert Alexander Hulten, New York City, of counsel), for petitioner and third party plaintiff-appellant, Alva S. S. Co., Ltd.

Robert S. Blanc, New York City (Hill, Betts & Nash, Terence Gargan, Henry F. White, Jr., New York City, of counsel), for third party defendant-appellee-appellant, Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corp.

Wilbur E. Dow, Jr., Lake George, N. Y. (R. Lee Dow, Lake George, N. Y., of counsel), for third party defendant-appellee-appellant, City of New York.

Before LUMBARD and VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges, and CARTER, District Judge.*

LUMBARD, Circuit Judge:

This case presents a complex of liability apportionment issues surrounding the explosion during salvage operations of the M/T Alva Cape, which had previously been involved in one of the most serious marine fires in the history of New York harbor.1 Judge Conner found the owners of the vessel liable to the extent of 20% of the damages; the salvors liable for 70%; and the City of New York liable for 10%. We affirm the findings as to liability below with respect to the ship's owner, Alva Steamship Co., Ltd. ("Alva"), and the salvors hired by it, but reverse the district court's finding that the City of New York was negligent; we adjust the allocation of liability accordingly, splitting the City's share proportionately between the owner and the salvor.

On June 16, 1966 the M/T Alva Cape, a British-owned ship of British registration, carrying 133,000 gallons of liquid naptha, collided with the empty tanker Texaco Massachusetts just off the New Jersey coast. The ensuing explosion and fire took the lives of 28 seamen and firefighters and injured many more. The blaze was finally extinguished by the efforts of the largest fleet of sea-borne firefighting equipment ever massed on the East Coast.

Following the disaster, the Alva Cape was towed into New York harbor where, because of the continuing threat of explosion and fire posed by flammable liquids and gases on board, she was moored in the Federal Explosives Harbor in Gravesend Bay, off Brooklyn. At this point, Alva, acting through its New York agent, Navcot, Inc., hired the well-known salvage firm of Merritt-Chapman & Scott ("MCS") to undertake salvage operations on the Alva Cape. The goal of the shipowners was to render the hull gas-free so that it could be scrapped or repaired, if repair was found to be economically feasible.

MCS began operations by unloading most of the Alva's remaining cargo by the "over-the-top" method. But by the time that only about two to three thousand gallons of liquid naptha remained, on June 23, this method had to be given up and the use of the Alva's on-board pumps resorted to. On June 26, Fire Department officials observed that the ship was leaking liquid naptha into the waters of the harbor. They decided that the best way to meet the hazard of the explosion or fire from the leaking naptha was to "inert" the cargo hold of the Alva Cape through the introduction of a gas such as nitrogen or carbon dioxide. On June 27, the Board of Fire Prevention of the City of New York Fire Department issued an order requiring such inerting.

MCS and Navcot agreed to perform this inerting procedure although officials of both entities made no secret at the time, and testified at trial, that they thought the Fire Department order was a foolish one. This belief was based on their view that inerting was unnecessary, impractical and in flagrant disregard of a better alternative, that of "butterworthing," or flushing out the cargo hold with warm water. But MCS and Navcot determined to go ahead with a "token" inerting procedure by pumping a minute quantity of CO 2 into the Alva's hold.

MCS contacted Walter Kidde & Co. to arrange for the delivery, on June 28, of ten 50-gallon canisters of liquid CO 2 (an amount far smaller than the one to two hundred tons of liquid CO 2 needed to do the job as specified by the Fire Department order). The Kidde salesman, Becker, inquired as to the use to which MCS was going to put the CO 2 and the "token" operation planned on the Alva was described by Varnum, an MCS executive. Becker's response was that such an operation would be extremely dangerous because unless the apparatus used to fill the cargo hold with gas was properly grounded, an electrical discharge might trigger an explosion. Becker recommended that MCS delay its plans. Varnum told Becker to mind his own business.

The canisters of CO 2 arrived at the Alva early in the afternoon of the 28th. The danger the Kidde salesman referred to was the same danger the entire inerting operation was being undertaken to nullify the danger of a spark from the operation of mechanical equipment igniting the flammable gases accumulating in the Alva's cargo tanks. The way to avoid this danger was simple, as any marine chemist knew. The part of the canister that came into contact with the gases in the hold should have been grounded to the ship with copper wire, so that any electrical charge built up around the point of contact would not be free to ignite an explosion. Lee, a marine chemist employed by E. W. Seybolt & Co., Inc., a firm retained by MCS, warned Varnum of this problem in a telephone call on the morning of the 28th. Varnum told him it was too late for a change in plans. Captain Zickl, MCS's salvage master in charge of operations aboard the Alva, had no personal knowledge of the dangers involved in the inerting procedure, and Varnum did not transmit to him the warnings of Lee and Becker.

The first canister of CO 2 was discharged into the Alva without incident. When the operation began, Rush, the Fire Department's representative, became aware of the fact that MCS and Navcot did not intend to perform the inerting operation in the manner ordered by the Fire Department. He left on a Fire Department launch to telephone his superiors to report this situation. His own training as a fireman, and his experience using CO 2 as a safe fire-fighting tool in ordinary land-based fires, was not such as to lead him to think that the operation being carried out in his absence was dangerous.

Within seconds after discharge of the second canister of CO 2 began, an electrical charge that had accumulated at the head of the nozzle discharged itself as a spark and came into contact with the naptha gas in the Alva's hold. Once again, for the second time in two weeks, the ship was rocked by powerful explosions.

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Bluebook (online)
616 F.2d 605, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 20961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alva-steamship-co-ltd-v-city-of-new-york-ca2-1980.