American Petroleum Co. v. Texas Co.

22 F.2d 290, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3321, 1928 A.M.C. 1564
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 1927
DocketNo. 28
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 F.2d 290 (American Petroleum Co. v. Texas Co.) 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
American Petroleum Co. v. Texas Co., 22 F.2d 290, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3321, 1928 A.M.C. 1564 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The suits arose out of the collision between the Rotterdam and the Tampico, which occurred at about 4 o’clock on the afternoon of Juno 30, 1921, in the Sabine-Neehes Canal, at a point opposite the upper part of the city of Port Arthur, above the bridge known as the “Pleasure Bridge.” The trial court found that the place of collision was at a point about a mile and a half north of the Pleasure Pier bridge, which was a drawbridge across the canal.

The steamship Rotterdam is a bulk tank steamer, 360 feet long, 46.7 feet in beam, which at the time of the collision was drawing 22.6 feet forward and 24 feet aft. The Rotterdam was bound down the canal, partly loaded, and there was a tide setting in the direction in which the Rotterdam was proceeding with á force of about 2 miles per hour. The barge Tampico, which is 248 feet long, 40.1 feet in beam, and with a maximum draft of 19 feet aft, was bound up the canal, in tow of the tug South American, which is 97.6 feet long, 23.6 feet in beam, and with a draft of about 13 feet. The South American was made fast on the starboard quarter of the Tampico, alongside the latter, and was in a position in which the Tampico extended considerably forward of the stem of the tug, and the stern of the tug extended to the rear of the Tampico. Thus the barge, as the vessels met, would pass between the Rotterdam and the tug.

The Sabine-Neehes Canal is a dredged channel of several miles in length and connecting Neches river with the Port Arthur ship canal.

The District Court found upon sufficient evidence that there was a wider section of the canal just below the bridge than above it, in the portion of the canal where the collision occurred. The bridge was a single-leaf bascule lift bridge. The collision occurred in the portion of the canal opposite the Woodward lot, so called, which was about 9,000 feet above the bridge. About 1,700 feet below the bridge was a slight bend in the canal, and when the tug and barge were approaching this curve the tug blow for the bridge to open. The bridge subsequently lifted, and not until the barge was entering the draw did the master of the tug or of the barge Tampico see the Rotterdam. Nor did any one on the Rotterdam descry the tug and barge until about the same time.

The opinion of the trial judge says: “The man on the bridge of the steamer had no difficulty in observing the barge at some distance below the bridge.” If by this was meant a finding that the Rotterdam saw the tug and tow some distance below the bridge, we regard it as in conflict with all the evidence, except that of the master of the Rotterdam, who, just after the collision, had signed a report (Kaper Exhibit No. 5) in which the following appears: “When we observed the Tampico, she was just passing through the Pleasure Pier bridge to Port Arthur.”

It seems, therefore, to have been the fact that none of these vessels saw one another until the tug and barge were about entering the draw. There does not, however, appear to be any reason why a large ship like the Rotterdam should not have seen the tug and barge when the latter rounded the curve about 2,000 feet below the bridge, nor why the tug, had she maintained a proper lookout on the stem of the barge, should not have seen the Rotterdam coming down the canal. It was stated by the master of the tug that there were obstructions, but he apparently admitted that “ordinarily you can see,” and the claim made by Kaper, the pilot of the Rotterdam, that he could not see the Tampico and her tug because he did not have any background seems difficult to understand, and is contradicted by the statement of the master, made at the trial (erroneous though it apparently was in fact), that he did see the tug and barge far below the bridge.

We therefore think that each vessel, had it maintained a careful lookout, was in position to see the other at or shortly after the [292]*292time the tug and her barge blew to open the bridge, and while the latter was in the wider portion of the canal, which extended for some distance between the bend where the tug blew her signal and the drawbridge itself. In other words, for some distance below the bridge the tug and barge should have become aware of the approach of a large vessel, which they would have to pass in a channel exceedingly narrow at best, and should have accordingly stopped in this portion of the channel where it was widest until the descending steamer could pass through it. On the other hand, the descending steamer was in a position where she should have seen the .tug and barge coming nearer and nearer to the bridge, and getting beyond the portion of the channel which was the widest and most available for the vessels to pass.

The tug, after passing through the bridge, blew a signal of one blast which was answered by one blast by the Rotterdam, indicating an acquiescence in a port to port passing; while at some distance from the Rotterdam the tug put her course to starboard and proceeded to the right-hand side of the canal and along the sloping bank. When the bow of the Tampico was somewhere near abreast of the bow of the Rotterdam, the barge took a slight sheer towards the steamer, that was at least partially overcome by the tug, which reversed her engines for a short space of time. When about half the length of the barge had passed the stern of the steamer, the steamer’s port quarter came into collision with the port side of the Tampico about abreast of the latter’s mainmast, and between 20 and 50 feet from the stern of the Rotterdam.

The master of the Rotterdam testified that, when they saw the Tampico, “We thought we might stop and stay on the mud and let her pass us, but the tide was too strong and throwed our stem over. Q. Toward the Tampico? A. Toward the Tampico, yes; we were on the mud, and thought she could pass us, and we tried to get just as fast in the mud as we could, and stopped the engines. Q. Tour bow in the mud? A. The whole ship in the mud, but the tide was too strong and pushed the stem off; we were lying across the river, so we had to move her ahead again and keep on the bank, the only way to get clear,”

In addition to this testimony, Gomes, the chief engineer of the Rotterdam, testified that her engines were stopped one minute before the collision; that the ship was on the bank and had hardly any speed. •

Tinder such circumstances, we think it almost inevitable that the stem of the Rotterdam was carried out into the center of the stream by the current, and this is borne out by the fact that she collided with the Tampico somewhere near amidships ,of the latter. There is no doubt that the tug was close to the starboard side of the canal, and if the collision was wholly due to the sheer of the Tampico, the attempt to break which swung her stem toward the Rotterdam, the stem of the Tampico, and not a point almost amidships of the latter, would have been the point of contact with the port quarter of the Rotterdam.

Rule 3 of the Pilot Rules for Rivers Whose Waters Plow into the Gulf of Mexico and through Tributaries, which applies in general to the canal in question, reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
22 F.2d 290, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3321, 1928 A.M.C. 1564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-petroleum-co-v-texas-co-ca2-1927.