American Smelting and Refining Co. v. S.S. Irish Spruce, Her Engines, Tackle, Etc., and Irish Shipping Ltd., Complaint of Irish Shipping Ltd., as Owner of the s.s."irish Spruce", for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Compania Peruana De Vapores, S.A., Claimant-Appellant v. Sprague & Rhodes Commodity Corp., Claimants-Appellees

548 F.2d 56
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 17, 1977
Docket488
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 548 F.2d 56 (American Smelting and Refining Co. v. S.S. Irish Spruce, Her Engines, Tackle, Etc., and Irish Shipping Ltd., Complaint of Irish Shipping Ltd., as Owner of the s.s."irish Spruce", for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Compania Peruana De Vapores, S.A., Claimant-Appellant v. Sprague & Rhodes Commodity Corp., Claimants-Appellees) 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 Smelting and Refining Co. v. S.S. Irish Spruce, Her Engines, Tackle, Etc., and Irish Shipping Ltd., Complaint of Irish Shipping Ltd., as Owner of the s.s."irish Spruce", for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Compania Peruana De Vapores, S.A., Claimant-Appellant v. Sprague & Rhodes Commodity Corp., Claimants-Appellees, 548 F.2d 56 (2d Cir. 1977).

Opinion

548 F.2d 56

AMERICAN SMELTING AND REFINING CO., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
S.S. IRISH SPRUCE, her engines, tackle, etc., and Irish
Shipping Ltd., Defendants-Appellants.
Complaint of IRISH SHIPPING LTD., Plaintiff-Appellant, as
owner of the S.S."IRISH SPRUCE", for exoneration
from or limitation of liability.
COMPANIA PERUANA de VAPORES, S.A., Claimant-Appellant,
v.
SPRAGUE & RHODES COMMODITY CORP., et al., Claimants-Appellees.

Nos. 487, 488, Dockets 75-7441, 75-7445.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued Feb. 9, 1976.
Decided Jan. 17, 1977.

Nicholas J. Healy, New York City (Allan A. Baillie, John C. Koster, Healy & Baillie, New York City, on the brief), for appellant Irish Shipping Ltd.

Richard G. Ashworth, Haight, Gardner, Poor & Havens, New York City, on the brief, for appellant Compania Peruana de Vapores, S.A.

Douglas A. Jacobsen, New York City (Francis M. O'Regan, Bigham, Englar, Jones & Houston, New York City, on the brief), for appellees.

Before LUMBARD and TIMBERS, Circuit Judges, and BRYAN, District Judge.**

Opinion reassigned on November 1, 1976 to Judge Lumbard at

the request of Judge Timbers.

LUMBARD, Circuit Judge:

This appeal concerns the district court's confirmation of a special master's report which found the S.S. Irish Spruce to have been unseaworthy at the time of its foundering in the Caribbean and which further found that this unseaworthiness was a proximate cause of the stranding. We find the holding relating to proximate causation to be erroneous and, accordingly, reverse.

I.

The events leading up to the stranding were recounted in depositions from all the officers of the Irish Spruce and in testimony before the magistrate by First Officer Kelly and Second Officer Healy. Loaded with appellees' cargo, the Irish Spruce cleared the Panama Canal and entered the Caribbean on January 25, 1972. Her projected course to New Orleans was northerly toward the Yucatan Pass (which lies between Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula), passing between Roncador Bank and Serrana Bank to the east and Quito Sueno Bank to the west. Quito Sueno, whose name translates as "troubled sleep," is an uninhabited or virtually uninhabited possession of Colombia which lies about 120 miles off the eastern coast of Nicaragua and at a greater distance north of Colombia's mainland. As the magistrate reported, "hazards to navigation are poorly marked and inadequately serviced" in this area of the Caribbean.

Early in the morning of January 26, shortly after the ship left the Canal, rough seas and heavy swells forced a change of course more to the eastward than had been planned originally. As the weather eased at midday other minor adjustments were made in order to regain the base course. Partly cloudy skies and rain made it impossible to obtain reliable star sights. Reliance, therefore, was placed on "dead reckoning" and "sun line" positions, navigational techniques which are inherently inferior to star sights or radio fixes and which are only used in the absence of surer guideposts. At about 0930 or 1000 hours on the 26th, Third Officer O'Connor took sun sights and then moved up the ship's morning position line until noon, when he took more sun sights. Second Officer Healy checked O'Connor's work and concluded that it was correct. At dusk (about 1900 hours), Chief Officer Kelly attempted to obtain an accurate locational fix by using star sights but he was prevented from doing so when rain obscured the horizon.

During the oncoming night the ship was to pass between the poorly marked Roncador and Quito Sueno Banks. In order to do so the navigators intended to alter the ship's course from 330 degrees to 323 degrees upon the first sighting of Roncador Bank. The light on Roncador is visible 13 miles under optimum conditions and it was planned that the boat would pass 11 miles off Roncador at 2300 hours on the 26th. The Roncador light was never sighted that evening and the vessel was kept on the 330 degree course until midnight when the shift to a 323 degree course was finally made. Although the vessel was equipped with a working radar apparatus, no radar reflection was had off of Roncador; this may not have been surprising, however, since Roncador was a low lying reef and the only high object, the light tower, was an open latticework structure without a special radar reflector. Even though no precision sightings had been had since the noontime sun sight and even though the sun sights employed are inherently less accurate than star sights or radiobeacon fixes, the Irish Spruce steamed ahead at full speed into the night.

Second Officer Healy, a relatively young officer whom Magistrate Goettel described as "an officer of 'meticulosity in matters of navigation,' " stood watch on the bridge with a seaman lookout from midnight on, early on the 27th. Captain Kerr was also on the bridge during most of this watch. The radar and fathometer (depth meter) were in operation. However, since the vessel was travelling far off the mainland and since the various reefs were low lying, the radar was none too valuable a navigational tool in these waters. Furthermore, since the reefs in this part of the Caribbean come up very fast from the bottom, which is to say that they are steep sided, the fathometer was also a most inadequate tool to prevent stranding since it was unlikely to provide enough advance warning to allow the officer in charge to do anything in time.

The Irish Spruce was also equipped with a British-made, Decca-brand Navigator. This is an electronic position finder which depends on signals from special sending stations. It was far beyond the reach of such signals in this part of the Caribbean. The ship did not have a similar, though incompatible, American-made Loran navigational system which would have been of some use in this part of the world during nighttime hours. Finally, the Irish Spruce was equipped with a radio-direction finder (RDF) which was useful in locating more or less precisely the orientation of any radio signals which might be receivable. In this part of the Caribbean, however, radio signals useful to the RDF were few and far between. On the basis of previous trips through these same waters, navigator Healy knew that a radiobeacon was located on Swan Island, a former British possession some 200 or so miles north of Quito Sueno Bank. When his watch began early on the morning of the 27th, Healy had the RDF turned on in an effort to pick up the Swan Island beacon. After warming up the unit he was only able to hear static on the channel assigned to Swan Island. He turned off the set without rotating the dial to try to find other signals. Having been through these shipping lanes before, Healy apparently thought that he already knew the few radiobeacons which might be available and so he did not refer on this particular occasion to the 1969 edition of the British Admiralty List of Radio Signals which was on board the Irish Spruce, a work which he had consulted on previous occasions.1

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