Bradley Fertilizer Co. v. The Edwin I. Morrison

27 F. 136, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 30, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 F. 136 (Bradley Fertilizer Co. v. The Edwin I. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley Fertilizer Co. v. The Edwin I. Morrison, 27 F. 136, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46 (S.D.N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The libel in this case was filed against the schooner Edwin I. Morrison to recover for the damage done to a cargo of guano by sea-water taken aboard on the tenth day of January, 1884, on her voyage from Boston to Savannah. The schooner sailed on the fifth of January, and, according to her log, on the afternoon of the ninth of .January met a very strong gale and heavy sea, and shipped great quantities of water. The 10th opened with a strong westerly gale, sea running very high. “At 8 A. m.,” as the log continues, “set two reef foresail and storm trysail, and hove vessel to, heading about south. Found that the vessel is making water faster than we can pump her out with both pumps, the men not being able to work at pumping steadily because of heavy seas sweeping her decks. Sounded pumps, and found that sho has seven feet of water in the hold. Cut tho boat lashings, and got all ready to leave vessel, when found that the cap liad washed off the bilge pump hole on the port side. Nailed a piece of sheet load over it, and started both pumps agoing. Pumped two hours, and sounded again, and found that we are freeing her very rapidly.” The words above quoted in italics have been added to the log at some time since the original entry. The figure “7” is written over an erasure. The damage sued for was occasioned by the flooding of tho hold.

The evidence leaves no doubt that most of the water was taken in through the bilge pump hole referred to in the above extract from the log. This was a hole on the port side, in the water-ways, a short distance only in front of the poop, and ran down through the waterway between the ceiling and the skin of the ship. There was a similar hole on the starboard side. They were placed there in the construction of the ship for the purpose of running a hose down in the bilges so as to pump out the water more thoroughly in case of alight cargo and much rolling. The hole was from three to four inches in diameter, and was covered by a brass plate about four inches square, countersunk into the timber, through which was a hole covered by a brass cap which screwed into tho plate. The plate was fastened into the water-ways by screws. Such bilge pump holes are not unusual in vessels constructed in some localities, and seldom have any accidents arisen from them. The mode of covering them above described was deemed perfectly secure. Such caps usually project a little above the surface of the water-way, the upper edge of the cap being beveled off so as to leave usually not more than an eighth of an inch of perpendicular surface. -The only question in this case is whether, considering all the circumstances, any negligence is shown either in the handling of the ship, or in the sufficiency of her equipment as a seaworthy vessel, as respects the proper security of this port cap and plate.

[138]*138The schooner was built some 11 years previous. .These holes had never been used. They were dangerous unless the caps and plates to cover them were kept perfectly tight and secure. The obligation to keep watch of their condition was as stringent as the danger from weakness in them was extreme; yet there is no satisfactory evidence that there had been more than a casual examination of them since the schooner was built. The evidence shows that up to about half past 4 a. m. of the 10th the schooner had made no more water than was speedily pumped out in the ordinary handling of the pumps every two hours. Upon renewing the pumping at half past 4, and not obtaining a suck as soon as usual, the captain, at 5 a. m., sounded and found 18 inches of water in the hold. The schooner at that time, according to the captain’s testimony, was on the port tack, lying to. In order to man the pumps better she was then put before the wind, with the wind on the starboard quarter, which gave her a list to port of about two streaks. Notwithstanding the constant pumping, she continued settling till 9 o’clock, when seven feet of water was found in the hold. The captain supposed she had sprung a leak, probably through her bow ports. About 11 o’clock they wore ship, which presently brought her port side out of water; when, through the gurgling in the bilge pump hole, the second mate discovered the opening, as the master and crew were on the point of abandoning her. The opening was soon covered with sheet lead, and shortly after the ship was 'speedily lightened by the use of the pumps. The second mate, who took charge of the watch at half past 4, says that she was then on the starboard tack; but he also says her booms were on the starboard side, and that the port side was lowest in the water, and that it was 8 o’clock when they kept her off on the same tack.

The theory of the defense is that the plate and cap were perfectly tight; but that, through the many seas taken aboard and the washing about of many articles upon the deck, particularly of the heavy covers of the chain lockers that had got adrift, the bilge plate and cover, though perfectly sound and tight in their setting, were knocked off by violence or some accidental blow of the floating articles. Uor the libelants it is urged that this explanation is purely hypothetical, and not entitled to be accepted as a discharge of the ship’s presumptive liability.

1. I do not find any reason to charge the ship with any defect in her original construction by reason of having the bilge pump holes. The fact that they were quite commonly used in the construction of such vessels, and deemed safe; that this schooner had been in constant use during all weathers for some 11 years without any previous accident from them; that the existence of these holes was obvious upon any careful inspection or survey of the schooner; and that no objection has ever been made to them,—are a sufficient answer to any charge of unseaworthiness from the mere faet of having such holes. It is, doubtless, possible that if one of the heavy chain locker [139]*139covers had been swept violently across the deck in an exactly level position, and with a sharp and hard edge had hit the upright surface of the cap, that might have torn off the cap and plate, and account for this accident. The probabilities of any such contact of a sharp and solid edge of one of these covers in the exact position to do this are exceedingly small. The cap and plate were upon the water-ways, and a number of inches above the deck. The second mate says tho covers were “water-logged.” They would hardly seem capable of indicting any blow that would not slide off and over the beveled edge of the cap, if the cap and plate were securely fastened. It seems incredible, moreover, that any such blow could have been given that would not have left its marks upon the stanchions and bulwarks on the port side, which were within a few inches of the plate; yet no such marks appear, nor was anything broken or carried away in that vicinity except the cap and plate, although on the starboard side the •bulwarks were in some places carried away. There is, in fact, no evidence of any such violent blow in the region of the cap and plate as is assumed by the claimant. Several experts, moreover, express the opinion that if the plate had been carried away bj' such a blow, the wood, if sound, would have retained the screws, and their heads would have been broken off, although other experts express a contrary opinion. The screws, however, were carried away with the plate. For the claimants one witness testified that the holes of the screws were sound, and not decayed or blackened; and the fact that the wood held the sheet lead afterwards nailed upon it is urged as evidence that the wood was sound. Other witnesses also testify to the fact that it was sound.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. 136, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-fertilizer-co-v-the-edwin-i-morrison-nysd-1886.