Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co. v. Eastern Transp. Co.

15 F. Supp. 705, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 9, 1936
DocketNo. A-14479
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 F. Supp. 705 (Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co. v. Eastern Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co. v. Eastern Transp. Co., 15 F. Supp. 705, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101 (E.D.N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

The barge William B. Diggs owned by the respondent sank and was lost off the New Jersey coast on September 3, 1934, having taken a cargo of 1510 tons, 1800 lbs. of pig iron on August 23, 1934, from the libelant at Albany, N. Y. for delivery at Roebling, N. J.

In this cause recovery is sought by the libelant as assignee of the consignee for the loss of the cargo, namely, $38,757.00. .

The questions raised by the pleadings are: •

1. Whether the barge was seaworthy and yielded only to the perils of heavy cross seas which caused her to leak and founder,

2. Whether the respondent is entitled to the protection of the Harter Act (46 U. S.C.A. § 190 et seq.).

3. Whether the respondent was an insurer.

4. Whether the libelant has been reimbursed by insurance for the loss, which insurance was paid for by respondent and the benefit of which extends to the respondent, whereby the underwriters “on whose behalf this action is being maintairfed are barred from maintaining this suit against respondent” (Answer, art. twenty-second).

As to the latter, there is before the court a document reciting a loan without interest by The Universal Insurance Company to the libelant dated March 15, 1935, of $34,-000.00 repayable only out of any recovery by the libelant in connection with the said pig iron shipped as stated. Assignment of the cause of action and control of litigation, etc., to the insurance company are set forth.

As to the question of seaworthiness, it should be said that the barge was owned by the respondent, and chartered from -it by libelant; there are no unusual clauses in the charter party; there is of course a clause requiring the owner to exercise due diligence to make the barge tight, staunch, strong and seaworthy, and relieving it of liability for any loss or damage to cargo occasioned by any defects whatsoever in hull, machinery or equipment, whether existing before the commencement of or arising or developing during the voyage provided all reasonable means have been taken to make the barge seaworthy.

In these circumstances the respondent was a private carrier, a bailee, and is to be held answerable for negligence. The Joseph J. Hock (C.C.A.) 70 F.(2d) 259, at page 260.

This voyage started in Albany, where the cargo was taken. Before that was done, repairs were made to the boiler that fur-. nished steam for the pumps, the whistle, and the winch; namely, two “spots were welded around the mud. ring or what is known as the leg of the boiler.” That was on August 19, 1934. The boiler was then tested and one or two more leaks developed, and were repaired the next day. The boiler was again tested, and was found to be in good repair. •

The barge was towed down the Hudson to the anchorage grounds on Red Hook flats, and lay there for seven or eight days, until departure was had on September 2d at about 1:00 p. m.

During that interval 12 to 14 inches of water or so were made each day, and the pumps cleared this without difficulty. The weather was fair during that entire time, so [707]*707that an intake of 8 to 10 inches daily may he regarded as normal on this barge, since the pumps began sucking at 4 inches. There is uncontradicted testimony that this is a customary leakage of such barges.

The tanks supplying fresh water to the boiler, and for the use of those on board, were filled at Albany. So much as had been consumed of the contents by September 1st was replaced by the tug Baldrock on that day. It does not appear how much water was so required but the testimony is that the tanks carried an adequate supply for fourteen days when’ the barge was operating.

The Diggs was a wooden barge, built in 1918, 203 feet long, and 36 feet in beam, having 14-foot sides. Her carrying capacity was around 1800 tons and her prior service had been constant, as will be seen. When loaded on ibis voyage she had a free-board fore and aft of from 6 to 7 feet and 3% to 4 feet amidships. Her cargoes and voyages during the year preceding her foundering included:

August, 1933 — 1500 tons of pig iron, Albany to Roebling, N. J. (Del.River)

February, 1934 — 1575.71 tons of coal, Newport News to Boston

March, 1934 — 1020.876 tons scrapiron, Boston to Sparrows Point

April, 1934 — 1103.5 tons steel rails, Sparrows Pt., Md., to Portsmouth, Va.

May, 1934 — 12730 railroad tics, Fredricksburg to Weehawken

June, 1934 — 1197 gr. tons steel skelp, Sparrows Pt. to Albany

June, 1934 — 1500 gr. tons pig iron, Albany to Roebling’

July, 1934 — 1500 gr. tons pig iron, Albany to Roebling

It was customary, when carrying pig iron, to stow about 10 per cent, of the cargo on deck, i. e., near the rails and in the dead hatches. This was done to equalize the strain on the hull. The 90 per cent, carried in the holds was stowed of course as low in the vessel as possible, and tended to draw the sides together; to equalize that strain, the deck stowage was employed. The charter-party so provided in terms, that is, ££Ten percent of each cargo shipped on deck at shipper’s risk.”

Such was the manner of cargo stowage on this trip.

The Diggs was the second boat in the tow; the head barge was the Morrisette, similar in all respects and carrying the same cargo; the tail barge was the Kunkel, carrying 1340 tons of scrap tin to Sparrows Point, Md. Her capacity was the same, but her load was lighter, all stowed below, and she rode higher.

Hawsers were paid out leaving the lower bay, 225 fathoms from the tug to the head barge, and 200 fathoms from the latter to the Diggs, and the same from her to the Kunkel.

Passing Sandy Hook, the wind was light from the east, northeast, and the seas were moderate.

Nothing occurred of moment until about 10:00 p. m., when the tow was off Asbury, when all vessels began to feel the effects of swells, probably caused by easterly winds which had prevailed for a number of days; the tug and the barges were rolling in the swells, and this caused bull twisting as the barges tended to zigzag because of the lateral play upon the hawsers as the vessels successively mounted the waves, and could not be kept in line.

That was all that happened, but the testimony is unanimously to the effect that the conditions increased in intensity as the night wore on and the morning of September 3rd dawned. From Barnegat Light to Brigantine the swells grew in size, and finally, as the wind freshened, the waves began to cap, and the Diggs and the other barges took green water repeatedly on the port quarter aft, which washed in volume across the decks. This caused much of the deck cargo on the Diggs to tumble about, and some of it washed overside; that is said to have disturbed the equilibrium of stowage which has been referred to; also, as the second vessel in the tow, she was yawing under the influence of the fore and aft hawsers which held her in position, and her pumps proved inadequate to the task of clearing her. Whether seams were opened on deck, as well as below, does not appear definitely. By 10 :00 o’clock a. m. or so, she blew five blasts of her whistle (requiring 60 lbs. of steam pressure) and the tug was apprised of her difficulties; the latter did not at once respond (apparently the captain misread an intermediate signal), so the signal was repeated in twenty minutes.

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Related

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37 F. Supp. 386 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Supp. 705, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chateaugay-ore-iron-co-v-eastern-transp-co-nyed-1936.