Consolidated Grain & Barge Co. v. General Intermodal Logistics Corp.

548 F. Supp. 424, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9729
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedSeptember 10, 1982
DocketNo. 81-1303A(4)
StatusPublished

This text of 548 F. Supp. 424 (Consolidated Grain & Barge Co. v. General Intermodal Logistics Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Grain & Barge Co. v. General Intermodal Logistics Corp., 548 F. Supp. 424, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9729 (E.D. Mo. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

HUNGATE, District Judge.

This admiralty action is before the Court for decision on the merits following a bench trial on July 19 and 20, 1982. Plaintiff Consolidated Grain and Barge Company (Consolidated) seeks monetary damages from defendants General Intermodal Logistics Corporation (GILCO) and the M/V Ann Elizabeth (Ann Elizabeth), alleging that they negligently caused Consolidated’s barge CGB 161 to run aground on May 11, 1981. GILCO impleaded defendants Helena Marine Service, Inc. (Helena) and the M/V Victor II (Victor II), alleging that they negligently caused the damage to CGB 161. Helena and the Victor II thereupon counterclaimed against GILCO and the Ann Elizabeth for indemnity or contribution.

The parties stipulated at trial that plaintiff sustained damage in the total amount of $160,439.39 and that, if prejudgment interest were awarded, it should be awarded from October 2, 1981, at a rate of ten percentum (10%) per annum. The parties have also stipulated to a number of other facts by a written stipulation filed July 2, 1982. The stipulations are incorporated into the Court’s findings of fact.

Having considered the pleadings, trial testimony, exhibits, stipulations, and memoranda of the parties, and being fully advised in the premises, the Court hereby makes and enters the following findings of facts and conclusions of law.

Findings of Fact

1. At all material times, Consolidated was a corporation organized and existing under law.

2. At all material times, Consolidated was the owner and/or operator of the unmanned, unpowered, steel-hulled covered hopper barge known as barge CGB 161 and it was the bailee of the cargo laden in the barge. At the time of the casualty, the barge was tight, staunch and in all respects seaworthy.

3. At all material times, GILCO was a corporation duly organized and existing under law and was the owner and employed the crew of the Ann Elizabeth, a river towboat.

4. The Ann Elizabeth is a steel-hulled, diesel-powered river towboat.

5. At all material times, Helena was a corporation duly organized and existing under law and was the owner of the Victor II, a river towboat.

[426]*4266. The Victor II is a steel-hulled, diesel-powered river towboat.

7. On May 11, 1981, the barge CGB 161 was in tow of the Ann Elizabeth. On that day, while the Ann Elizabeth and its tow were proceeding southbound downriver at Mile 257.7 on the upper Mississippi River, barge CGB 161 and its cargo were damaged when the barge was grounded on a dike. Barge CGB 161 was the lead starboard barge of the tow. The tow consisted of three strings with five loaded barges in each string.

8. The dike upon which barge CGB 161 was grounded was outside the navigable channel.

9. Consolidated sustained damages as a result of the grounding of barge CGB 161 in the amount of $160,438.39.

10. The cause of the grounding was hotly contested at trial. The Court was presented with two mutually exclusive versions of the events leading up to the grounding. GILCO presented evidence showing that as the Ann Elizabeth and tow approached the area of Mile 257.7, the Victor II and tow suddenly and unexpectedly appeared in the navigation channel immediately abreast of the rock dike, thus forcing the Ann Elizabeth and tow to leave the channel in order to avoid colliding with the northbound tow. Helena, however, presented evidence showing that the passing of the two tows occurred without incident, well upriver above the rock dike and that the subsequent grounding was due to either careless navigation or the unseaworthy condition of the Ann Elizabeth itself. Resolution of the causation issue thus clearly depends on the credibility of the witnesses.

11. After carefully considering all of the testimony and the evidence, and having observed the demeanor and manner of the witnesses themselves, the Court concludes that the weight of the more credible evidence establishes that the Victor II and tow were well upriver above the rock dike and in the area of the City of Hamburg at Mile 258.5 when the passing of the two tows was accomplished, that the passing occurred without incident and without embarrassing or interfering with the navigation of the downbound Ann Elizabeth, and that the location of the Victor II and tow did not cause or contribute to the subsequent grounding of the tow by the Ann Elizabeth. The Court further finds as a fact that the proximate cause of the grounding of barge CGB 161 was the negligent navigation of the Ann Elizabeth by her pilot.

12.In making this credibility choice, the Court notes several factors. Of primary importance is the extent to which each party’s version of the accident is supported or contradicted by other undisputed facts. The captain of the Ann Elizabeth, Captain Doucet, testified that the Victor II had, in two separate radio conversations prior to the grounding, given its position as being in the area of Sterling Island, at Mile 252, or some five miles below the rock dike; that, in reliance on that position report, the two vessels had agreed to meet and pass in an area approximately two and a half miles below the site of this grounding, and that he (Captain Doucet) did not become aware of the presence and location of the Victor II abreast of the rock dike until he was less than one-half mile above the dike. At that time, according to Captain Doucet, he brought his engines full astern and made every effort to stop his tow, but was unable to do so before colliding with the rock dike. Captain Doucet also testified that following the grounding, Captain Hamilton on the Victor II told him that the Victor II’s pilot was not “posted on” (i.e., not familiar with) the upper Mississippi River and that he has gotten confused about the Victor II’s location.

Captain Doucet’s testimony, however, is impeached on material points by many of the other witnesses (including the Ann Elizabeth’s pilot, Hasson, and the Ann Elizabeth’s mate, Mathews), and by the documentary evidence introduced at trial. GIL-CO Exhibit B, a copy of the official U. S. Corps of Engineers river navigation map, shows that the pilot on a southbound vessel would have a clear view of any vessels in the area of or below Mile 257.7 as soon as [427]*427the southbound vessel reached a point above Mile 260, or over two miles above the rock dike. This fact was supported by Pilot Hasson who testified that the navigable channel in and below the rock dike is, in fact, clearly visible to a southbound pilot at least two miles above it.

It is difficult for this Court to credit Captain Doucet’s testimony that he was unaware of the presence of the Victor II and tow until shortly before this grounding. Rather, the evidence demonstrates that had the Victor II and tow been in a bad location for passing, this would have been known to Captain Doucet some two miles above the site of the casualty, which, according to the testimony of Pilot Hasson, would have been sufficient to permit the Ann Elizabeth to stop and avoid the collision.

Captain Doucet’s credibility was also put into question by his admission that at the time of the accident, he was on probation with the Coast Guard with respect to his pilot’s license.

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548 F. Supp. 424, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-grain-barge-co-v-general-intermodal-logistics-corp-moed-1982.