Cornec v. Baltimore & O. R.

27 F.2d 960, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1408
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 960 (Cornec v. Baltimore & O. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cornec v. Baltimore & O. R., 27 F.2d 960, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1408 (D. Md. 1928).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

The question in this case is as to the liability for an explosion which occurred on the French barque Richelieu while lying at the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company’s coal piers, Curtis Bay, Baltimore, on the late [963]*963afternoon of January 4,1927, while she was being loaded with a cargo of pitch. As a result of the explosion a fire was propagated throughout the ’tween-decks and lower hold of the vessel, resulting in the death of seven stevedores, engaged at the time in trimming the cargo, and in very severe injury to a number of other stevedores and members of the crew. The vessel herself was damaged to a great extent and sank at the pier. A large part of the eargo was destroyed or damaged. The vessel was being loaded by electrical trimmers owned and operated by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, which operation was supplemented by hand trimming performed by the stevedores, who were employed by and under the direct supervision and control of the railroad company. As a result of the disaster, the owners of the Richelieu libeled the railroad company for the damage to the vessel. Three of the vessel’s crew and eight stevedores, who were injured, and the representatives of four of the stevedores, who were killed, also brought libels against the railroad and the vessel and cargo as well.

The railroad company filed a cross-libel against the vessel and cargo, at the same time impleading the F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Company, manufacturers and shippers of the cargo, as respondent, under the fifty-sixth admiralty rule, claiming that, whatever liability might exist for the disaster, the latter company, and not the railroad company, was responsible therefor. Lastly, the owners of the Greek steamship Emanuel Stavroudis intervened against the railroad company, the Lewis Company, and the ship and cargo, claiming reimbursement for salvage of the Emanuel Stavroudis, allowed by this court, and occasioned by the fact that this vessel was lying at the same pier in close proximity to the Richelieu, at the time of the disaster, and was towed to safety. See The Emanuel Stavroudis (D. C.) 23 F.(2d) 214. All of the suits (except that for salvage reimbursement) were consolidated and heard together.

The interrogatories and answers thereto are many and multifarious. The trial covered 29 days. Testimony of some 100 witnesses was taken, covering over 6,000 pages. In addition, there are depositions of 38 French sailors and others, who were aboard the Richelieu at the time of the explosion, and many photographs, drawings, and other exhibits. A model of the pier and trimmers, electrically operated, showing the Richelieu in the course of being loaded, was exhibited in the courtroom during the trial. At the conclusion of the testimony, court and counsel visited the pier, where a demonstration was given by the railroad officials of one of the trimmers loading coal into an open barge. Certain tests were also made, as to arcing and sparking of one of the trimmers, with samples of coal and also of pitch taken from the Richelieu.

The managing owner of the Richelieu at the time was the Soeiété des Armateurs Franjáis, the French republic having an interest in the vessel as a training ship of the Soeiété des Navires Écoles Fransaises. For this reason there were a number of cadets aboard. By the terms of the charter party, the vessel was under contract to carry a cargo of pitch, consisting of not less than 3,900 nor more than 4,400'tons, to Lorient, France, where it was to he used as a binder in the manufacture of briquettes. The manufacturers and sellers of the pitch, the F. J. Lewis Manufacturing Company, had a separate contract, with which the vessel had no connection, with the buyers, Robinson, Butler; Hemingway & Co., of New York, for Walter H. Brown & Co., London.

Summarized, the basis of the claim on behalf of the vessel and the various other libelants is that the railroad company was negligent in the means which it employed and the manner in which it loaded the cargo, or, more specifically, that the railroad company (a) undertook as stevedores to load the pitch safely into the vessel; (b) that in the loading it reduced much of the pitch to dust, rendering it highly inflammable and explosive; (c) that the reducing of the pitch to dust was by means of electrical trimmers, which, by reason of their imperfect design and run-down cofidition, produced ares and sparks; (d) that either these arcs and sparks, or the open lights or torches which the railroad company’s stevedores used in the dust area, or both, were the igniting agency for the explosion.

The railroad company’s reply is that all that was required of it was ordinary care in the handling of the cargo, and that it exercised such care; that, as a, result of this disaster, pitch is now known to be highly inflammable, much more so than coal, but that such was not previously known to be true; and that, therefore, conceding that both the trimmers and the open lamps are dangerous instrumentalities to use with pitch, and conceding, further, that the open lamps were the igniting agency in the explosion, nevertheless, the railroad company is without liability, because the danger was neither known to it at the time, nor to the lay or [964]*964scientific mind; and therefore that, if there was any negligence in relation to the disaster, sneh negligence was that of the vessel, or of the shippers of the cargo, or both — of the former on the ground that the vessel was not properly constructed, fitted, and supervised by her master at the time of loading; and of the latter, because the pitch, when delivered, was inherently dangerous and vicious, and contrary to the railroad company's contract. The Lewis Company, on its part, denied that the product which it delivered was not pursuant- to contract, or that it was inherently vicious and dangerous, and that whatever liability might exist for the disaster was the liability of the railroad company because of improper handling of the cargo.

When libelants and the railroad company had concluded their testimony, the court found that the evidence was legally insufficient, for reasons hereinafter fully discussed, to warrant a finding that the Lewis Company was in any way responsible for the disaster, and so dismissed that company.

At the outset, a clear understanding of the exact nature of the cargo which was being loaded into the Richelieu at the time of the disaster is essential, as is also a clear understanding of the type of the vessel herself and the method employed in receiving and loading the cargo.

First, as to the cargo: This was coal tar fuel pitch, which is a by-product of coal. Crude coal tar, the raw material from which pitch is made, is produced by the carbonization or destructive distillation of high volatile coal, either in by-product coke ovens or in gas retorts. It appears that about 80 per cent, of the coal tar made in the United States is produced in by-product coke ovens, the principal products of these ovens being metallurgical coke; the tar being "the nonacqueous portion of the vapors that are distilled off the coal. The crude tar thus obtained is then placed in large storage tanks, where the free water separates and is drawn off. From these storage tanks the tar is pumped to the. still, where the oils are condensed and taken off; the first of these being known as light oils, containing benzol and other solvents of that series.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 960, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornec-v-baltimore-o-r-mdd-1928.