Cuyamel Fruit Co. v. Nedland

19 F.2d 489, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2280, 1927 A.M.C. 956
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 20, 1927
DocketNo. 4953
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 489 (Cuyamel Fruit Co. v. Nedland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuyamel Fruit Co. v. Nedland, 19 F.2d 489, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2280, 1927 A.M.C. 956 (5th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

About 2:30 o’clock in the morning of April 13, 1922, the steamship Kewanee, owned by the United States of America, and then loaded to capacity, anchored in the Mississippi river below Algiers Point, about 400 feet from the west bank, opposite New Orleans, being, when she straightened out on her anchor, about 75 to 100 feet upstream from the steamship Omoa, which had no cargo aboard, and had been anchored where she then was since February 14, 1922. About 3 o’clock that morning another vessel, the Chicago Maru, came up and anchored between 200 and 250 feet outside the Kewanee, the stem of the Chicago Mam when she was anchored being about amidship of the Kewanee. A few minutes after the Chicago Mara anchored, the Kewanee sheered, dragged her anchor, and drifted until she collided with the Omoa, breaking loose the latter’s anchor chain and setting her adrift, with the result that the Omoa collided with the steamship Stavangaren, which was anchored a short distance downstream, and after such collision continued to drift downstream until she was taken in tow by tugs and brought back up the river to a wharf at New Orleans.

The masj:er of the Stavangaren libeled the Omoa for recovery of damages to the former. The owner of the Omoa answered the libel, denying liability, and impleaded the United States of America as owner of the Kewanee. The impleading petition charged that the drifting of the Omoa and damage thereto, and the Omoa’s collision with the Stavan-garen and the resulting damage to the last-named vessel, were due wholly to alleged faults chargeable against the Kewanee, and prayed an award in favor of the owner of the Omoa against the owner of the Kewanee for damages sustained by the Omoa, and that, in the event of the court decreeing anything to be due to the original libelant by the Omoa or her owner, the same amount be decreed in favor of the owner of the Omoa against the United States. The owner of the Omoa, by its answer to the original libel, -put in issue the allegations as to damages sustained by the Stavangaren, and the owner [491]*491of the Kewanee by its answer to the im-pleading petition put in issue the allegations as to damages sustained by' the Omoa and the Stavangaren.

After evidence for all parties had been adduced before a commissioner and submitted to the presiding judge, he delivered an opinion on October 1, 1924, and a decree signed by him was filed on the same date. That opinion expressed the conclusions that the Omoa was chargeable with fault in being anchored with only one anchor when the river was at flood stage, and at a point where all vessels arriving at night were required to stop and remain until daylight, and in being left at night with no one aboard, except two Jamaican negroes, who were incapable of handling her when necessity arose; that the Kewanee was at fault in putting out only one anchor, when the high stage of the river, the swift current, and the local restrictions on her movements showed that additional precautions were required; and that the Stavangaren should recover her damages against the Omoa, and that those claimed by the Omoa of the Kewanee, or the United States, should be denied. The decree mentioned, after a recital of the submission of the cause, continued and concluded as follows:

“Whereupon, and on consideration thereof and for the reasons assigned in the written opinion of the court on file, the court finds that in this case the Stavangaren should recover her damages against the Omoa and those claimed by the latter of the Kewanee, or the United States, should be denied, and it is so ordered.
“It is further ordered that this matter be now referred to Reginald H. Carter, Esq., as commissioner, who is directed to ascertain the amount of damages suffered by the Stavangaren and to report the same back to this court in due season, all according to law and the usual forms and practices' of this court.”

Following the making of a report by the commissioner named in the above-mentioned decree, the court, on August 18, 1926, rendered a decree which awarded in favor of the original libelant and against the Omoa and her sureties damages, which included an award for demurrage for 9% 'days on the basis of $5,000 per month, less expenses. The owner of the Omoa appealed from that decree on the day it was rendered. In behalf of the appellant it was contended that the Omoa was not chargeable with fault; that the Kewanee was solely at fault, and liable for the damages both to the Stavangaren and the Omoa; that, if the Omoa was chargeable with fault, the Kewanee being also chargeable with fault which was a contributing cause of the injury to the Stavangaren, the damages should be divided between the Kewanee and the Omoa; and that the Stav-angaren’s claim for demurrage should be rejected.

The owner of the Kewanee moved to dismiss the appeal. In its behalf it was contended that the above-mentioned decree of July 1,1924, was final so far as the case concerned the Kewanee or her owner, and that the right to review the court’s ruling on the question of the asserted liability of the Kewanee was lost by the failure to appeal from that decree within the time allowed. The language of that decree shows that it was not final, but interlocutory only. Obviously it did not dispose of the whole ease, or even all the issues between the owner of the Omoa and the owner of the Kewanee. It did not dispose of the issues as to damages alleged to have been sustained by the Omoa and the Stavangaren, no award of damages being made against the Omoa; the matter of making such an award being left to be determined after the production of additional evidence and the making of a report by the commissioner named. It did not adjudicate on the claim asserted by the owner of the Omoa that the Kewanee or her owner was liable for damages sustained by the Stavangaren, and did not order the dismissal of the suit so far as it involved claims against the Kewanee. Plainly that decree did not so dispose of the whole case as to be subject to be appealed from. Rexford v. Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co., 228 U. S. 339, 31 S. Ct. 469, 55 L. Ed. 346. The motion to dismiss the appeal is overruled.

We concur in the court’s conclusions that both the Kewanee and the Omoa were at fault. At the time of the occurrences in question the Mississippi river was at flood stage, being unusually high, with strong currents, which were sometimes shifted by movements of vessels, resulting in eddies and “boils,” making the handling and control of vessels, including those anchored, exceptionally difficult. There were many vessels in the vicinity of the Kewanee when she anchored; her master stating that there were eight or nine astern of her at that time. The waters in that locality were liable to be additionally disturbed at any time during the night by [492]*492the movement of vessels seeking places of anchorage until after daylight. The circumstances attending the anchoring of the Ke-wanee, loaded to capacity as she was, called for special precautions to avoid endangering herself and other vessels in her vicinity.

The use of only one anchor to hold her, when it was practicable, by the use of an additional anchor, more effectively to insure the accomplishment of that result, indicated a lack of due appreciation of the situation dealt with and of the perils involved in a failure to use effective means of keeping her at a safe distance from other vessels.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 489, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2280, 1927 A.M.C. 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuyamel-fruit-co-v-nedland-ca5-1927.