Daisy Philippine Underwear Co. v. United States Steel Products Co.

11 F. Supp. 175, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1551
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 16, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 F. Supp. 175 (Daisy Philippine Underwear Co. v. United States Steel Products Co.) 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
Daisy Philippine Underwear Co. v. United States Steel Products Co., 11 F. Supp. 175, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1551 (S.D.N.Y. 1935).

Opinion

GODDARD, District Judge.

These suits resulted from the stranding on April 13, 1926, at 11 p. m. of the steamship Steel Scientist on a small rocky island known as Farallón Sucio located off the Eastern Coast of Panama, some 24 miles from the Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal.

Included are fifteen libels filed by the various owners of cargo shipped on the Steel Scientist to recover for the loss of and damage to their cargo, and one libel filed by the United States Steel Products Company against a number of underwrit[176]*176ers who executed general average guaranties to recover contributions in general average alleged to be due from cargo. All cases were consolidated for trial which took place in June, 1934, and the cases finally submitted on December 6, 1934. By agreement of the parties and with the approval of the court it was stipulated that the libelants should not be required to offer proof of compliance with the bill of lading notice of claim provision, where that provision is applicable, prior to the determination of the merits of the litigation.

The Steel Scientist is a steel vessel built in 1921 by the Federal Shipbuilding Company in Kearney, N. J., and was owned' by the United States Steel Products Company. Her general dimensions are about 441 feet over all, 56 feet beam, 38 feet in depth, with a loaded mean draft of about 26 feet, and was operated by her owner as a general cargo carrier trading from the Atlantic Coast to the Far East.

On February 26, 1926, the Steel Scientist returned from a six months’ voyage around the world, having sailed from New York through the Panama Canal to various Far East ports and returning through the Suez Canal. After discharging her cargo, she was dry docked and overhauled in preparation for this voyage to the Far East, which began in Philadelphia on March 10, 1926, and terminated at Philadelphia on November 27, 1926, during which she met with the disaster. After loading cargo at Philadelphia, she sailed from there on March 25 for Boston, Mass., where she arrived on March 27, and after taking on more cargo, left on March 29 for New York, arriving there the same day. Her loading was completed on April 6, and at 7:24 á. m. she sailed from New York for the Far East by way of Crooked Island Passage, Bahama Islands, and the Panama Canal. Her draft was then 25 feet, 10 inches. On April 10, at 9:25 a. m. the San Salvador Lighthouse was passed abeam. Continuing through the Crooked Island Passage she was off Navassa Island Light at 6:23 p. m. the following day—April 11. Her observed position at noon on April 13, as shown by her log book, was latitude 11° 26’ north and longitude 78° 47’ west. There was a straight course from this position toward the entrance to the Panama Canal of about 207° true, and the entries in her log book show that this course was held up to 10 p. m. At 8 p. m. Third Officer Walton relieved Chief Officer Guilfoyle on the bridge. At this time the Steel Scientist was on a course 207° true and the weather clear with a smooth sea. At 8:25 p. m. Isla Grande Light (Manzanillo Light) was sighted. At 10 p. m., according to the testimony of Third Officer Walton, a red flashing light that turned out to be Farallón Sucio was picked up, but this is denied by Capt. Busch and the log book contains no mention of this light being sighted at this time. However, at 10 o’clock the course of the Steel Scientist was changed to 220° true, which would set her track further away from Isla Grande Light, and it is difficult to explain this change of course, except upon the theory that the light on Farallón Sücio was sighted at that time or shortly before. At 10:35 the Isla Grande Light was abeam, and according to Walton’s observation was then distant 7.4 miles and bearing 130° true from the vessel. Capt. Busch’s testimony is that at this time he went below and that ten minutes later a red light was reported to him and he returned to the bridge, and when he reached there the red light was pointed out to him; “it was just a flash when I first saw it”; that following his sighting of this red light (Farallón Sucio) he went into the chartroom, looked at the chart, and there was no red light on the chart between Isla Grande and' the breakwater; that he did not look at the “Light List” because “it could just have been the red light of a steamer”; that he went to the bridge and Walton told him he thought it was a “red flash light” and he ordered Walton to take a bearing of it, and returned to the chartroom; that on obtaining the bearing from Walton he laid it out on the chart, assuming that the red flashing light was that on the West Breakwater, and found that this set the vessel too far out.

Capt. Busch’s testimony confirms a statement in his report to the local inspectors that the light on Farallón Sucio was first taken for the light on the breakwater. But he testified that he was convinced after laying down on the chart the two bearings, (a) the flashing red light, and (b) the Isla Grande Light, that this red light could not be the light on the breakwater; that this vessel would be too far out of range to see the light on the breakwater; also that he knew that this light* was “one flash,” and that the light on the breakwater was a “double flash.” Nevertheless, he [177]*177“told him (the man at the wheel) to haul in toward the light to get a better view of it.” He also said that he knew Farallón Sucio was over in the direction in which he headed. The engines were continued at full speed ahead which was about 11 knots. This change of course placed the vessel on a course of 150°, an alteration of 67° or six points (220° minus 153°). Capt. Busch says that he again returned to the chartroom and shortly afterwards Walton reported land ahead, whereupon he ordered the wheel hard aport and the engines full speed astern; very soon thereafter the vessel struck. The log book contains this entry: “10:35 P. M. Manzanillo Lt. abeam distant 7.4 miles. Saw flashing light on port bow bearing 178° taken for Colon Breakwater and steered for it.”

Capt. Busch’s report to the local inspectors includes the following: “10:35 p. m. Passed Isla Grande Light bearing 130 true, estimated distance of 7.4 miles, course 220 true. Soon after, saw a red flashing light on the port bow at times disappearing. This light first taken for the light on Colon Breakwater, and ship hauled in for it.”

Capt. Busch testified that when he saw this flashing red light and did not know what it was, he looked at the chart and at the “American Light List” and saw no mention of this light. He said that it was his practice to use the American Light List instead of the British light List, but at no time before the stranding did he look at the Supplement to the American Light List and did not examine the “Sailing Directions” (H. O. Pilot Book), nor did he examine the British Light Book with its Supplement, all of which were in the rack near the chart table, and which he admits would have informed him of the new light on Farallón Sucio.

Walton’s testimony is that about 10:56 he asked Capt. Busch to come out on the bridge and as they stood on the bridge looking ahead, “ * * * I says ‘There are rocks ahead, Captain’, and he stood there and didn’t say anything, and finally I said ‘Hadn’t you better stop her’, and I just reached over and grabbed the telegraph and he said ‘Yes, full astern’. I give it full astern, was around 10:58, and he said ‘Hard aport’, and just at that time she got swinging good, he said ‘Hard astarboard,’ he put her hard astarboard, and just as the clock struck 11, why she struck on the rocks.”

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Supp. 175, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daisy-philippine-underwear-co-v-united-states-steel-products-co-nysd-1935.