Dammers & Van Der Heide Shipping & Trading (Antilles) Inc. v. Steamship Joseph Lykes

300 F. Supp. 358, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10771
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 11, 1969
DocketNo. 8036, Civ. A. Nos. 66-289, 66-315, 66-316, 66-325, 66-327
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 300 F. Supp. 358 (Dammers & Van Der Heide Shipping & Trading (Antilles) Inc. v. Steamship Joseph Lykes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dammers & Van Der Heide Shipping & Trading (Antilles) Inc. v. Steamship Joseph Lykes, 300 F. Supp. 358, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10771 (E.D. La. 1969).

Opinion

CASSIBRY, District Judge:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1.

These consolidated actions arose out of Hurricane Betsy which struck the port of New Orleans on the night of September 9th and early morning of September 10, 1965. Owners of various moored vessels, which were damaged as a result of the breakaway of others, contend that the owners of the SS JOSEPH LYKES, SS WINGED ARROW and the United States Army barges were negligent in preparing for the hurricane, in mooring the vessels, and have not overcome the presumption of fault for striking stationary objects.

2.

The plaintiffs against Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Inc., and its SS JOSEPH LYKES are Central Gulf Steamship Corp., owner of the SS GREEN PORT, Dammers & Van der Heide Shipping & Trading (Antilles), Inc., owner of the MY SANTA MARIA, and Marine Tankers, Inc., owner of the motor tanker SAVFUEL. Claiming against the United States as owner of a number of Army barges are the owners of the GREEN PORT and SANTA MARIA. The owners of the GREEN PORT together with National Marine Service, Inc., also claimed against the government as owner of the SS WINGED ARROW. The SANTA MARIA’s action joined as co-defendant the aforementioned National Marine Service, Inc., as owner of various barges which also broke adrift, and National, in turn, cross-claimed for its own damages and contingent liability against Lykes and the government. Other claims were withdrawn at trial.

3.

The complaint of Central Gulf Steamship Corp. contends as well for high order salvage against the JOSEPH LYKES for $2 million and claims salvage against the government for the Army barges.

[360]*3604.

The many principal witnesses were heard in open court and several depositions were received in evidence. The Weather Bureau data and all meteorologic and hydrologic phenomenon regarding Betsy were stipulated as compiled in the Public Report, November, 1965, serial number 1794, United States Army, District of New Orleans, Corps of Engineers. The records of the Board of Commissioners, Port of New Orleans, were received as well as innumerable exhibits and photographs.

5.

On the early morning of September 8th, Betsy had lashed southern Florida with peak wind gusts up to 105 m. p. h., causing tidal flooding and considerable damage in the Miami area. Continuing westward, the hurricane swept over the Upper Keys that night when winds reached 140 m. p. h. As the hurricane entered the Gulf, her track was uncertain, moving generally WNW’ly. On the afternoon of September 8th, security preparations went forward in the port of New Orleans, the hurricane then being some 450 miles away.

6.

The JOSEPH LYKES, built in 1960, of the “Gulf Pride” class is 495' in length and 60' in beam. At the relevant times, in her lightened state, she drew 9' 08" forward and 19' 06" aft. The JOSEPH LYKES, moored starboard side to, bow upriver at the Andry Street Wharf, along the left descending side of the river, had been laid up at the repair facility of Dixie Machine Welding and Metal Works, Inc., out of commission, and without a crew. On August 23rd, major dismantling work began under the supervision of the owner’s port engineers. The vessel’s main engine and auxiliaries were disassembled. A Lykes’ chief engineer and first assistant engineer were aboard during the work days. The machinery was the subject of examination by the Coast Guard and the American Bureau of Shipping during the required quadrennial survey. The JOSEPH LYKES, a “dead ship”' was wholly without power, electricity being furnished a shoreline by Dixie. In connection with Lykes’ long-range maintenance program, the JOSEPH LYKES’ hull was being sand blasted. Her deck machinery, cargo winches, and anchor windlass had all been removed ashore for sand blasting. The unusable anchors led out just below the hawse pipes, stopped off by wire cable through the chain links and around bitts. Third Officer Eugene F. McCormick was aboard each working day beginning September 1st. On September 8th, her master, Captain John A. Madison, rejoined the ship.

7.

On the afternoon of September 8th, at the direction of the owner’s port captains, regular members of the Lykes shoregang reported to the JOSEPH LYKES and others in the fleet, to put out additional mooring lines. These men, based ashore, were sailors of years experience, certificated by the Coast Guard for the ratings of boatswain and able-bodied seamen. By 4 p. m., and when the shoregang departed, the JOSEPH LYKES had out five headlines, two forward breast lines, one forward spring line, four back spring lines, and four stern lines. They were 8-inch manila lines, some broken out of the gear locker and used for the first time.

8.

The WINGED ARROW, which was formerly named the GREEN BAY, is a 460 foot long vessel of the C2 class. She had once been owned by plaintiff-claimant Central Gulf but had since been traded to the government and then redelivered to Central Gulf in an arrangement whereby Central Gulf would act as a general agent for the government. On the morning of September 8, 1965 the vessel’s main turbines were being warmed up preparatory to departure from New Orleans on her first voyage as a general agency vessel with the name [361]*361WINGED ARROW. During the engine warm-up, difficulties were encountered that postponed the scheduled September 8 departure and required that the vessel remain at Charbonnet Street, where she had been for the past month, undergoing repairs and various inspections (one of which was an anchor chain inspection, wherein the American Bureau of Shipping certified the soundness of both anchor chains).

9.

On the morning of September 9th at 8 a. m., the Dixie Machine repair workers boarded the JOSEPH LYKES and resumed sand blasting the hull. That morning hurricane warnings were issued from the mouth of the Mississippi River westward to Galveston. In the afternoon, Betsy’s rate of advance up the Gulf had increased to 12 m. p. h. The storm was intensifying and its track changed from WNW’ly to NW’ly. Lykes again sent members of the shore-gang to the JOSEPH LYKES. Beginning at 1 p. m. they put out additional lines ultimately filling each of the ship’s bitts and bollards with the maximum load of 8-inch mooring lines. In all, counting bights and leads of the double lines, there was a total of 30 leads to the steel cleats and bollards on the Andry Street Wharf. In the rainy weather, the repair yard workers knocked off at 3:30 p. m., shortly after the shoregang left.

10.

The government barges involved in these cases are Army cargo barges which are shuttled back and forth across the Mississippi River by commercial tugs. While not in use the majority of these barges remain moored at the Navy Base moorings on the west bank of the river. They are towed across to the Army terminal on the east bank (at Poland St.) when and if they are needed in the handling of Army cargo. The Army’s entire cargo barge fleet at New Orleans on September 9, 1965 consisted of some 27 barges about 120 feet long by 30 or 40 feet wide and one barge (BCL-1104) about 220 feet long. Five of these cargo barges were permanently moored at the Army Terminal, while, as of September 9, 1965, the remaining 22 had been placed at the Navy’s West Bank Moorings.

11.

The National Marine Services barges were moored upriver of the Army barges on the west bank less than a mile away.

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300 F. Supp. 358, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dammers-van-der-heide-shipping-trading-antilles-inc-v-steamship-laed-1969.