FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND DIRECTION FOR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT
GIGNOUX, District Judge.
On July 23, 1965, the F/Y SNOOPY, while dragging for scallops off the coast of North Carolina, caught a torpedo in her port drag, exploded and sank. As a result of the explosion arid sinking, eight members of her crew, including the captain, died, and the four surviving crew members sustained personal injuries. Having failed in prior litigation to establish that the sinking resulted from any fault of the SNOOPY or its owner, see Petition of Trawler Snoopy, Inc., 268 F.Supp. 951 (D.Me.1967), the personal representatives of the deceased crew members and the surviving crew members bring the present actions against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq. (1964) to recover damages for the deaths and personal injuries resulting from the sinking. With the agreement of the parties, the actions have been consolidated for all purposes, including trial, Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(a), and a separate trial has been had on the issues of liability. Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(b). The Court has heard the evidence and considered the written and oral arguments of counsel on the issues of liability, and now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law and directs entry of its judgment as follows:
At all times material hereto, Trawler Snoopy, Inc., a Maine corporation, was the owner and operator of the F/V SNOOPY, a wooden dragger, whose home port was Portland, Maine. The captain of the SNOOPY was Edward F. [212]*212Doody, of Scarborough, Maine, a fishing vessel captain of many years experience.
Some time during May 1965 the SNOOPY left Portland for Cape May, New Jersey and the scallop fishing grounds off the coast of North Carolina. On July 19, 1965, the SNOOPY departed Cape May on her fourth trip to the scallop beds located approximately 45 miles east of Currituck Beach, North Carolina. On July 23, 1965, at approximately 9:15 p. m., at latitude 36°20' north, longitude 74°55' west, while the SNOOPY was in the company of about 40 other scallopers, she commenced to pull in her catch. The starboard drag had already been hauled back and was on the starboard rail, but when an attempt was made to bring the port drag aboard, it was found that a torpedo was hanging vertically by its propellor or propellor guard on either the sweep chain or a tickler on the exterior of the chain bag. The device was an expended German G7e torpedo which had been lying on the ocean bottom since World War II. It weighed 3,540 pounds and was 23 feet long and 21 inches in diameter. Its weight was such as to cause the cable to slip on the winch drum.
Captain Doody was on watch in the wheelhouse, and under his direction, an initial effort was made to lift the drag high enough to bring it aboard. The crew was unable to accomplish this because the winch could not lift the torpedo high enough to clear the rail. An attempt was then made to dislodge the torpedo by securing a line from the torpedo to a gallows stay overhead and then dropping the drag out from under it, but this effort also proved to be unsuccessful. After the failure of these attempts, Captain Doody again directed the crew to try to bring the torpedo aboard. As this was being done, the torpedo swung away from the vessel as the SNOOPY rolled in a swell, swung back, struck the rail, and exploded. The efforts to free the torpedo lasted about 15 minutes.
In order to recover in these actions, plaintiffs must prove that the sinking of the SNOOPY was caused by some negligent or otherwise wrongful act or omission for which the United States Government is legally responsible. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2674 (1964); Feres v. United States, 340 U.S. 135, 71 S.Ct. 153, 95 L.Ed. 152 (1950). Upon the entire record in this ease, the Court is compelled to conclude that plaintiffs have failed to sustain their burden in this respect.
In their effort to establish Governmental liability for this unfortunate accident, plaintiffs’ sole contention is that the sinking of the SNOOPY was caused by the negligence of the Government in providing fishermen with erroneous instructions as to the method of handling explosive objects caught in their nets and in offering a monetary reward for their return.1 In support of their position, plaintiffs point to: (1) a “Warning to Fishermen,” set out in the margin,2 [213]*213which was contained in the printed Atlantic Notice to Mariners, prepared jointly by the U. S. Coast Guard and the U. S. Naval Oceanographic Office and published in January 1965; and (2) a “Reward Notice,” also set out in the margin,3 which was issued by the U. S. Naval Underwater Ordnance Station, Newport, Rhode Island, and was reprinted in the mimeographed Local Notice to Mariners issued on July 29, 1964 by the Commander, First Coast Guard District, Boston, Massachusetts. Plaintiffs attribute negligence to the Government in recommending to fishermen, in the Warning, that explosive objects recovered in their nets be brought aboard their vessels, a highly dangerous and unsafe procedure, and in encouraging fishermen, in the Reward Notice, to attempt to salvage such explosive devices by the offer of a reward for their recovery.4
The present record, however, is devoid of any persuasive evidence that Captain Doody had ever seen either the Warning or the Reward Notice.5 More importantly, plaintiffs have presented no credible evidence that even if Captain Doody had been aware of these notices, they in any way influenced his judgment or actions in attempting to deal with the problem with which he was confronted when he discovered the torpedo in his net. To the contrary, the only reasonable conclusion from the present record is that Captain Doody, faced with a wholly unprecedented emergency,6 apprehensive of the danger to his vessel and his crew,7 [214]*214but also reluctant to jettison a drag which was worth approximately $2,000,8 exercised his best judgment in extraordinarily trying circumstances in an effort to free the torpedo without loss of the net. The only evidence offered by plaintiffs that Captain Doody was in any way motivated by a possible reward was the testimony of French and Martin, the only surviving crew members to testify at the trial, and of Captain Manley, Captain Doody’s brother-in-law. French and Martin testified that Captain Doody had participated in several “casual conversations” in the SNOOPY’s galley, during which rewards for the recovery of explosive objects were discussed. Captain Manley stated that he and Captain Doody had had similar discussions in Captain Doody’s home on a number of occasions prior to the sinking. The Court is singularly unimpressed by this testimony.
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FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND DIRECTION FOR ENTRY OF JUDGMENT
GIGNOUX, District Judge.
On July 23, 1965, the F/Y SNOOPY, while dragging for scallops off the coast of North Carolina, caught a torpedo in her port drag, exploded and sank. As a result of the explosion arid sinking, eight members of her crew, including the captain, died, and the four surviving crew members sustained personal injuries. Having failed in prior litigation to establish that the sinking resulted from any fault of the SNOOPY or its owner, see Petition of Trawler Snoopy, Inc., 268 F.Supp. 951 (D.Me.1967), the personal representatives of the deceased crew members and the surviving crew members bring the present actions against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq. (1964) to recover damages for the deaths and personal injuries resulting from the sinking. With the agreement of the parties, the actions have been consolidated for all purposes, including trial, Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(a), and a separate trial has been had on the issues of liability. Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(b). The Court has heard the evidence and considered the written and oral arguments of counsel on the issues of liability, and now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law and directs entry of its judgment as follows:
At all times material hereto, Trawler Snoopy, Inc., a Maine corporation, was the owner and operator of the F/V SNOOPY, a wooden dragger, whose home port was Portland, Maine. The captain of the SNOOPY was Edward F. [212]*212Doody, of Scarborough, Maine, a fishing vessel captain of many years experience.
Some time during May 1965 the SNOOPY left Portland for Cape May, New Jersey and the scallop fishing grounds off the coast of North Carolina. On July 19, 1965, the SNOOPY departed Cape May on her fourth trip to the scallop beds located approximately 45 miles east of Currituck Beach, North Carolina. On July 23, 1965, at approximately 9:15 p. m., at latitude 36°20' north, longitude 74°55' west, while the SNOOPY was in the company of about 40 other scallopers, she commenced to pull in her catch. The starboard drag had already been hauled back and was on the starboard rail, but when an attempt was made to bring the port drag aboard, it was found that a torpedo was hanging vertically by its propellor or propellor guard on either the sweep chain or a tickler on the exterior of the chain bag. The device was an expended German G7e torpedo which had been lying on the ocean bottom since World War II. It weighed 3,540 pounds and was 23 feet long and 21 inches in diameter. Its weight was such as to cause the cable to slip on the winch drum.
Captain Doody was on watch in the wheelhouse, and under his direction, an initial effort was made to lift the drag high enough to bring it aboard. The crew was unable to accomplish this because the winch could not lift the torpedo high enough to clear the rail. An attempt was then made to dislodge the torpedo by securing a line from the torpedo to a gallows stay overhead and then dropping the drag out from under it, but this effort also proved to be unsuccessful. After the failure of these attempts, Captain Doody again directed the crew to try to bring the torpedo aboard. As this was being done, the torpedo swung away from the vessel as the SNOOPY rolled in a swell, swung back, struck the rail, and exploded. The efforts to free the torpedo lasted about 15 minutes.
In order to recover in these actions, plaintiffs must prove that the sinking of the SNOOPY was caused by some negligent or otherwise wrongful act or omission for which the United States Government is legally responsible. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2674 (1964); Feres v. United States, 340 U.S. 135, 71 S.Ct. 153, 95 L.Ed. 152 (1950). Upon the entire record in this ease, the Court is compelled to conclude that plaintiffs have failed to sustain their burden in this respect.
In their effort to establish Governmental liability for this unfortunate accident, plaintiffs’ sole contention is that the sinking of the SNOOPY was caused by the negligence of the Government in providing fishermen with erroneous instructions as to the method of handling explosive objects caught in their nets and in offering a monetary reward for their return.1 In support of their position, plaintiffs point to: (1) a “Warning to Fishermen,” set out in the margin,2 [213]*213which was contained in the printed Atlantic Notice to Mariners, prepared jointly by the U. S. Coast Guard and the U. S. Naval Oceanographic Office and published in January 1965; and (2) a “Reward Notice,” also set out in the margin,3 which was issued by the U. S. Naval Underwater Ordnance Station, Newport, Rhode Island, and was reprinted in the mimeographed Local Notice to Mariners issued on July 29, 1964 by the Commander, First Coast Guard District, Boston, Massachusetts. Plaintiffs attribute negligence to the Government in recommending to fishermen, in the Warning, that explosive objects recovered in their nets be brought aboard their vessels, a highly dangerous and unsafe procedure, and in encouraging fishermen, in the Reward Notice, to attempt to salvage such explosive devices by the offer of a reward for their recovery.4
The present record, however, is devoid of any persuasive evidence that Captain Doody had ever seen either the Warning or the Reward Notice.5 More importantly, plaintiffs have presented no credible evidence that even if Captain Doody had been aware of these notices, they in any way influenced his judgment or actions in attempting to deal with the problem with which he was confronted when he discovered the torpedo in his net. To the contrary, the only reasonable conclusion from the present record is that Captain Doody, faced with a wholly unprecedented emergency,6 apprehensive of the danger to his vessel and his crew,7 [214]*214but also reluctant to jettison a drag which was worth approximately $2,000,8 exercised his best judgment in extraordinarily trying circumstances in an effort to free the torpedo without loss of the net. The only evidence offered by plaintiffs that Captain Doody was in any way motivated by a possible reward was the testimony of French and Martin, the only surviving crew members to testify at the trial, and of Captain Manley, Captain Doody’s brother-in-law. French and Martin testified that Captain Doody had participated in several “casual conversations” in the SNOOPY’s galley, during which rewards for the recovery of explosive objects were discussed. Captain Manley stated that he and Captain Doody had had similar discussions in Captain Doody’s home on a number of occasions prior to the sinking. The Court is singularly unimpressed by this testimony. Apart from the obvious interest of the two crew members, as plaintiffs, in the outcome of these actions, and Captain Manley’s understandably sympathetic attitude, it is highly significant that there was no suggestion that Captain Doody might have been motivated by a possible reward, either when the four surviving crew members were interviewed by naval investigators immediately following the accident, or when they testified two years later in the prior litigation involving their claims against the vessel and its owner. See Petition of Trawler Snoopy, Inc., supra. In fact, so far as the present record discloses, the first mention of the Reward Notice was in a September 1967 interview with plaintiffs’ counsel during the course of his preparation for the trial of the present actions.
Plaintiffs have failed to show any action by Captain Doody in reliance either upon the “Warning to Fishermen” contained in the Atlantic Notice to Mariners or upon the “Reward Notice” issued by the Naval Underwater Ordnance Station at Newport, Rhode Island. Accordingly, the Court holds that plaintiffs have failed to sustain their burden of proving that the sinking of the SNOOPY resulted from any fault of the United States Government. Judgment will be entered for the defendant against the plaintiffs dismissing the actions, with prejudice and without costs.
It is so ordered.