Drake v. Inland Waterways Corp.

111 F. Supp. 891, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3048
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 7, 1953
DocketNo. 8878(2)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 F. Supp. 891 (Drake v. Inland Waterways Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. Inland Waterways Corp., 111 F. Supp. 891, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3048 (E.D. Mo. 1953).

Opinion

HULEN, District Judge.

Libelant sues in admiralty1 for loss of a wooden wharf, barge and equipment on the barge,- charging respondents with negligence in operating a towboat, so as to create an unusual swell, causing a gasoline [892]*892barge to collide with the wharf barge to which it was moored. The collision resulted in damage to the wharf barge causing it to sink. The negligence charged is excessive speed. The issues are factual: (1) Were respondents negligent? (2) Was libelant’s wharf barge seaworthy? (3) Was the steel barge properly' moored to the wharf barge ?

Facts

Libelant owned a wooden wharf barge.. On the night of August 10, 1951, it was moored at the foot of Market Street, in the St. Louis Harbor of the Mississippi River. Libelant also owned a steel gasoline barge. It was moored on the river side, to the wooden barge. Respondent Steamer Tunis was proceeding downstream, with one barge in tow. As the Tunis passed the steel barge the swell made by the Tunis caused the steel barge of libelant to strike the wooden wharf barge, causing the timbers on the river side of the wooden barge to be caved in below the water line. The wooden barge sank.

Libelant testified he was sitting in the cabin on the steel barge, the night was dark, that he saw Tunis approaching and that- its speed was 15 to 20 miles an hour. Witness Koch testified that he was in a bunk in a cabin cruiser moored some distance upstream and the swell from the Tunis rocked the cruiser so violently as to throw him out of the bunk; that'he saw the Tunis moving away and estimated its speed at ten or twelve miles an hour. He attempted to follow the Tunis on the bank. Another witness testified that the swell from the Tunis caused steel landing plates on a landing barge to move up and down with some violence. The pilot of the Tunis testified that he was moving at reduced speed made necessary by the rope lashing with which the barge and tow were made fast. He put the speed of the Tunis at eight or nine miles an hour.

If respondents were operating their vessel at an excessive rate of speed — the only act of negligence charged — proof must be found in circumstantial evidence. There is no direct evidence of excessive speed. Libelant and the witness Koch saw the vessel in the dark. Weight of their testimony on speed is not substantial when compared with the testimony of the pilot of respondent boat. There is testimony that casts some doubt on whether libelant was telling the truth when he testified he saw respondent boat before the swell reached the barge he was on, having given a statement to the effect that he was in his bunk on the barge when the swell reached the barge. But whether the Court takes the rate of speed estimated by libelant of twenty miles an hour, or the rate given by the pilot of eight or nine miles an hour, there is no direct evidence on which the Court can find either speed was negligence for operating respondent boat under the circumstances shown. There is no substantial evidence that such speeds are of themselves negligent acts for operating a boat such as the Tunis, in the Mississippi River, in the channel of the St. Louis Harbor. There are no speed rules for the St. Louis Harbor. Respondent’s pilot said it was his usual speed under the circumstances of the tow in the St. Louis Harbor. There is no evidence to the contrary.

We pass to the circumstantial evidence. The experience of Koch and another person on his boat being thrown from their beds and Koch going, outside and seéing the Tunis pass, and trying to follow it on the bank, is evidence that an unusual swell struck the Koch cruiser. From that we are asked to presume it was due to the speed of the Tunis because the Tunis was passing. The landing plates on the steel barge were caused to rise and fall when the Tunis passed, and from this we are asked to presume it was due to the speed of the Tunis, because the Tunis .was passing. Libelant’s steel barge was thrown against the wooden landing barge causing the side of the wooden barge to “cave in.” This happened at the time the Tunis was passing and we are asked to assume from this that the Tunis was proceeding at an excessive speed.

There is no evidence of any other source of the swell than respondent boat. Swells can be caused by speed. The presumption follows,' the speed of respondent boat caused an unusual swell to strike libelant’s barge.

[893]*893Legal Conclusions ,«

The parties are in agreement that if libelant’s wharf barge was seaworthy, and the steel gasoline barge properly moored to it, and the wharf barge sank as the result of an unusual swell from the respondent vessel in passing, the presumption is that respondents were at fault in operation of the Tunis at an excessive speed so as to cause an unusual swell.' Damage to the wharf barge standing alone under the circumstances does not establish respondents’ liability. Libelant has the burden of proof on the issue of seaworthiness and proper mooring.

Seaworthiness of the wooden wharf barge is a serious question in this case. Libelant had purchased the wooden barge three to five years before its sinking for $25. Libelant’s explanation of the purchase price was that the owner was running up a watchman’s bill. We are not convinced that was the reason. The barge was 80 feet long, 20 feet wide and 6 feet deep. Libelant claimed it had a salvage value for lumber of $500. If the timbers were not decayed and rotten it could have been salvaged for more than $25 when libelant purchased it. At the time of purchase libelant beached the barge for caulking the seams and also added some new timber to the deck. How old the barge was when purchased is not shown. The damage to the wooden barge that caused its sinking was not from a blunt or pointed object making a hole in the side, but water came in at the seams and the side was “caved” or “crushed” in. Libelant argues that because the wooden barge served its .purpose for use as a wharf that that establishes seaworthiness. We cannot . agree. It was while serving that purpose that it sank. If this barge was seaworthy libelant could and should have produced evidence of the condition of the side timbers. For a wooden barge there must come a time when it could not longer be considered seaworthy. The record leaves us in doubt as to whether the wooden barge was seaworthy at the time it sank. Libelant has failed to show by substantial evidence that the barge was seaworthy. On the record there is a serious question whether the advanced age of the barge and its unseaworthiness was the ■ cause of its sinking. The evidence is that the swell caused the other vessels to move up and down. In the case of libelant’s barge, we are called onto find‘the swell was of such force as to throw the steel barge against the wooden barge with such force as to crush the-sides of the wooden barge. To find the swell was of such force and size as to result in such damage, in this way, to a seaworthy vessel, calls for gross speculation. There is no evidence whatsoever of the size of the swell that must have been spent substantially by the time it struck the shore.

Libelant testified as to how the steel barge was moored to the wooden barge, but whether the lines were a proper size, proper number, and properly placed, with proper slack to protect a barge under ordinary conditions, is a matter of speculation. Because the two barges had been moored together “about four years” the Court is asked to presume that they were properly moored.

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Bluebook (online)
111 F. Supp. 891, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-inland-waterways-corp-moed-1953.