Edmond Weil, Inc. v. S. S. West Kebar

53 F. Supp. 763, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 18, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 F. Supp. 763 (Edmond Weil, Inc. v. S. S. West Kebar) 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
Edmond Weil, Inc. v. S. S. West Kebar, 53 F. Supp. 763, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804 (S.D.N.Y. 1943).

Opinion

HULBERT, District Judge.

These are two suits in admiralty, tried together, to recover cargo damages.

Libels were filed against the S/S West Kebar, her engines, etc., American West African Line, Inc., as owner, and Barber Steamship lines, as operating agents.

The libel in the first suit was filed January 28th, 1941, by' Edmond Weil, Inc., and the subsequent libel was filed on January 14th, 1942, by Robert Schwarz Bristle Corp., Emil Buschoff & Co., Inc., N. Brezner & Co. Inc., William Hurwitz & Co., Ltd., S. B. Penick & Company, Gillespie & Company of New York, Inc., Cadbury Brothers, Ltd., Cadbury & Fry (ACCRA), Companie Francaise de L’Afrique Occidentel, John Holt & Company, Ltd., and John Menguissolou.

[764]*764The claimant-respondents contend that the damage was caused by perils of the sea, and claim exemption from liability under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act of 1936, 46 U.S.C.A. §§ 1300-1315.

Because of concessions of counsel, the court is concerned only with the responsibility for damage in the No. 4 and No. 5 ’tween decks, the No. 4 and No. 5 lower holds, the port bunker and the shelter or bridge deck spaces.

Findings of Fact

1. That libelants had, and have, the legal status set out in the respective libels; that the shipments therein described were laden in apparent good order and condition on board said vessel, a common carrier of merchandise by water, for hire, and all, or some part, of each shipment thus described (except piassava, Schwarz libel) sustained damage as the result of the entry of sea water during the homeward voyage, and the piassava sustained some damage through contact with sea water and/or palm oil; that the libelants were the respective owners of the cargoes described in said libels and were and are the proper parties to institute and maintain these suits.

2. The West Kebar was a well-deck ship of the three-island type having five holds; Nos. 1 and 2 on the forward deck; No. 3 amidship (shelter or bridge deck); and Nos. 4 and 5 on the after deck.

3. She was designed under the guidance of what was then the Emergency Fleet Corporation of the United States Shipping Board and built at Long Beach, California, in 1919-1920, under the supervision of the American Bureau of Shipping (hereinafter designated as ABS). Such supervision signifies that all materials of construction for hull, machinery and equipment were tested in the presence of surveyors of the ABS who were present during construction, supervised the work, and upon completion, their report was confirmed by the ABS who issued a certificate classifying the West Kebar “A-l” (first class). As the result of inspection at stated intervals thereafter, such classification was continued by the ABS until and including the commencement of the voyage involved in this suit.

4. The West Kebar was equipped as a coal burner, afterwards converted to oil. Some pipes came out through the engine room bulkhead and ran fore and aft on the after well deck on the port side of the coamings of Nos. 4 and 5 hatches to the poop deck; they were protected with 1/2 inch guard plates with the edges turned down. There were also pipes which led through the forward bulkhead on the bridge space into the open well deck.

5. There was a wiring system installed to furnish current for the navigation lights. Wires leading up from the dynamo or switch board in the engine room to the ’tween decks at the most convenient level’ under the deck corresponding to the circuit involved and then through the deck in conduit pipes, or “kick tubes” located near-shrouds and the mast. This wiring system was discontinued early in the ship’s, life and each of the conduit pipes or “kick tubes” fitted with a screw cap, long before the vessel came under the ownership of the-respondent. The vessel was equipped with' goose-neck ventilators or cowls to supply the interior of the ship with fresh air, and’ led, among other places, into the shelter deck and the port bunker space.

6. The West Kebar sailed from New York on October 11, 1940, with a miscellaneous cargo. She discharged and loaded cargo at various West African ports and departed from Freetown on her westbound voyage December 26, 1940 and encountered heavy weather on January llr 12, 13 and part of the 14th, 1941.

7. Due diligence was used to make the West Kebar structurally sound when she broke ground at New York, and the storm which she encountered January 11th to 14th, attained catastrophic proportions and sea water entered the shelter deck or bridge deck space, the port coal bunker, the No. 4 and No. 5 ’tween decks and the No. 4 and No. 5 lower holds, as a result of the storm, and damaged some cargo in all of said compartments.

8. On the after deck, the vessel carried 200 empty ammonia cylinders weighing about 200 pounds each, and a considerable number of mahogany curls — the root part of the tree — irregular in shape and of varying weights, from 200 to 1,000 pounds each. This cargo was properly stowed. It broke loose during the storm and snapped off several of the conduit pipes or “kick tubes” permitting water to enter the No. 4 and No. 5 ’tween decks, some of which found its way into the No. 4 lower hold and, to a less degree, into the No. 5 lower hold. Sea water entered the shelter deck and bridge space through openings resulting from structural damage and from the shelter [765]*765deck, by reason of “old age of the leaky cement blocks in the frames”, and probable working of the ship in the storm, into the port bunker.

9. There was a door with a 10-inch sill in the bulkhead, between the No. 4 ’tween deck and the port bunker, so equipped that it could be dogged and made water tight. It was closed when the ship sailed from New York but was left open out of Lagos (December 9) or Cape Palmas (December 19) and so remained until arrival in New York on the return voyage, and water could and did flow over that sill from the No. 4 ’tween deck into the port bunker.

10. At Lobito, on November 27-29, 1940, 1,100 tons of zinc ore, in bulk, was taken aboard; approximately one-half of this cargo was stowed in lower No. 2, and the other one-half in lower No. 4, holds. The ore was a fine powder and very heavy. The stowage in lower No. 4 was in the rear, on the bottom on both sides of the shaft alley from the wall to the wings or skin of the ship. At the forward or open end a wooden bulkhead 8 ft. high was constructed against which bundles of matte were stowed. This matte consisted of copper sheeting bent over to make a bale about 3 ft. wide and 3% ft. long, and there were two bales placed one on top of the other. Between the skin of the ship and the limber boards nearest thereto, there were cement blocks between all the frames, and before the zinc ore was stowed, the cracks and holes in the limber boards and the cracks in the floor boards “if they were big cracks,” were sealed up to stop any ore from getting into the bilges. The ore in lower hold No. 2 was similarly stowed.

11. The scuppers in the ’tween decks and holds were tested once between Duala and Luanda and again between Matadi and Lagos on the return voyage. The carpenter poured about 9 quarts of water in each scupper and the Chief Officer heard it gurgle and concluded the drainage system was clear. Before leaving the African Coast a test was also made of the scuppers leading from the shelter deck, but no test was made of the port bunker drain.

12. A list to port during the storm prompted an investigation to ascertain its cause.

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53 F. Supp. 763, 1943 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmond-weil-inc-v-s-s-west-kebar-nysd-1943.