Ernie Miller

71 F. Supp. 806, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 24, 1947
DocketNo. 541
StatusPublished

This text of 71 F. Supp. 806 (Ernie Miller) 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
Ernie Miller, 71 F. Supp. 806, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599 (E.D. La. 1947).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

Ernest S. Miller, as owner of the Diesel Tug Ernie Miller, prays for exoneration from liability for any loss, damage, injury or destruction, resulting from a collision which occurred on January 18, 1941, in the Intracoastal Waterway (Lake Charles Ship Canal) at or near Ellender’s Ferry, Louisiana, between the tug Ernie Miller and the 5.5. Sinaloa; or if exoneration be denied, then he prays for limitation of petitioner’s liability to the value of the tug Ernie Miller and her pending freight.

Subsequent to the collision, Captain William A. D’Entremont, the master of the 5.5. Sinaloa, filed a libel in the United States district court for the Eastern district of Louisiana, Baton Rouge division, against Ernest S. Miller, a resident of Plaquemine in the parish of Iberville and the tug Ernie Miller, then at the port of Plaquemine within the Baton Rouge division. The tug Ernie Miller was seized under process issued.

Thereupon, Ernest S. Miller filed his petition for exoneration from or limitation of liability in the United States district court for the Eastern district of Louisiana, Baton Rouge division. Later, on motion of all parties, the case was transferred to the New Orleans division, where it is number 541 of the docket.

On the filing of the petition, the court appointed J. Clyde Dean of Plaquemine, trustee, to whom Ernest S. Miller delivered the tug Ernie Miller, transferred his interest in the tug and in her pending freight, and, also his claim against the colliding steamship, the Sinaloa, for the damages to the Ernie Miller coming out of the collision.

On order of court and after due advertisement, the tug Ernie Miller was sold at public auction at Plaquemine, Louisiana, to the highest bidder for the sum of $5,-700; the sale was confirmed by the court. The amount of the pending freight transferred by Ernest S. Miller to the trustee [808]*808was $176.41 and accordingly, the trustee had in his possession the sum of $5,878.41. Out of this sum, pursuant to orders of court, the trustee paid certain costs aggregating $97,42 and his fee of $250 and deposited the balance $5,530.99 in the registry.

Claims were filed in this proceeding by Captain William A. D’Entremont on his own behalf and as bailee on behalf of the owner, officers and crew of the S.S: Sinaloa, and on behalf of the cargo laden on the S.S. Sinaloa and all persons interested , therein in the sum of some $85,000. There have also been a number of cargo claims filed for various amounts by the owners of the cargo, laden on the steamship at the time of the collision and alleged to have been damaged. All of the claims have been objected to on behalf of Ernest S. Miller, and various claimants have objected to the claims of other claimants. Answers were also filed on behalf of D’Entremont and on behalf of various cargo claimants. Proof of claims was suspended by order of court and the matter is presently on the petition of Ernest S. Miller and on the answers filed on behalf of D’Entremont and the various cargo claimants.

Which of the two craft is at fault? At the first reading of the record we were baffled for the testimony of the crew of the tug was irreconcilable with the testimony of the crew of the Sinaloa.

Counsel on both sides frankly state that the case for decision depends upon which side is favored by the possibilities.

Evidence is to be characterized in the whole and then studied and classified in detail. In the whole, the witnesses on the tug are all uneducated, of not much experience (except Miller, the owner — but he was asleep until just previous to the collision), and seemed to know so little, or failed repeatedly to answer the simplest of questions, and most of which to remain unanswered is inexcusable.

On the other hand, as a whole, the witnesses on the Sinaloa are qualified, licensed for their respective positions, educated academically and trained technically for their special work. They answered all questions promptly and intelligently and in the instances of n_o response it was because of the want of opportunity to have observed, and consequently to have known.

The strong, electrically-powered searchlight of the, tug was- thrown — and twice— on the Sinaloa, preventing the pilot, navigators and watcher from evading the collision. We believe that the danger signal by the whistle’s successive blasts to have been given by the Sinaloa. It is patent that the Sinaloa gave first the single 'blast, replied to by the tug, indicating a port to port passage. The fact that the collision occurred means that'there must have been trouble,- — ■ then why not the blast of alarm? Why not a complaint as against the searchlight play on- the Sinaloa?

If we were to believe the evidence of the witnesses on the tug-boat, that the prow of the tug was within 10 feet of its right bank, and that there was no disarray in its towing arrangement, there would have been no accident and the Sinaloa would have come through and not been hit. We cannot believe that the Sinaloa was so much out of its way as to have crossed the middle line so far that its prow struck the port corner of the first barge.

In the overall examination, we should also consider that the bank of the canal which the Sinaloa had at its right, was well delimited and that the ship had the outer bend of the turn, whilst on the other hand, the right bank of the tug-boat was not delimited — for the canal on that side spread out of its regular deepened banks over a relatively wide area. So, it was an expanse of water to the right of the tug-boat. There is nothing in the record which shows any buoys, lights or posts to mark the bank of the submerged, deep part of the channel.

On the one hand, ive must note that the S. S. Sinaloa was well designed and a seaworthy craft and readily maneuverable. On the other hand, we must note that this tug with its two barges was 230 feet long. The barges were of steel and contained the great mass of 16,000 barrels of oil. The tug was being navigated in a very difficult situation, with all factors increasing against it, as previously explained. It was only 42 feet long, with a beam of only 13 feet and a draft of only 3.2 feet, equipped with a Diesel engine of only 150 horsepower. It lost control entirely, especially when, by [809]*809the clear preponderance of the evidence, its tow line broke. Or, it is well within the probabilities that its tow line was actually 160 feet long all the time and not 40 feet long as testified to by the tug men.

The tug-boat, drawing with it these two heavily-laden barges, and with an engine of only 150 horsepower, in attempting, to make the turn to the right, bringing into play the tangential force of this great mass, even though the acceleration factor was only two or three miles, was unable to hug the channel on its right-hand side. It and the barges went, in part if not in whole, across the middle of this slim 250-foot channel, and thus became an obstruction to the Sinaloa’s safe passage on its right-hand side.

We believe the evidence of the experienced expert who says that the tug was not sufficiently strong to cope with the situation that existed.

Moreover, the slow tide, moving against the tug and its barges, at the rate of about two miles per hour, was another factor forcing the barges into the path of the Sinaloa. This is an additional factor to cause those in charge of the tug to be unable to control the direction of the tug and its heavily-laden barges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 F. Supp. 806, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernie-miller-laed-1947.