Esso Standard Oil Company, as Owner of the Esso Barge No. 21, Libelant-Cross-Appellant v. The President Garfield and American President Lines, Ltd., Claimant-Respondent-Appellant. American President Lines, Ltd., Cross-Libelant-Appellant v. The Esso New Hampshire and Esso Barge No. 21 and Esso Barge No. 17, and Esso Standard Oil Company, Cross-Respondent-Cross-Appellant

279 F.2d 540, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4417
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1960
Docket26143_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 279 F.2d 540 (Esso Standard Oil Company, as Owner of the Esso Barge No. 21, Libelant-Cross-Appellant v. The President Garfield and American President Lines, Ltd., Claimant-Respondent-Appellant. American President Lines, Ltd., Cross-Libelant-Appellant v. The Esso New Hampshire and Esso Barge No. 21 and Esso Barge No. 17, and Esso Standard Oil Company, Cross-Respondent-Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esso Standard Oil Company, as Owner of the Esso Barge No. 21, Libelant-Cross-Appellant v. The President Garfield and American President Lines, Ltd., Claimant-Respondent-Appellant. American President Lines, Ltd., Cross-Libelant-Appellant v. The Esso New Hampshire and Esso Barge No. 21 and Esso Barge No. 17, and Esso Standard Oil Company, Cross-Respondent-Cross-Appellant, 279 F.2d 540, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4417 (2d Cir. 1960).

Opinion

279 F.2d 540

ESSO STANDARD OIL COMPANY, as Owner of THE ESSO BARGE NO.
21, Libelant-Cross-Appellant,
v.
THE PRESIDENT GARFIELD and American President Lines, Ltd.,
Claimant-Respondent-Appellant.
AMERICAN PRESIDENT LINES, LTD., Cross-Libelant-Appellant,
v.
THE ESSO NEW HAMPSHIRE and Esso Barge No. 21 and ESSO BARGE
NO. 17, and Esso Standard Oil Company,
Cross-Respondent-Cross-Appellant.

Nos. 327, 328, Docket 26142, 26143.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued May 6, 1960.
Decided June 1, 1960.

Stephen J. Buckley, New York City (Raymond T. Greene, and Kirlin, Campbell & Keating, New York City on the brief), for appellee and cross-appellant, Esso Standard Oil Company.

William Warner, New York Ciry (William G. Symmers, Peter J. Malloy, Jr., and Symmers, Fish & Warner, New York City, on the brief), for appellant and cross-appellee, American President Lines, Ltd.

Before LUMBARD, Chief Judge, MEDINA, Circuit Judge, and JAMESON, District Judge.*

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

These are cross-appeals from a decree holding both vessels at fault in two consolidated cases arising out of a collision in the North River, between the New York and New Jersey shores, shortly after half past six in the morning of August 22, 1956. Visibility was from one to three miles, despite a slight haze, the wind was light from the Northeast and there was almost no current as it was at the end of an ebb tide. The running lights on both vessels had not yet been switched off.

The steam tug Esso New Hampshire had two barges in tow: the Esso No. 21 made fast to her starbord and the Esso No. 17 made fast to port. Both the tug and her tow were owned by Esso Standard Oil Company. Each barge carried from 6000 to 7000 barrels of fuel oil and the destination of this flotilla was the north side of Pier No. 3 where a United Fruit Company steamer was to be bunkered with fuel oil from Esso No. 21 at 8 A.M. The tug was 98 feet long, 27 feet abeam and had a 13 foot draft. The two barges, each 176 feet in length, with a beam of 38 feet were lashed to the tug in such fashion that each barge extended about 100 feet forward of the stem of the tug. As the flotilla headed up the North River past the Battery, it reached Pier No. 3 about 6:15 A.M. and found the United Fruit Company steamer had not yet berthed. So the tug stopped about 50 feet from the river end of the pier, heading upriver paralled to the line of piers, and the master decided to cross the river and return after leaving one of the barges at a Pennsylvania Railroad berth on the New Jersey side of the river. Somewhere in the neighborhood of Pier 7 the tug turned hard left at half speed and started across; but very shortly the master observed two steamers, one inbound and one outbound obstructing his course and he stopped again and drifted. It is impossible with any accuracy to fix the then position of the tug and tow with relation to the Manhattan piers but they were out in midstream at least several hundred feet. After the two steamers passed there was other traffic, including two Central R.R. of New Jersey ferryboats passing in opposite directions, one bound for New York and the other returning to New Jresey. In addition the President Garfield, a Victory ship owned by American President Lines, Ltd., with which Esso No. 21 later collided, was slowly coming upstream favoring the New York side of the river and she was followed at a distance of a half mile or so by another steamer on the same course.

The effect of the wind and the ebb current soon caused the tug and tow to swing to port and there came a time when the master of the tug ordered half speed ahead and steered hard left in an endeavor to return to the Manhattan side of the river. This speed was maintained until just before the collision, when the master ordered full speed ahead in an attempt to get across the bow of the President Garfield. This maneuver almost but not quite succeeded, as the point of contact was only 25 or 30 feet from the stern of the barge Esso No. 21, lashed to the starboard side of the tug.

What took place in the few minutes immediately prior to the collision seems to us to be overwhelmingly established. We shall presently describe the facts in some detail. We think the collision was caused solely by the faulty navigation of both vessels in the brief interval of time during which the facts we are about to describe occurred.

By way of preliminary, and when the vessels were separated by over half a mile, the Sandy Hook pilot and the master of the President Garfield saw the 'broad red light' of the tug and 'surmised' she was on her way across the river. Acting on this assumption the President Garfield, without giving any signal of her intention to do so, changed her course slightly to starboard to give the tug and two clearance. As the findings below are not as clear as they might be, we cannot tell whether the tug and tow were at this time on a steady course or whether they were drifting along and running off their way. In the view we take of the case, however, subsequent events alone caused the collision and we shall assume, arguendo, that the master of the tug was contemplating an attempt to return to the Manhattan shore, and that the tug and tow were drifting and running off their way, with the engines stopped. Moreover, if, as we hold, the collision was caused solely by the faulty navigation of both vessels at a later time in the sequence of events, the change of course by the President Garfield was not a contributing cause of the collision, and we have no occasion to decide whether or not this change of course constituted a fault.

It was evidently at about the time the President Garfield steadied back on her course that the master of the tug decided to return to the Manhattan side of the river. In any event, as we interpret the findings, Judge Knox concluded as matter of fact that the tug and tow had crossed the bow of the President Garfield from starboard to port. We arrive at the same conclusion, and perceive no basis for rejecting this finding as clearly erroneous.

It was under these circumstances and with a distance of no more than half a mile between the converging vessels that the master of the tug ordered half speed ahead with his wheel hard left and gave a signal of two blasts. This was the first of two two-blast signals given by the tug, and we shall discuss the other one in connection with what occurred immediately before the collision. There is not the slightest doubt that this first two-blast signal was addressed to the President Garfield and it was given several minutes before the collision. Receiving no reply to his signal the master of the tug continued at half speed ahead and his wheel hard left on a semi-circular course back across the bow of the President Garfield from port to starboard, having already crossed her bow in the opposite direction. Even though the President Garfield was proceeding upstream slowly, at perhaps three or four knots over the ground,1

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279 F.2d 540, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esso-standard-oil-company-as-owner-of-the-esso-barge-no-21-ca2-1960.