Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. v. Flota Mercante Del Estado

102 F. Supp. 861, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4811
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 12, 1952
DocketNo. 820
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 F. Supp. 861 (Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. v. Flota Mercante Del Estado) 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
Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. v. Flota Mercante Del Estado, 102 F. Supp. 861, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4811 (E.D. La. 1952).

Opinion

WRIGHT, District Judge.

Libelant is a cargo underwriter and assignee of all right, title and interest in the claim of La Prensa against the respondent, Flota Mercante Del Estado, an agency of the government of Argentina. The claim in question arises from damage to a shipment of 1464 rolls of newsprint shipped by La Prensa on board the steamship Rio Gualeguay which is owned and operated by respondent. The damage was caused by fire and respondent has pleaded in bar the fire statute which provides: “No owner of any vessel shall be liable to answer for or make good to any person any loss or damage, which may happen to any merchandise whatsoever, which shall be shipped, taken in, or put on board any such vessel, by reason or by means of any fire happening to or on board the vessel, unless such fire is caused by the design or neglect of such owner.” 46 U.S.C.A. § 182.

On December 2, 1943 Montmorency Paper 'Company delivered to the steamship Rio Gualeguay at the Port of New Orleans 1464 rolls of newsprint consigned to the order of the shipper, La Prensa, for delivery to Buenos Aires, Argentina. On December 3, at about 12:15 A. M. after the rolls of newsprint had been loaded with other general cargo in hold No. 2 of the Rio Gualeguay, smoke was observed coming from that hold. Upon examination a fire was discovered, which fire together with efforts to extinguish it, caused the damage and destruction of 1048 of the 1464 rolls of newsprint.

The steamship Rio Gualeguay is a single deck vessel with a raised forecastle, bridge deck and poop. She has a net tonnage of 6173, her dimensions being 391 feet in length, 49 feet in breadth with a hold depth of 27 feet. She has two cargo holds forward. Hold No.2 is divided into two compartments by a wooden bulkhead run athwartships. The forward compartment was used for cargo and the after compartment or cross bunker was used to carry a reserve supply of coal. She was built in Montreal, Canada, in 1918 and was given an A-l classification in Lloyds. She was acquired by the respondent in August 1941 from the Italian government. She was last surveyed by Lloyds in Genoa in 1939 and would have been up for her next survey in February 1943. However, in June, 1942 at her owner’s request she was withdrawn from class.

At all pertinent times the Rio Gualeguay was moored at the 7th Street wharf in the hai'bor of New Oxdeans. At approximately 4:30 on the afternoon of December 2, 1943 the hatch serving No. 2 hold was closed and battened down after the hold had been loaded with general cargo consisting of cigarettes, tobacco, tin plate, machinery, [863]*863barrel staves, bricks, veneer and the shipment of 1464 rolls of newsprint. She was scheduled to depart the Port of New Orleans on the morning of December 3rd. The fire at 12:15 A. M. December 3rd intervened and delayed her departure.

Immediately on discovery of the fire, the Fire Department for the City of New Orleans was called as was the harbor fire tug Deluge. Both the Fire Department and the Deluge arrived promptly but were not allowed to open No. 2 hatch immediately on arrival. The ship’s officers had decided to attempt to smother the fire by use of the ship’s steam smothering system in order to prevent excessive water damage to the remaining cargo-. After a delay variously estimated at from ten to thirty minutes the attempt to smother the fire with the steam smothering system was abandoned. The hatch was opened and both the Fire Department and the Deluge began to bring large amounts o-f water to bear on the fire which appeared to be primarily in the tobacco loaded in the after upper part of No. 2 hold, starboard side. Both the Fire Department and the Deluge continued to pump water into the No.-2 hold at the rate of nine tons per minute until 2:30 A.M. when it was decided, because of concern for the stability of the vessel by reason o-f the excessive amount of water then in No-. 2 hold, to take the vessel down river to- Chalmette where she could be beached. The vessel was removed from the wharf by the Deluge and an assisting tug and beached at Chalmette where the Deluge again turned her hoses into No. 2 hold until the water in the hold was almost level with the- deck.

Libelant realizing its burden under the fire statute has undertaken to- prove that the fire was caused by the design or neglect of the owner of the Rio Gualeguay. It predicates its proof on three propositions. 1. The fire originated through spontaneous combustion of the coal carried in the cross bunker of the Rio Gualeguay. 2. This spontaneous combustion fire was caused by the improper construction and design of this cross bunker and particularly the wooden bulkhead which separated the cross bunker from No. 2 cargo hold. 3. The Rio Gualeguay was unseaworthy by reason of the defective construction and design of her steam smothering system and by reason of improper drainage in her No. 2 hold caused by the construction of the wooden bulkhead. Libelant contends that if the evidence establishes these three propositions it has successfully undertaken its burden of proving that the fire was caused by the design or neglect of the owner of the vessel. In this contention libelant is correct. Unfortunately, however, none of the three propositions has been proved.

Much of the record is taken up with a description of the wooden bulkhead separating cargo hold No. 2 from the cross bunker. This wooden bulkhead was constructed of 3" athwartship deals o-r p-lanking fitted in between the flanges of I-beams on either side of the ship and H beams near the ship’s center. 'In other words, at the place where the wooden bulkhead was fitted there were four vertical steel stanchions running from the deckhead to the tank top. The I-beams or stanchions were on either side of the ship. The H beams were near the center of the ship approximately fifteen feet apart. •These beams gave the bulkhead its primary support. In addition there were 8x8 vertical supports fitted in pairs on either side of the bulkhead and bolted through, together with three 11x11 athwartship strengthening pieces. The face of the bulkhead on the cargo side was entirely covered with prepared paper. This bulkhead separated the cargo in No. 2 hold from some 600' tons of coal in the cross bunker. The coal was piled approximately 43 feet high, 27 feet from the tank top to the main deck, through an open hatch in the main deck up 11 feet to the bridge deck, through an -open hatch on the bridge deck up again approximately 5 feet on the open deck.

Libelant’s point with reference to the alleged unseaworthiness of the wooden bulkhead seems to- be that a wooden bulkhead should not be used in connection with the stowage of coal and if one is used it should be airtight. The evidence shows, however, that it is quite customary in coal burning vessels of this type to create a reserve bunker in the No. 2 cargo- hold by the [864]*864use of a wooden bulkhead. Consequently it cannot be said that the use of the wooden bulkhead as such is improper; otherwise the hundreds of vessels so fitted would have to be declared unseaworthy. As to the bulkhead being airtight, it is doubtful that a wooden bulkhead can be made airtight. The use of the prepared paper on the cargo side of the bulkhead made it dust tight and as airtight as reasonably required. The evidence shows that this bulkhead was suited for the purpose for which it was designed and that it complied with the requirements of ordinary prudence. It was of the type in common use for bunkers and it cannot be said that because the owner of the Rio Gualeguay allowed a bulkhead of this kind to be used in its vessel that owner is negligent.

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102 F. Supp. 861, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-phenix-fire-ins-v-flota-mercante-del-estado-laed-1952.