Ford Motor Co. v. Bradley Transp. Co.

74 F. Supp. 460, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 3, 1947
DocketCivil Action No. 471
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 74 F. Supp. 460 (Ford Motor Co. v. Bradley Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford Motor Co. v. Bradley Transp. Co., 74 F. Supp. 460, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110 (E.D. Mich. 1947).

Opinion

PICARD, District Judge.

This is an action to recover damages admittedly incurred when a Hulett unloader on the Ford dock at the River Rouge plant was toppled over, allegedly due solely to negligence of defendant.

On the night of November 29 — 30, 1944, defendant’s steamer, the Carl D. Bradley, had finished unloading stone at the Ford dock which runs in a generally northerly and southerly direction at the Ford River Rouge plant and is located on the east side of a slip. The over-all length of the Bradley is 638 feet 9 inches, its moulded breadth 65 feet. The slip to the north is a dead end but at the south there is considerable open water and vessels unable to turn around in the slip usually back up or are pulled or pushed from the slip to the open water turning basin, turn and head out through River Rouge to the Great Lakes. This slip is 250 feet wide. The length of the dock from the inner bulkhead to the back turn is 2594 feet and on the night in question the bow of the Bradley was apparently a considerable distance south of the tool crib which is 1057 feet from the north end of the dock. Her stern was near or aft of two Hulett unloaders which had been placed on the dock about 75 to 150 feet apart. Some of plaintiff’s witnesses stated that they were at the tool crib and when the Bradley started backing out they walked south and towards the north Hulett.

The Bradley, a self-unloader, had completed unloading its stone about 11:15 p. m. and the accident happened at about 11:25 p. m. while the vessel was moving backwards, partly and intermittently under its own power and that of the tug Oregon that had been engaged for the purpose of maneuvering the Bradley back to the turning basin.

The Hulett is a large piece of equipment and spans or arches a macadam road, three sets of railroad tracks and a fence. [462]*462It stands 80 f ei t from ground to top, weighs 550 tons, and is between 27 and 28 feet wide. From the ground to the lower part of the Hulett, as it arches over the road and tracks, is 19 feet in height for a distance of about 70 feet in length. Near the edge of the dock are two rails closely spaced together on which the trucks of the westerly upright supporting legs of the Hulett rested and traveled. East of this is a railroad track, a macadam road 18 feet wide, another railroad track, a steel wire fence and then another track. The back end of the Huletts also ran on closely spaced tracks which were on the wall about 15 feet up above the level of the road and east of that wall was a trough and open area where the ore and coal were deposited and stored. The south Hulett, involved in the accident, and the north Hulett, were as nearly identical as engineering construction could make them.

The extreme west end extension of the Hulett was approximately 31 feet 6 inches above the surface of the dock and set back 15% inches from its edge. From the top surface of the dock to the water, on the night in question, was approximately 4 feet, and between the water and the dock top surface there was a wooden bumper consisting of a 12 inch by 12 inch timber which when new extended 8 inches beyond the concrete being imbedded 4 inches therein. The top surface of this bumper was 2 feet from the top surface of the dock. Admittedly this timber bumper had been worn by constant rubbing of the sides of vessels moored at the dock for unloading, although it was claimed by plaintiff that its maintenance crew had but recently replaced any timbers noticeably worn or broken.

Flood lights were located every 40 feet on the back wall, the efficacy of which is questioned by defendant. There were also flood lights on the ship.

The captain of the Bradley, one of the largest vessels on the Great Lakes, had been in that slip about ten times before and admittedly saw the Huletts when he came in that afternoon. He testified he could see their huge bulks looming up in the darkness when he was backing and being towed or pushed out by the small tug. A fairly strong or fresh wind (18 mph) was blowing from the west or northwest. The tug assisting the Bradley in backing down the slip was on the Bradley’s left or port bow facing south and was emitting quite heavy smoke spasmodically. The Bradley successfully maneuvered by the north Hulett, clearing it two or three feet and was moving at the rate of one or one and a half miles per hour when as the widest flare of the Bradley’s bow reached the vicinity of the south Hulett there were creaking, grinding, and groaning noises. Witnesses of plaintiff did not see the Bradley come in contact with the Hulett but testified that they did see the Hulett move and sway in a southerly direction along with the bow of the boat probably a distance of 8 or 10 feet. Then followed electric flashes from the hot rails at the back wall and east end of the Hulett and suddenly the Hulett, either because its progress was stopped by the coal unloader — another heavy piece of equipment left placed 8 or 10 feet south of the Hulett — or because its east end was wrenched off the rails, lost its support from its right leg and fell over in a northerly direction. The dock lights all went out and the top end of the Hulett after the crash extended about 8 feet out into the slip from the edge of the dock and what had been its northwest supporting leg was hanging over the dock’s edge. Pieces of the rails close to the slip on which the Hulett traveled were broken out for a distance of 6 or 7 feet and the rear supports of the Hulett were toppled off the back wall.

After the accident there were marks on the top beading at the forecastle bulwarks along the starboard and on the starboard side of the vessel Bradley, the latter undoubtedly indicating where the Hulett had struck while falling. This contact was of sufficient force to break through the steel plating forcing the Bradley away from the dock.

Just prior to the crash, however, a train consisting of coal tender, engine and caboose, ran north on the track located just west of the fence. According to plaintiff’s witnesses that train passed them when they were at least 50 feet north of the north Hulett because when the south Hulett fell [463]*463they claim they were at the stairs at the south side of the north Hulett. The train was going 10 to 15 miles per hour running backwards, with a headlight burning brightly on its north (back) end over the coal tender. The brakeman, Morgan, was standing on the tailboard on the north end of the tender and was facing north, the direction in which the train was backing. The headlight on the north end of the tender was similar in brightness to the regular locomotive headlight and according to witnesses the train proceeded north under the coal tower and the two Huletts.

While the Hulett was idle it was possible for a long cable to be so released that it would hang as far as the tracks and macadam road underneath, but all plaintiff witnesses deny this cable was hanging, and the brakeman, Morgan, said that if the cable had been hanging when he went under the Hulett he would have seen it. Neither he nor any member of the train crew felt any jerk and there was no evidence of damage to the train. The engineer and fireman admitted, however, that at the end of the run to the north where they stopped to fuel they got out and looked under the engine because somewhere along the road they had felt a roughness in the roadbed. They explained that they merely wanted to see if anything had happened to the engine. The engine itself was not in evidence, having been discarded or dismantled in May 1946, but a duplicate with measurements was available for the court’s inspection.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F. Supp. 460, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-motor-co-v-bradley-transp-co-mied-1947.