Gartland Steamship Co. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.

165 F. Supp. 769, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 5, 1958
DocketNo. 3602
StatusPublished

This text of 165 F. Supp. 769 (Gartland Steamship Co. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gartland Steamship Co. v. Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co., 165 F. Supp. 769, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886 (N.D. Ohio 1958).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Judge.

About noon on July 5, 1955 the Tug McGuire, 77 feet in length, 23 feet in width, with a light draft of about 9.9 feet was moving up the Cuyahoga River astern of the Sullivan Brothers, a bulk steel freighter 437 feet in length, 50 feet beam and an average draft of 21.5 feet, loaded with 7,400 tons of iron ore. The libellant alleges that the Tug, without giving the required signal and securing response, undertook to pass the Sullivan Brothers at Center Street Bridge as they were passing through the draw 113 feet wide; that in some way the Tug appeared to get out of control, fetching up hard against the channel piling and bouncing off, sheering forcibly into the starboard side of the Sullivan Brothers some 90 to 100 feet forward of her stern, or between the 12th and 13th hatches, damaging two of her plates and an inside supporting frame, and perhaps other damage. The respondent concedes the attempted passing without signal or response but claims that the passing was made at the B. & O. Railroad Bridge with 161 feet draw, five or six hundred feet down the River from the Center Street Bridge, and, while it admits collision with the Sullivan Brothers, denies that it was with any appreciable force or resulting damage.

While there were many details and distances related in evidence as to the relative speeds, movements and positions of the Sullivan Brothers and the Tug McGuire as the events progressed and culminated in the contact, it is not thought necessary for me to review them, or to undertake to analyze or reconcile conflicting testimony on the issues of fact. It will be sufficient to state that I have given careful consideration to them, satisfactory to myself, in resolving the issues and to set down my findings and conclusions.

Respondent seeks to exonerate its Tug McGuire in whole or in part from the consequences of its initial fault in giving no passing signal to the libellant’s vessel the Sullivan Brothers. It asserts that had the Sullivan Brothers cooperated, as it should have, despite the violation of the passing rule, the McGuire could have negotiated the passing in safety; that such failure so to cooperate, and by giving an unnecessary wheel at a time when the McGuire was known to be passing, was the direct or contributing cause of the collision.

I am unable to find that the Sullivan Brothers in any way contributed to the collision, or that it failed to take any measures in its navigation that it should have taken to avoid the consequences of the McGuire’s self-imposed predicament. In the exercise of good and safe navigation the McGuire must be charged with knowledge of the perils of propeller currents such as vessels of the Sullivan Brothers’ size would produce in a narrow and shallow channel. Following the stern for so long, the McGuire must have known that the Sullivan Brothers was working its engines, not only to back and [771]*771fill around Superior Bend, but to maintain its speed and steerageway.

The Sullivan Brothers was not required to assume that the McGuire was intending to pass her in the B. & O. draw, or that of the Center Street. In such failure upon its part, the Tug had no right to assume that the Sullivan Brothers would not kick her stern one way or the other in keeping straight with its necessary course up the River.

The rule clearly gives the vessel ahead the right to determine whether an overtaking vessel shall pass; and the overtaking vessel must keep out of the way. This would be more especially forceful of application where no signals were given or exchanged.

The tow-line Tug Nebraska was not pulling the Sullivan Brothers but was assisting in keeping it in the channel and on the required course up the River.

While I have great respect for Captain Murray’s experience and knowledge of navigation in the rivers, I do not share his opinion based upon the assumed facts, that the Tug McGuire must have come up against the ship’s starboard side, as he thought, with light contact and little force.

The McGuire’s navigation was faulty from the failure to give the passing signal and to secure a response from the Sullivan Brothers. What happened afterward was, in my opinion, bad judgment and unsafe navigation in electing to pass the Sullivan Brothers under the circumstances, and this would be so whether it was at the B. & O., or the Center Street draw. This view was fortified by Captain Roche’s testimony of his navigation of the McGuire. As I said in another place, he was charged with the knowledge of currents involved in such situation and which he, in his testimony, gave as the cause of his losing control of the Tug and coming into collision with the Sullivan Brothers. This was a condition that was well known to the Tug McGuire, and quite obvious. I think neither draw was satisfactory for a passing without a signal and favorable response from the Sullivan Bros. The B. & O. draw was the less desirable of the two because of the currents to be anticipated and which were obvious by reason of the working of the propellers of a large ship like the Sullivan Brothers, in backing and filling to make the turn in the Superior Bend for the straight away up the River.

While there is sharp conflict between the vessels as to the place of passing, I find it more likely that the McGuire attempted the passing at the Center Street draw, which was well into the straight away. At the B. & O. Bridge there was more water, but the Sullivan Brothers would hardly have finished her backing and filling in the Superior Bend, creating more propeller current in lining up for the B. & O. draw, than she would have been using her wheel at the Center Street Bridge. Conditions and effects of currents generated by the propeller of the Sullivan Brothers in backing and filling at the Superior Bend below the B. & O. draw must be charged to have been within the knowledge of, and understood by, the Tug McGuire in undertaking to pass the Sullivan Brothers if that were where it occurred.

Attempting a passing of a ship the size of the Sullivan Brothers at either draw without a signal and a favorable response would constitute unsafe navigation.

Considering the evidence as to the movements and conduct involved in the navigation of the McGuire preceding and leading up to the disasterous consequences it seems to me to be more consistent with a finding that its unannounced passing of the Sullivan Brothers was undertaken in the narrower draw at the Center Street Bridge (113 feet) than through the wider draw of the B. & O. Railroad Bridge (161 feet).

There is the final sharp issue between the parties as to the damage directly caused by the collision of the McGuire with the starboard side of the Sullivan Brothers. The libellant’s evidence was to the effect that the damage was found to two plates, characterized as a two and a [772]*772half inch indentation over a space of about three feet in diameter and that an inner frame or support structure was bent or buckled. These conditions were identified at the surveys in Buffalo and Milwaukee as to the point where the contact took place. While the respondent’s Superintendent of Repairs Rezi, at Buffalo, inspected and substantially confirmed the damage alleged to have been caused by the contact, the respondent contends that the extensive damage could not have been inflicted by the McGuire. Superintendent Rezi testified that as a practical matter, under the assumed facts as to speed, control, angle and point of contact, no damage such as found by him upon inspection at Buffalo could have resulted from the striking by the McGuire.

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Bluebook (online)
165 F. Supp. 769, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gartland-steamship-co-v-great-lakes-dredge-dock-co-ohnd-1958.