Holloway Concrete Products Company, Inc. v. Beltz-Beatty, Inc.

293 F.2d 474, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1961
Docket18414
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 293 F.2d 474 (Holloway Concrete Products Company, Inc. v. Beltz-Beatty, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holloway Concrete Products Company, Inc. v. Beltz-Beatty, Inc., 293 F.2d 474, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775 (5th Cir. 1961).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal by the owner of a motor cruiser from a judgment of the trial court, sitting in admiralty, denying its plea to limit liability under 46 U.S.C.A. § 183, and assessing damages for losses incurred by others from an explosion and fire which occurred on board the boat.

Appellant owned the Overtime, a 27-foot cabin cruiser. For sometime it had been used almost entirely by its President, Williamson. Gradually Williamson lost interest in the boat and the Company, acting through Williamson, permitted Thomas Eoss, an engineer employed by the Company, to use it pretty much as he wished. For sometime prior to the accident no one but Eoss had made any use of the boat. He had used it on July 3rd, the day before the accident, and discovered that there was something defective with the bilge pump. On July 4, 1957, Ross was on board the boat with his friend Emerson for the purpose of causing some repairs to be made to the pump.

The occurrences just prior to the explosion and fire are not in dispute. The boat was powered by a gasoline engine which was started by a self-starter activated by a storage battery. The battery equipment consisted of two 8-volt batteries in a single box, separated by a frame. Each of the batteries was connected to the starter button through a switch which could select one but not both of the batteries for starting the engine. There was also a switch connection which could be used to operate a blower.

On the day of the fire Ross turned on the blower in order to ventilate the bilge. He then turned to the gasoline valve to permit the fuel to run to the engine and then attempted to start the engine by pressing the starter. The first battery was too weak to start the motor. He thereupon switched to the other battery in an effort to start it; it was also too weak.

On similar occasions previously Ross had connected the two batteries in series, that is he connected the positive pole of one battery to the negative pole of the other, which would be calculated to sup *476 ply whatever power both batteries had to the starter. In order to do this he needed to have another person hold a connecting wire between the poles of the two batteries, while he, himself pressed the starter button.

Ross undertook to explain to Emerson, who was on the boat for the first time, how to hold the wire across the batteries so that Ross could then go forward and press the starter button. While he was bent down over the battery demonstrating the connection, with Emerson looking over his shoulder, an explosion occurred, setting a fire that destroyed the boat and caused the damage to the other property that is here sued for.

In order for appellees to recover for their damages they must prove that the explosion and fire were proximately caused by negligence. Even then recovery against Holloway would be denied under the limitation of liability provisions of Section 183, 46 U.S.C.A., if Holloway proved that the loss was occasioned without the privity or knowledge of the owner. Appellees relied on proof that Ross used an unsafe and dangerous method of attempting to start the motor at a time when there must have been present an accumulation of gasoline fumes, readily ignitable by a spark, as establishing negligence on the part of Ross. They undertook to establish privity or knowledge on the part of Holloway first by attempting to show that Ross was the responsible corporate official charged with the duty of handling the boat, or, in the alternative, that the very operation performed by Ross was done in a manner known and approved by the president of the corporation.

The trial court made brief findings of fact. 1 These findings were in favor of the appellees’ contentions with respect to both matters touching on knowledge and privity. Then, without dealing with the matter in terms of negligence the trial court made the following conclusions of law:

“The unsafe and dangerous method used to start the motor on the ‘Overtime’ made the boat unseaworthy at the time of and prior to the accident. This condition was known to Williamson, the president of petitioner for some time prior to the accident. The petitioner, there *477 fore, had knowledge and privity and is therefore liable for all damage proximately resulting from the accident. The petition for limitation of liability is denied.”

Appellant vigorously attacks several of the findings of fact, and also the relevance of the conclusion that the boat was “unseaworthy at the time of and prior to the accident.” Careful consideration of these contentions brings us to the conviction that in several important respects the findings are not supported by the evidence. The first of these instances is the trial court’s finding, “Ross had Emerson hold the jumper wires onto the poles of the batteries while Ross activated the starter for the engine. The explosion and fire resulted from this procedure.” The record is absolutely clear that Emerson had nothing to do with holding the wires but, rather, that the explosion and fire followed a demonstration by Ross while he was undertaking to show Emerson how to hold the wires in order that Ross might later press the starter button.

One having even slight knowledge of electricity may wonder how the touching of the wire on the poles of the two batteries in the manner testified to by Ross could cause the spark that the trial court found to have caused the explosion, since the starter button was not pressed and the circuit was thus apparently “open.” This may be explained by the testimony that the blower fan was then being operated, it thus being clear that the circuit was closed after all.

As we have stated, the explosion did not occur as found by the trial court. It may be that if the boat had not blown up Ross would, have caused Emerson to hold the connecting wire across the poles, and Ross would have pushed the starter button and the boat might then have blown up the same way. Of course, on the other hand it may be that before he would have done these things Ross might have cut off the blower to get all the power available for the starter. In such circumstances, the circuit would then have been open, and if Emerson made a firm connection with the jumper wire before Ross pressed the starter button, there might never have been a spark at all. All of this, of course, is speculation and is mentioned only because we feel that it is necessary to analyze the court’s finding against the true facts in order to determine whether it can be approved as a basis for the ultimate conclusion, even though not accurate. We conclude that this particular finding is too remote from what actually happened to support a finding of unseaworthiness or of negligence.

This is not to say, of course, that the trial court could not have found that Ross was negligent for doing exactly what he did do — attempting to bridge the batteries while the circuit (probably through his oversight) was closed. We cannot, however, speculate as to this. The finding of the court of unseaworthiness or negligence 2 because of his pressing the starter while Emerson held the wire cannot be sustained on a record which shows ' that this is not what happened.

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Bluebook (online)
293 F.2d 474, 1961 U.S. App. LEXIS 3775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holloway-concrete-products-company-inc-v-beltz-beatty-inc-ca5-1961.