Home Shipping Co., S. A. v. United States

239 F. Supp. 226, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7041
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedMarch 2, 1965
DocketNo. 1783
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 F. Supp. 226 (Home Shipping Co., S. A. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Shipping Co., S. A. v. United States, 239 F. Supp. 226, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7041 (D. Del. 1965).

Opinion

LAYTON, District Judge.

On the night of May 27, 1957, the SS COSMIC bound upriver collided with the floating stern section of the wreck of the SS MISSION SAN FRANCISCO (hereafter MISSION) lying about 80 ft. west of the center line of Deepwater Point Range of the Delaware River.

It is the judgment of this Court based upon the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law that the respondent was guilty of no negligence in the marking of the wreck which contributed in any manner to this collision with the result that the Government is not liable. However, it is thought desirable, following the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, to set forth briefly the reasons why libellant’s contentions as to respondent’s liability are not well founded.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The SS COSMIC was a Liberian-flag, Panamanian-owned, Greek-operated combination oil and ore carrier, 744.1 feet long, 100.9 feet wide, with her housing on the stern, the bridge being 625 feet aft of the bow.

2. The MISSION, a Government tanker (owned by the United States) sank on March 7, 1957, after colliding with the SS ELNA II. Shortly thereafter, the sunken bow of the MISSION was marked by Buoy WR2A, and the still floating stern section by WR3D, a quick-flashing green light located on the starboard quarter of the stern’s boat deck some 30 ft. inboard of the stern. Buoy WR2A and the flashing green light WR3D, clearly and plainly marked the wreck of-the MISSION insofar as concerns the literal language of the Wreck Act, 33 U.S.C. § 409.

3. As a result of the collision on March 7, 1957, between the MISSION and the SS ELNA II, the stern section of the wrecked MISSION floated in the western (downbound) half of Deepwater Point Range Channel, 80 feet from the center line of the channel and 1900 to 2000 feet above the intersection of the Bulkhead Bar Range and Deepwater Point Lights. The stern was firmly attached to the remainder of the ship by shell plating and three keelsons running fore and aft.

4. On the night of May 27th about 10:00 P.M., the SS COSMIC bound upriver collided with the floating stern sec[228]*228tion of the MISSION. It was a dark, very clear night with five mile visibility.

5. All pilots and ship operators knew or were required to know the exact location of the MISSION and of light WR3D and other navigational markers because they had been in place nearly 80 days and their positions were widely disseminated in Notices to Mariners issued by the Hydrographic Office, the Coast Guard and the Corps of Engineers. In addition, the President of the Delaware Bay and River Pilots Association participated in a meeting where all phases of marking and navigation in the area of the MISSION were thoroughly discussed. The wreck was marked with appropriate buoys and lights in accordance with the recommendations made at this meeting. Any superficial discrepancy between the recommendations for marking the wreck made at the meeting and the markings actually made by the Coast Guard were probably due to an error in the recommendations improperly inferring that the light WR3D was originally a buoy.

6. The COSMIC was making its third voyage to Philadelphia past the MISSION’S stern in a deep draft condition during May 1957. She was ladened with 44,433 tons of iron ore and had a draft of 37 feet.

7. In bringing the vessel up New Castle Range, the engine was on full maneuvering speed under which power the COSMIC would have been making about 14 knots over the ground. Just before reaching Buoy 2B, engine speed was cut to half speed ahead.

8. New Castle and Deepwater Ranges are both 800 feet wide, but to facilitate the turns into and out of Bulkhead Bar, that range widens to 1600 feet, beginning to widen at a point 300 feet below Buoy 2B.

9. Buoy 2B was the first buoy warning navigators of the approaching 34° turn to the right from New Castle Range to Bulkhead Bar Range. Bulkhead Bar Range is only .65 miles long, and another identical 34° turn to the right from Bulkhead Bar to Deepwater Point Range was required almost immediately.

10. Buoy 2B, quick-flashing red, 30 candlepower, marked the eastern (up-bound) side of the channel. It was not contested at trial that lighted aids to navigation in the area were burning normally, with the possible exception of the light (WR3D) on the stern of the MISSION.

11. In addition to Buoy 2B, the lights marking the main Bulkhead Bar Range Channel as seen by a ship sailing upriver, were as follows:

(a) Buoy IB flashing green, 30 candlepower light, 300 ft. to the west of Bulkhead Bar Range.
(b) Bulkhead Bar Range lights, white, 200,000 candlepower, which indicated the centerline of Bulkhead Bar Channel.
(c) Buoy 4B, quick-flashing red, 30 candlepower, marked the eastern limit and the next 34° change in channel direction to the right.
(d) Directly east of 4B on a fixed shore structure 30 feet high is Finns Point Jetty Light. This is a flashing white light of 400 candlepower, casting a 90 candlepower red sector over the entire length of Bulkhead Bar Range. It additionally warned of the 34° change in channel direction to the right into Deepwater Point Range.
(e) Deepwater Point Range Lights, white 250,000 candlepower, marked the centerline of Deepwater Point Range Channel.
(f) Directly east of the MISSION’S stern, marking the eastern edge of Deepwater Point Channel, was Deep-water Point Buoy 2D, flashing red, 30 candlepower.

All the above range lights and buoys, located on Bulkhead Bar and Deepwater Point Channels, defined the 40-foot dredged channel to be used in passing the MISSION’S stern.

12. Pilot Maclntire had piloted this river and these ranges for 37 years. He [229]*229had an intimate personal knowledge of the location of the wreck and the lights and buoys marking it. He had piloted approximately 50 ships of all kinds past the wreck of the MISSION prior to May 27th, including 14 deep draft ships. He had piloted at least two deep draft ships by the MISSION’S stern at night. On May 14, he piloted a 35 ft. draft ship past the MISSION’S stern. On May 21st, 6 days before this accident, he had piloted a 28 ft. draft ship past the MISSION’S stern at night.

13. Any experienced pilot should have been able to pilot the COSMIC past the stern of the MISSION northbound on a clear night even if the green light on MISSION’S stern had been out entirely.

14. Maclntire ordered a 10° swing just as the bow was approaching Buoy 4B. This was too late to make the turn into Deepwater Point Range without crossing over to the west side of the channel.

15. The normal brilliance of WR3D was approximately 28-30 candlepower and as such was clearly sufficient in the light of all other navigational aids.

16. The green light on the MISSION’S stern was not out on the night of May 27, 1957. While it was not as bright as some of the navigational buoy lights, nevertheless, at the time of the accident, it was shining substantially at its normal brilliance, was otherwise unobstructed and was plainly visible well down New Castle Range long before its use for navigational purposes was necessary.

17.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. Supp. 226, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-shipping-co-s-a-v-united-states-ded-1965.