In re Barrett

108 F. Supp. 710, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2348
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 28, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 F. Supp. 710 (In re Barrett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Barrett, 108 F. Supp. 710, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2348 (S.D.N.Y. 1952).

Opinion

RYAN, District Judge.

Gentlemen, I am now prepared to give you my findings of fact and conclusions of law in these cases. Before doing so, I want to thank you, on behalf of the Court, for the cooperation you have given us in disposing of these suits.

A welter of litigation has followed in the wake of the attempted disastrous towing as a dead ship of the S. S. Samcree from Pier 67 down the East River, on the afternoon of August IS, 1947. Seven suits —six in the admiralty and one at law— have by consent been submitted for decision by me upon the stipulated record of a trial had before my brother Judge, who because of illness has been unable to ren[712]*712der his judgment on the evidence so presented to him. After consideration of the record now before me, I make the following findings of fact.

The S. S. Sameree was an oceangoing vessel built in 1944 with deadweight of 10,521; net tonnage, 4380; gross tonnage 7219. She was owned by the United States of America and husbanded by American Foreign Steamship Corporation, a :New York corporation with an office and place of business within this district, under the usual form of .“General Agency Agreement, 4/4/42.” She had for some time prior to July 1, 1947, been under lend-lease to the British Ministry of Transport, and on that day had been turned over to American Foreign Steamship Corporation, as general agent, for the then instructed purpose of putting her in shape for operation. She was docked on the south side of Pier 67, at East 20th Street, East River, on July 11, 1947, and remained there until the afternoon of August 15, 1947.

Shortly after July 14, 1947, it was determined not to maintain her in service and the general agent was instructed to have the vessel prepared to be taken by tug to the lay-up fleet in the James River, Virginia. A skeleton crew and additional men hired from the Hercules Company undertook to do the work preliminary to the lay-up. The tackle and deck equipment were placed below; the machinery and engines were cared for and measures taken for their preservation. While this was going on and at least five days before its completion, Eugene H. Tannehill, who was Assistant Port Captain of the general agent, came aboard the ship to see that she was made ready. He supervised this work.

Finally, on August 15, 1947, the work was completed and the American Foreign Steamship Corporation hired Mathiasen Shipping Company, Inc., a Delaware corporation, with an office and place of business within this district, to tow the Sameree from Pier 67 to Greenville Anchorage, New York Harbor, where she was to be taken over by a seagoing tug and her tow completed to the James River.

William J. Scanlan, the Master of the Sameree, left the ship about one p. m. to go to the Customs House in' lower New York to clear the ship for departure from port. There remained aboard Captain Tannehill, whom the Master accepted as the owner’s representative; William H. Minarik, chief mate; Jacob Spiegel, second mate; an able-bodied seaman; a cook and eight men from the Hercules Company. All were to assist in unberthing the Sameree and all including Captain' Scanlan, who planned to board his ship, while she was in tow further down the river, were to remain on board during the voyage to the James River anchorage.

The towing was performed by the Mathiasen Shipping Company, Inc., under a written contract with American Foreign Steamship executed May 1, 1946. Mathia-sen Shipping dispatched four tugs to Pier 67 — Helen M. Mathiasen, Mathiasen Girls, Mathiasen Line and Richard J. Barrett.

The tug Helen M. Mathiasen was built in 1882. She was 104.2 feet in length, 20 feet beam, net weight 63 tons, and had a registered power plant of 500 h.p. She was owned by Mathiasen Steamboats, Inc., a Delaware corporation, doing business within this district and operated by Mathiasen Shipping Co., Inc., under a bareboat charter.

The tug Mathiasen Girls was constructed in' 1888 and subsequently repowered with 550 h.p. diesel engines. She was 87 feet in length, 20.1 feet beam, net weight of 73 tons. She was' owned by Mathiasen Transportation Co., Inc., a Delaware corporation, transacting business within’ this district and operated by Mathiasen Shipping Company, Inc., under a bareboat charter.

The tug Mathiasen Line was built in 1887. She was 84 feet in length, 19.7 feet beam, registered for 350 h.p., net weight 47 tons.' She was owned and operated by Mathiasen Shipping Co., Inc. She became a total loss as a result of the disaster in the towing operation here involved.

While it appears that all of the various Mathiasen Companies were separate legal entities, the stock ownership in each was vested in identical parties in identical proportions. All of these corporation's were [713]*713managed and operated by Mathiasen Shipping Company, Inc.

The tug Richard J. Barrett was owned and operated by Edward E. Barrett and William Bowman, under the name E. E. Barrett & Co., which maintained a business office within this district. The Richard J. Barrett was built in 1919, of 176 gross tons, 95.5 feet long, 24.7 feet beam and 12.2 feet depth, with 750 h.p. registered. She is represented as one of the more powerful tugs working in New York Harbor, and was the most powerful tug employed in the towing. It was to obtain this power that Mathiasen Shipping Company hired this tug and arranged that in the towing she should be under the direction of the pilot.

Fred Johansen was captain of the Mathia-sen Girls; Axel G. Larson was captain of the Helen M. Mathiasen; and' George Fuhr, captain of the Mathiasen Line. Aboard the Richard J. Barrett, George B. Young was captain, Nils H. Larson, mate, and Edward V. Yackshina, deckhand.

Although the tugs reached Pier 67 at about 3 p. m. to begin the towing, the departure was delayed because of the necessity of complying with the Coast Guard regulation requiring that a lifeboat be in position. All the lifeboats had been stored below; it was necessary to send for a shore crane and remove one of the lifeboats from a hold and put it back on its davits.

When' the tugs arrived, they could not pull alongside the Samcree because a derrick tug of Merritt-Chapman Company was still tied to her. Captain Axel Larson of the Helen M. Mathiasen went to the dock and boarded the Samcree by the gangway. He was instructed to wait. He observed the derrick hoisting a lifeboat up to the davits; he returned to his tug.

While waiting for the Samcree to be made ready for towage, Captain Larson, who later acted as the pilot of the Samcree, gave the tugs instructions as to the positions they were to take and the tasks assigned to them in the towage. The Mathiasen Girls was directed to pull the ship out on the stern line; the Mathiasen Line to go to the starboard bow and the Richard J. Barrett to take the hawser off the Samcree as she came out of the slip. After the Mathiasen Girls got the Samcree out in the stream, she was instructed to let go the line leading to the stern of the Samcree and come to the ship’s starboard quarter.

A little after four p. m., the Merritt-Chapman tug pulled away, the Helen M. Mathiasen came ' along and made fast on the port quarter of the Samcree and Larson again went aboard — this time up the ship’s ladder from the tug. He found a number of men aboard; non'e wore uniforms but one or two seemed to be in charge. He was advised that all was ready and the tugs were signalled to proceed as previously instructed.

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Related

Neptune Transportation Corp. v. The Tug Bartow
158 F. Supp. 45 (S.D. New York, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. Supp. 710, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-barrett-nysd-1952.