In re Cenac Towing Co.

276 F. Supp. 317, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9073
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 15, 1967
DocketNos. 6148, 6149
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 276 F. Supp. 317 (In re Cenac Towing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Cenac Towing Co., 276 F. Supp. 317, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9073 (E.D. La. 1967).

Opinion

CASSIBRY, District Judge:

Cenac Towing Co., Inc., as owner of the Tug CONNIE CENAC, and Alfred P. Cenac Towing Co., Inc., as owner of the Tug CAPT. TENNER CENAC, each filed a petition under the Limited Liability Act, 46 U.S.C. § 183 et seq., praying for exoneration from or limitation of liability. The cause giving rise to the consolidated petitions was the alleged blocking of the channel below Southwest Pass on the night of April 9, 1963, causing the Tanker PERRYVILLE to ground. The tanker remained stranded for nine days. Heavy losses were sus[318]*318tained by her owner Keystone Shipping Co. consisting of repair costs, transshipment of cargo, salvage and general average expenses, and by Shell Oil Company, the owner of the cargo, for its share of the general average expenses. Keystone and Shell appeared in the limitation proceedings and claimed against each tug and their respective owners for their losses. The parties agreed that the cases be consolidated for trial on the question of liability alone.

The following copy .of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Chart No. 1272 (1963 Edition) will be helpful in following the events leading up to the PERRYVILLE grounding. It was used extensively during trial.

[319]*319At the end of the Passes on the east side is a blinking red light. The station maintained by the Coast Guard (Diaphone) is also located on the east side of the Pass, approximately 500 yards above the end of the Passes, and the Pilot Station is on the east side of the Pass, approximately one mile from the end of the Pass. The Pass runs in a generally southwest direction from the Pilot Station to the end of the jetties, where the channel bends to due south. The chart of the Pass contains certain lettered blocks beginning with the letter “A” well to the south of the red light and running through the letter “P” at the Pilot Station. These blocks, of course, are for ready reference in using the chart only.

Considering all the evidence, I am inclined to agree with counsel for the claimants when he says that “in all the tortuous, winding, lower Mississippi and its passes, there is no more difficult or dangerous place than the entrance to and the exit from Southwest Pass into the Gulf.” It is a difficult and dangerous Pass under favorable conditions, but at the time this accident occurred, it was extra hazardous. It was nighttime and even though visibility was not obscured by fog or rain, it was still dark and visibility was consequently greatly reduced. In April 1963, the U. S. Corps of Engineers maintained a 35 foot deep channel with an irregular width of 600 feet. The channel is confined on both sides by perpendicular dikes or wing dams extending out from the rock jetties and spaced about 1000 feet apart. The 41/2 mile per hour April current sets straight out between the jetties and then spreads fan-shaped across the bar with greater velocity to the west. The major problem for a pilot is to negotiate a sharp forty-three degree turn to port to get through the jetty ends. At the Pilot Station the vessel must first get on the outgoing range of 223°. This range, after some 4000 feet, abruptly intersects with the 180° range, due south, running down the outside channel leading to the sea buoy. Because the point of intersection is right at the jetty ends, it is necessary for the pilot to put on some twenty degrees left rudder when the vessel arrives at the Coast Guard Lighthouse, about 1000 feet above the jetty ends so that the vessel would have already come about and be headed down on 180° when arriving at the intersection. Because of the dangers of the bottleneck channel, the sharp turn, and the current phenomena, the Corps of Engineers long ago promulgated a regulation prohibiting vessels, and particularly tugs with tows, from entering the jetty ends when any descending traffic is within two and one-half miles.

There is no doubt that the tugs and tow did embarrass the PERRYVILLE’s navigation and were blocking the channel and therefore contributed heavily to the accident. On the other hand, PERRY-VILLE strongly contends that the tanker only discovered the tugs and tow blocking the channel when the PERRYVILLE was at, or near the Pilot Station, approximately one mile away; that she could not reasonably have discovered the danger before that time; and that thereafter her Pilot took every reasonable and prudent step to avoid the accident. The PERRYVILLE’s Pilot and another experienced River Pilot strongly supported this position in their depositions and court testimony.

For the reasons set forth below, I cannot agree with this conclusion and find that PERRYVILLE was equally at fault with the tugs and tow and will assess damages accordingly.

The Tug CONNIE CENAC is a documented vessel of the United States with the following register dimensions: length 60.8 feet, breadth 19.6 feet, depth 8.0 feet, 71 gross tons, 48 net tons, with horsepower of 1000. The Tug CAPT. TENNER CENAC is a documented vessel of the United States with register dimensions as follows: length 59.8 feet, breadth 19.6 feet, depth 8.0 feet, 71 gross tons, 48 net tons, with horsepower of 800. The Barge CTCO 176 is a steel tank barge, 210 feet in length, 40 feet in breadth, and 12 feet in depth. At the [320]*320time in question the barge was laden with 12,511.38 net barrels of crude oil to a draft of 10 feet, 7 inches forward and 10 feet, 10 inches aft.

The Tanker PERRYVILLE is of T-2 design, “jumboized” in 1958, 583 feet in length overall, 80 feet in beam, 45 feet in molded depth, propelled by a turbo-electric engine to a single screw with 6000 horsepower, of a burden of 14,455 gross and 10,666 net tons. At the time in question the tanker was fully loaded with a cargo owned by Shell Oil Company including different grades of aviation gasoline, kerosene and heating oil. The cargo had been loaded at, and the PERRYVILLE sailed from Norco, Louisiana.

On the night of April 8, 1963, the CAPT. TENNER CENAC departed an 011 rig in the Gulf of Mexico with the loaded barge CTCO 176 in tow on a hawser astern bound for the entrance of Southwest Pass, Mississippi River. Upon arrival below the entrance of the Pass, at about 2:00 P.M. on April 9th, the tug shortened the towing hawser to 30 feet. Thereafter attempts were made to cross the bar and enter the Pass between the ends of the jetties. The CAPT. TENNER CENAC did not have sufficient power, and each attempt resulted in the tug and barge being swept down 100 to 200 feet by the force of the current. As we have said, the river was in the seasonal spring rise and the velocity of the current, 3% miles per hour in the pass itself, accelerates to 4% miles over the bar at the end of the jetties. After each attempt The CAPT. TENNER and tow held up below and to the east of the east jetty end light where there is ample water. The CAPT. TENNER radioed her owner and was informed that the Tug .CONNIE CENAC would proceed to its assistance. Thereafter the watch changed and the tug’s captain went to sleep about 7:00 P.M., leaving a young relief captain in charge with a deck hand.

The PERRYVILLE, drawing 33 feet forward and 33 feet, 10 inches aft, down-bound from Norco, exchanged pilots at Pilot Town, and entered the Head of Southwest Pass at 7:28 P.M. to transit the 20.2 mile run under the conn of the bar pilot. He was assisted on the bridge by the Master and Third Officer. The Quartermaster was at the wheel and a lookout at the bow. The wind was from the southwest at eight knots.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 F. Supp. 317, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cenac-towing-co-laed-1967.