In Re Eastern Transp. Co.

37 F.2d 355, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1778, 1930 A.M.C. 258
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedDecember 26, 1929
Docket1703
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 355 (In Re Eastern Transp. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Eastern Transp. Co., 37 F.2d 355, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1778, 1930 A.M.C. 258 (D. Md. 1929).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN,' District Judge.

This ease arises on a petition of the owner of the barge Calvert for limitation and exemption of liability, under Rev. St. §§ 4283 — 4285 (46 USCA §§ 183-185). The proceeding follows the institution of a suit in the court of common pleas of Baltimore eity by the administratrix of the estate of the master of the barge Calvert, who, together with his wife and three infant children, was drowned when the barge foundered in Chesapeake Bay under the following eireumstanees:

On the evening of May 16,1928, the master of the tug Denhardt made up a tow off ¡Sparrows Point, Maryland, consisting of the barges Calvert and B. W. McDonald, all three vessels being owned and operated by the petitioner, the Eastern Transportation Company. At about 9 p. m. the tug proceeded down the Chesapeake Bay, bound for Urbana, Va. *357 The barges were in tandem tow, the McDonald being astern and light, while the C'alvert was loaded with 750 long tons of crashed slag, taken on at Sparrows Point. The Calvert followed the tug on a 125-fathom hawser, and the McDonald followed the Calvert on a 55-fathom hawser. The weather was mild and cloudy, with a moderate southeast wind and no sea. The barge Calvert was a wooden vessel, of the flat, bilge log type, 168 feet long, 20.8 feet beam, 10 feet & inches draught, 368 tons gross tonnage. She was 28 years old, but had been rebuilt in 1923. Being an inland barge, she was not subject to compulsory government inspection, as are sea-going barges. The master’s family were aboard by the tacit permission of the company, pursuant to common practice with barges in this type of service.

The master of the tug testified that at midnight, according to his inspection, the tow was proceeding satisfactorily, and he had retired, being relieved by the first mate, who testified that as late as 1 o’clock he found all three vessels in satisfactory condition. To the same general effect is the testimony of the master of the stem barge, the McDonald. However, about 15 minutes later, according to the master and mate of the tug, and about 5 minutes later, according to the master of the McDonald, they heard cries from the water, discovered that the barge Calvert had disappeared, and, the tug reversing her engine, it was discovered that the cries came from the mate of the Calvert, who was rescued from an overturned rowboat belonging to that barge. The tug stood by, and with the aid of a passing steamer, which used her searchlights, endeavored to find some trace of the master of the Calvert and his wife and three children. Meanwhile, the barge McDonald anchored nearby. However, the search was in vain. No trace was found either of the barge or of those on board.

There is no testimony whatsoever of any warning having been given of the Calvert’s distress, other than that of the assistant engineer on the tug, to the effect that, just prior to the discovery of the fact that the Calvert had sunk, he noticed that the tug’s engine slowed down slightly, which he at the time attributed to a normal dropping of the steam pressure, due to cleaning the fires. There is no evidence that there was any unusual or sudden pull or strain on either the bow or stem hawser of the Calvert. After she had disappeared, the hawsers were found intact, and were hauled aboard the tug* and the McDonald by hand, except, in the case of the hawser which was brought aboard the tug, the testimony is to the effect that, after it had been hauled partly inboard, it caught, and the rest of it had to be taken in by power, which may have indicated that, until the power was thus applied, the bight of the hawser was still remaining over the bit of the sunken barge, or had fouled something. The point where the barge sank was off Tolley’s Point gas buoy, just outside the main ship channel, in about 50 feet of water.

The sole survivor of the disaster, the mate Broek, testified that he had retired to his quarters in the wheelhouse of the barge at about midnight, after performing his usual lookout, and after finding that all requisite lights were properly set and burning, and that the entire tow appeared to be proceeding satisfactorily; that about 1 o’clock he felt a rush of air, and Ms cabin was flooded with water; that he had no more than time to utter a ray and jump o verboard, when the barge disappeared; that it all happened within about 39 seconds. TMs was the first time he had shipped on the barge, and he possessed, or at least disclosed, little information about her condition that Mght. He testified that the pumps (of which there were two) were not used after the commencement of the voyage, and that she had about 2% feet free-board. The master of the tug testified that the barge had less than 2 feet freeboard, a condition not unusual with barges carrying nonperishable cargo of tMs type in the Bay.

There is no evidence of any obstruction in the course wMch she followed, or of the possibility of collision with another vessel, or of there having been any wash from another vessel. The bodies of the master of the barge and of Ms wife and two of his children were recovered, and some tto*ee weeks later* the barge was raised. At that time a survey, made by an independent surveyor on behalf of the owner, disclosed that her bottom planking on the port side was scored diagonally for a length of about 75 feet, commencing about 11 feet from the stem and increasing in depth until it terminated in a hole approximately amidsMps. More specifically, tMs scoring commenced at the third plank outboard from the larboard strake and extended across the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth planks. Por a length of some 12 feet the outside bottom, wMch was 3 inches thick, was splintered to its entire tMekness; for some 26 feet the scoring almost completely penetrated the planking; and in the seventh and eighth planks there was a hole approximately 5 feet 9 inches long and 4% inches wide, all of wMch dearly manifested contact at some time with some external ob *358 jeíst. There was no evidence of this scoring on either side or aft of this hole.

In addition to the above, the survey disclosed, on both the port and starboard sides, loose and open butts and seams on the bottom and side planking and bilge strake; some splintered, spongy, and decayed planking, through which the test knife could be inserted; also numerous short length graving pieces, with their butt ends adjacent in various places. Another survey made on behalf of the owner by the local inspector of hulls, and also a survey made on behalf of claimant by a private surveyor, confirmed the existence of the foregoing condition, the last-named survey, however, being to the effect that the vessel’s planking and beams, and the character of repairs that were evident, were much more defective than testified to by the other surveyors. The barge had not been dry-docked since the fall of 1926, and there were no records kept of when, if ever, she had been surveyed sinee that time. Dining the five months period just prior to the disaster, approximately $300.00 had been spent upon her in repairs, some $400.00 had also been spent in 1927, and during the eleven years preceding the disaster an approximate total of $25,000 had been spent in rebuilding and in maintaining her from time to time.

There is no evidence, nor is there any claim, of negligence due to improper navigation, or excessive or improper loading; the claim being solely one of unseaworthiness.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 355, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1778, 1930 A.M.C. 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-eastern-transp-co-mdd-1929.