In re McAllister

53 F.2d 495
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 4, 1931
DocketTHE NO. 75
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 F.2d 495 (In re McAllister) 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 McAllister, 53 F.2d 495 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

My decision in this cause is that the petitioners may have a decree exonerating them from liability for the accident set forth in their petition, but that such decree shall not carry costs against the claimants.

I. This petition was brought by the owner of the lighter No. '75 in order to stay an action in the New York Supreme Court and to secure a trial in admiralty instead of law with a jury, of a claim for the death .on March 29, 1929, of Edward A. Gilbertson, engineer on the lighter No. 75, brought by his widow as his administratrix.

The administratrix of Gilbertson has filed a claim in the limitation proceeding, and the petitioners pray for a decree of exoneration from liability for this claim, and, in the alternative, if held liable, for a limitation of their liability to the value of the lighter as damaged after the accident which is the occasion of this suit.

II. In all eases of petitions of this kind, the first question to be determined is the liability of the petitioner, for if there is not any liability there is not anything against which to limit.

On the issue of liability in such a proceeding, the same burden lies on the claimant to make out a ease of liability by a fair preponderance of the evidence, as lies on every party who has the affirmative side of any issue in a civil case.

For the purpose of chancering the evidence on the issue of liability herein, therefore, I shall first deal with the ease as if the •administratrix claimant had filed a libel against the petitioners.

III. At about 1:05 p. m. on Friday, March 29, 1929, Edward .A. Gilbertson was killed by a most unusual kind of accident whilst working as engineer on board the steam lighter No. 75 at Robins Dry Dock, Erie Basin, N. Y.

Before it is possible to form any theory of the cause of the tragedy out of which this litigation arose, it is necessary to understand the locus in quo of the accident, the rigging and dimensions of the mast and boom whose collapse caused it, and the method in which they were normally operated in the handling of cargoes.

The steam lighter No. 75 was 100.5 feet long, had a width of 29 feet, a depth of 8.5 feet, and a carrying capacity of 219.17 tons. She had square ends and was, therefore, a box-like structure with a length slightly less than four times her width.

Midships aft she had a round mast of wood which rose about 60 feet above her deck, and was from 22 to 24 inches in diameter.

This mast was held braced in order to meet the strains which would be encountered in dealing with the heavy weights raised by the boom and tackle, by ten steel stays. Two of the stays led from near the top of the mast to the side of the lighter to a point at an angle of about 20 degrees forward of the mast. There were then two stays which led opposite to each other directly to the side of the lighter from the mast, two more which led angling aft of the mast at the same angle as the first mentioned stays angled forward, [497]*497two more stays leading to the after corners of the lighter, and two more which led to the stern at such angles as would bring each stay to a point on the stern one-third of the distance from each corner thereof.

The effect of this radiating arrangement of stays was that, as the boom swung, one stay after another came into play to take the principal strain, although it was assisted, of course, by the neighboring stays. In other words, as the boom swung, the piano of the greatest stresses cut successively through the plane created by the mast and the stay opposite to the boom at any given time.

Just forward of this mast and raised slightly above the deck was a socket in which the stepping at the foot of the boom was lodged and in which it could revolve as the boom was swung from side to side in operation.

The boom was about 65 feet long and of about the same diameter as the mast. Aft of the mast there was a deckhouse containing a donkey boiler and a winch which operated the boom and the tackle therewith connected.

The normal method of operating the boom was to raise it by the use of a topping lift till it was fixed at such an angle as would put its head over the cargo which was to be handled. This was accomplished by the use of one of the drums on the winch which was operated by a man in the deckhouse.

There was a second drum on the winch which controlled the fall, which was used' to raise or lower the drafts of cargo after they had been slung and their slings had been fastened to the fall.

In order that the boom might be under control as it swung from one side to the other of the lighter, there were two guys made of manila rope 3½ inches in circumference, which ran through appropriate leads on the deck near the sides of the lighter to the head of the boom so that the boom could be pulled either to port or to starboard as might be desired. These guys were operated on two devices known as niggerheads on the port side of the winch.

After a draft of cargo is raised, the drum, around which the fall raising it is wrapped, is kept by a foot brake from lowering its load, and so long as the foot brake is held pressed down the draft will not drop.

IV. On the occasion in question a man by the name of Reitveld, who was the captain of the lighter, was running the winch and handling the fall by which the cargo was raised. Reitveld also had charge of the tackle for raising or lowering the boom, which, of course, is a more infrequent operation than the use of the falls to raise and lower ‘the drafts of cargo, or the use of the guys to swing the boom from one side to the other of the lighter.

The decedent Gilbertson was running the guys on the niggerheads.

V. On the Monday morning before the accident, March 25th, the No. 75 was in the Wallabout and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company sent a tug over which fetched her to Greenville and there she commenced loading. She took on hoard a cargo of piling, steel ship plates, and steel rivet bars — so called because steel rivets are made from them. The plates and the bars were stowed thwart ships and extended substantially from side to side of the lighter.

The lighter was loading on Monday and Tuesday, March 25th and 26th; and on Wednesday, March 27th, she was taken over to Robins Dry Dock, where, lying with her starboard side to a pier, she started to unload on the afternoon of Thursday, March 28th, the day before the accident. On that afternoon and Friday morning she unloaded some rivet bars.

VI. The accident happened on Friday, March 29th, while the No. 75 was attempting to unload the first sling load of plates, weighing about 5½ tons.

This sling load had been made up and put into chain slings before the men who were working the lighter went to their luncheon, and immediately after their return Reitveld went to the winch, turned on the steam, and Gilbertson commenced to operate the guys.

The plates were then found to be caught under the piling on the deck of the lighter which overlapped them three or four inches, and in order to get them free it was necessary to swing the draft to port, although the lighter was lying with her starboard side to the dock and that was the direction which the plates would ultimately have to be swung in order to reach the dock where they were to be loaded.

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5 F. Supp. 511 (D. Oregon, 1933)

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53 F.2d 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mcallister-nysd-1931.