In Re Nueces County, Texas, Road District No. 4

174 F. Supp. 846, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3108
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1959
DocketA. B. 184
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 174 F. Supp. 846 (In Re Nueces County, Texas, Road District No. 4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Nueces County, Texas, Road District No. 4, 174 F. Supp. 846, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3108 (S.D. Tex. 1959).

Opinion

ALLRED, District Judge.

On April 20, 1956, Samuel J. Thomas drove his Chrysler Sedan on board the Nellie B, a ferryboat owned and operated by Nueces County Road District No. 4 (hereafter called Road District). Thomas was accompanied by his wife, Inez, and by his brother, Leo, and Leo’s wife, Lena May Thomas. The Thomas-es had gone aboard the ferry as fare paying passengers to be conveyed across navigable waters from a landing slip at *848 Harbor Island, Texas, to Aransas Pass on Mustang Island.

Thomas drove his automobile in a normal manner into the center lane as directed by a ferry deckhand and stopped forward of the wheelhouse in the center lane. Thereafter the deckhand directed Thomas to move forward without giving him specific directions as to how far to go or where or when to stop. Thomas drove the car forward slowly and, apparently without using his brakes or stopping, ran into two sagging cables hanging across the end of the vehicle runways at the seaward end of the ferry. A defective pin in one of the shackles holding the cables sheared and the car plunged into the water, submerging with the four passengers. The two women were trapped in the car and drowned immediately. The two Thomas brothers managed to free themselves from the car and tried to swim to safety. Leo Thomas was finally rescued and survived but S. J. Thomas, although having been hauled to shore and administered artificial respiration, died a short time after his wife was drowned.

Thereafter an admiralty proceeding was filed in this court, against the Road District (A.D. 17-9), by Leo Thomas, individually (for the death of his wife and for his personal injuries) and by Fay Thomas Whitford (a daughter, of Samuel and Inez B. Thomas), individually and as administratrix of the estate of her parents. A total of $114,000 damages was sought. Thereupon the Road District instituted this proceeding for exoneration from, and/or limitation of, liability, claiming the benefit of sections 183-186 of 46 U.S.C.A., and the various statutes, acts and rules supplementary thereto.

The Road District alleged that the Thomas tragedy was not caused, or contributed to, by any fault, neglect or want of care on the part of the Nellie'B, or those in charge of her, or of the petitioner, but was solely due to fault and neglect on the part of the occupants of the automobile, particularly the driver, Samuel J. Thomas; that the accident occurred and the losses and damages resulted without fault and without privity or knowledge on the part of petitioner. It was further alleged that petitioner feared other persons might file suits or claims as heirs at law or legal representatives of Lena May Thomas.

No freight was pending but petitioner offered to give a stipulation for the amount or value of the District’s interest in the vessel and her pending freight, etc.; and, pending an appraisal, offered' an ad interim stipulation in the amount of $40,760. .This stipulation was authorized by the Chief Judge of this court, with a proviso that application might be-made to increase or diminish it later after the report of a commissioner who-was appointed at the time. Monition, issued and a time was set for the filing-of claims. Fay Thomas Whitford, individually and in her capacity as ad-ministratrix, and Leo Thomas filed' claims and answers to the petition for exoneration.

Upon pretrial the court ordered the-issue of exoneration and limitation of liability to be tried first, severing the-issue of damages and the value of the Nellie B and directing that they should, be heard later. The pretrial order further recited that it should be without prej'udice to the Road District’s right to-assert any and all defenses it might have to the claims asserted by the claimants.

After a hearing the court held that, the Road District was not entitled to-exoneration or limitation. Findings of' fact and conclusions of law were filed on December 9, 1958, and are summarized as follows:

(1) that the Nellie B was unsea-worthy in various respects, particularly (a) in not having an adequate number-of deckhands; (b) in not having a member of the crew with a lifeboatman’s certificate; (c) that the two cables at the-seaward end of the runways were insufficient; (d) that the two cables were sagging below the bumper of the car; (e) a pin in one of the-' shackles was defective.

*849 The court further found that the persons in charge of the Nellie B were negligent in various respects, particularly in (a) failing to have at least two deckhands on board to spot the cars and direct drivers where to stop and to “chock” the wheels of automobiles on the ferry; (b) in failing to have a crewman on board with a lifeboatman’s certificate; (c) in using inadequate and defective cables across the end of the runways; (d) in failing to test the cables; (e) in failing to discover the defective pin in the shackle; and (f) in failing to discover the inadequacy of the cables. The court found that each of the items of unseaworthiness and acts of negligence was a proximate cause of the automobile going overboard, the drowning of the three people and of the injuries resulting therefrom.

The court further found that petitioner Road District was in privity and had knowledge of such unseaworthiness and negligence through Melvin Littleton, ferry superintendent chárged with general management of the ferry. At the same time the court further found that Samuel J. Thomas was guilty of contributory negligence which also was a proximate cause of the injuries involved in the claims.

By stipulation all the evidence heard on the issues of exoneration-limitation was incorporated as part of the record in support of, and defense against, the Thomas claims. From that evidence and the record as a whole, the court makes the same findings as to unseaworthiness, negligence and proximate cause. In addition to the specific acts of negligence outlined above, the court finds, upon further reflection, that the ferry deckhand who directed the driver to move forward was negligent in failing to give him further instructions and in failing to direct him when and where to stop; and that eách and all of said acts of negligence, except failing to have a crewman with a lifeboatman’s certificate, was a proximate cause of the. tragic incident giving rise to the Thomas claims.

Also, upon further reflection and reconsideration of the evidence, the Court finds that S. J. Thomas, driver of the automobile, was not guilty of contributory negligence, nor was his negligence a proximate cause of the Thomas deaths and other injuries. The previous holding, announced from the bench at the conclusion of the exoneration-limitation hearing was without consideration of the high degree of care which a ferry, although not an insurer, owes to its passengers; and, while a passenger is required to use ordinary care for his own safety, the fact that the Thomas car, easing along, after being directed to move forward by the ferry’s deckhand, slipped off the deck, does not indicate that the driver reasonably should have foreseen that the thing that did happen, or some similar event, likely would occur. On the contrary, it appears more likely that S. J.

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Bluebook (online)
174 F. Supp. 846, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nueces-county-texas-road-district-no-4-txsd-1959.