In re Pennsylvania R. Co.

44 F. Supp. 617, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2862
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 19, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 F. Supp. 617 (In re Pennsylvania R. Co.) 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 Pennsylvania R. Co., 44 F. Supp. 617, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2862 (S.D.N.Y. 1942).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

These proceedings grow out of the hurricane which swept over New York Harbor on the afternoon of September 21, 1938. At the height of the storm, two Erie Railroad lighters, Nos. 172 and 196, broke adrift in the slip between piers 2 and 3, Bush Docks, Brooklyn, and shortly thereafter collided with and pounded against the Pennsylvania Railroad lighter No. 225, which was at the time loaded with an airplane and airplane parts. As a result of the accident, the No. 225 sank, and her cargo was seriously damaged. There was also some relatively slight damage to the Lehigh Valley Railroad barge, No. 33, which was moored near the No. 225.

Three separate limitation proceedings have been commenced, one by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, owner of the lighter No. 225, and the other two by the trustees of the Erie Railroad Company, owner of the lighters Nos. 172 and 196. In the Pennsylvania proceeding, claims have been filed by Glenn L. Martin Company for the damage to the airplane and airplane parts loaded on the No. 225, and by the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company for the damage to the No. 33. In the two Erie proceedings, the Martin and Lehigh Valley companies have filed claims similar to those asserted in the Pennsylvania proceeding. Claims have also been filed in both Erie proceedings by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company for the damage to the No. 225 and for indemnity against claims filed in the Pennsylvania proceeding, and by the captain of the No. 225 for loss of personal effects. The three proceedings have not been consolidated, but have been tried together, and will be disposed of in one opinion.

The main controversy is between the Martin Company and the Pennsylvania and Erie companies with respect to the liability of either or both of those companies for the damage to the airplane and airplane parts loaded on the No. 225. It is not disputed that this damage was extremely heavy. The Martin Company seeks to hold the Pennsylvania Company as a carrier under the terms of its bill of lading; it predicates its claim against the Erie Company on the ground of negligence. The railroad companies resist liability principally on the ground either that the accident was inevitable, or was caused'by the act of God.

There was considerable confusion at the trial due to the fact that some witnesses used Daylight Saving Time and others Eastern Standard Time. In order to avoid further confusion in this respect, I shall hereinafter use only Daylight Saving Time, except in connection with the weather records, and, as to these latter, I shall use Eastern Standard Time followed in parenthesis by the equivalent Daylight Saving Time.

Piers 2 and 3, Bush Docks, are covered piers, 1337 feet long, with solid fill under the decking of each pier extending from the bulkhead to a point about 150 feet from the pier end. The slip is 270 feet wide, and faces northwest; it therefore affords protection to vessels in the slip from any wind except northwest. On September 21, the wind was north until 2:04 P.M. (3:04 D. S. T.) when it shifted to northwest and blew directly into the slip, accompanied by high waves. Shortly after this change in the wind, the two Erie lighters, Nos. 172 and 196, broke from their moorings ánd drifted up the slip.

There is a conflict in the testimony regarding the location of the Erie lighters prior to their breaking adrift. The witnesses for the Martin Company testified that they were moored outside of another Erie barge in the last or end berth on the south side of Pier 3. The Erie witnesses, on the other hand, placed the lighters outside of the Erie gasoline hoister No. 104, on the south side of Pier 3, about 400 feet in from the pier end; the No. 104 lying broadside to the pier, the No. 196 next to the No. 104, and the No. 172 outside of the No. 196. It is difficult to reconcile all of this conflicting testimony, but I am satisfied [619]*619that the location 400 feet from the end of Pier 3, as testified to by the Erie witnesses, is fairly supported by the evidence. That is where Horan and Callahan, the captains of the Nos. 172 and 196, said the two lighters were when they broke adrift. The location is further supported by the testimony of Seaburg, captain of the Pennsylvania barge No. 485, who said that his boat was in the end berth on the south side of Pier 3, with its outer end about 200 feet from the pier end; it is also supported by the testimony of Heaney, captain of the Erie gas hoister No. 110, who said that the No. 110 was moored on the south side of Pier 3 between the No. 485 and the three Erie boats Nos. 104, 196 and 172. I find, therefore, that at the time the Nos. 172 and 196 broke adrift they were moored outside the No. 104 on the south side of Pier 3, about 400 feet from the pier end.

The Pennsylvania No. 225 is a wooden derrick lighter, 89:4 feet long, and has rake ends. The lighter arrived at Bush Docks on September 19, 1938, at 12:30 P. M., with a cargo consisting of an airplane, airplane parts and automobile parts. The airplane and airplane parts were covered by a bill of lading naming Funch, Edye & Company, Inc1., Java-New York Line, as the consignee, and giving the “Mail or street address of consignee— For purpose of notification only” as “25 Broadway, New York, N. Y.”. The bill of lading contained a provision to the effect that the responsibility of the railroad company would be reduced to that of a warehouseman after the expiration of the free time allowed by the tariffs, and “after notice of the arrival of the property * * * has been duly sent or given”. There was also a provision exempting the railroad company from liability for loss or damage caused by the act of God.

Upon arrival at Bush Docks, the No. 225 was berthed at the bulkhead outside of the four Pennsylvania railroad steel lighters, Nos. 266, 269, 209 and 264; all five lighters were then lying broadside to the bulkhead, with the No. 225 made fast to the No. 264, the fourth boat in the group. Gellert, captain of the No. 225, delivered his documents to a “receiving clerk” on the pier at 1 P. M. on September 19. No notice other than this was given of the arrival of the cargo. On the following day, September 20, the No. 225 was shifted to the south side of Pier 3, where the automobile parts were unloaded'; the lighter was brought back in the early afternoon of the same day to her original berth at the bulkhead, outside of the four steel lighters, where she remained until the accident.

There were in all twenty-two vessels moored in the slip when the Nos. 172 and 196 broke adrift. Of these, five were moored at the bulkhead, ten on the south side of Pier 3, and seven on the north side of Pier 2. During the hurricane, four of the ten vessels on the south side of Pier 3, including the Nos. 172 and 196, broke adrift; one other, the No. 485, parted her lines and sagged down on the No. 110, which was moored farther in towards the bulkhead. On the north side of Pier 2, the S. S. Hertford, a large ship lying bow in near the pier end, broke away from the pier at her stern, and only avoided trouble by letting go her anchors in the center of the slip; just ahead of the S. S. Hertford, and near the middle of the pier, the No. 442 parted her lines but was able to keep from breaking adrift by putting out other lines.

The hurricane of September 21, 1938, was an extremely heavy storm. Practically all of the witnesses agreed that it was the worst storm they had ever seen in New York Harbor. Parry, of the New York Weather Bureau, testified that what made the storm so bad was the combination of the “wind and high seas”; he also said that it was the only storm in which there had been a “storm wave”.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F. Supp. 617, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pennsylvania-r-co-nysd-1942.