In Re the Complaint of Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc.

683 F. Supp. 577, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3145, 1988 WL 33665
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 8, 1988
DocketCiv. A. 85-2619-LC
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 683 F. Supp. 577 (In Re the Complaint of Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.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 the Complaint of Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc., 683 F. Supp. 577, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3145, 1988 WL 33665 (W.D. La. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

VERON, District Judge.

One foggy morning in the Gulf of Mexico, the GULF QUEEN, a wooden vessel chartered for pleasure fishing, was at her final anchor before returning to shore when a crew boat bore down on her out of the fog and sheared off her stern, sinking the vessel, leaving one passenger missing and presumed dead and injuring others. Several actions arose as a result of the allision. A number of individuals (“claimants”) reside in the Eastern District of Texas and have filed maritime tort claims in the Beaumont Division thereof. 1 Subsequently, owners and charterers of the crew boat M/V ALAN McCALL (“complainants”) instituted these proceedings on September 9, 1985 under the Limitation of Liability Act. 2 The customary monition and injunction have issued, and the Beaumont suits are in abeyance pending the result herein. This court’s summary judgment denying limitation of liability was reversed on appeal 3 , and the matter was tried to the court sitting in admiralty on January 28, 1988.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

At the operative time the M/V ALAN McCALL was time chartered to Transco Exploration Company under which agreement the owner, Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc., and N.F. McCall Crews, Inc., who employed the crew members, collectively agreed to provide vessels to Transco complete with equipment and crews. Both Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc. and N.F. McCall Crews, Inc. were owned by Norman F. McCall and his wife. McCall’s port captain, James Bosarge (whose payroll employer was N.F. McCall, Inc.) performed

*579 supervisory work for both companies, including hiring and firing of crews. Whatever was known to the principals or agents of one company was known to the principals and agents of the other insofar as this case is concerned. The time charter agreement refers to the McCall companies collectively as “Owner”, and although there is no language clearly establishing N.F. McCall Crews, Inc. as a demise charterer, that corporation was in effect a demise charterer or part of a joint venture with the registered owner providing an equipped and manned vessel to Transco, and will for purposes of this opinion be deemed an “owner” entitled to seek limitation of liability under 46 U.S.C.App. §§ 183 and 186.

No evidence was presented at trial of negligence on the part of any of the other complainants. Not all were “owners” under the Limitation Act, and none, other than N.F. McCall Crews, Inc. and Cameron Boat Rentals, Inc., remain in the case.

The M/V ALAN McCALL is a 110 foot crew boat of approximately 100 tons. It is powered by four diesel engines at 2,040 combined horsepower and travels at full speed ahead at about eighteen knots. When all four engines are thrown into full reverse from full speed ahead, its stopping distance is a little over one eighth of a nautical mile. This maneuvering characteristic was not posted on board and was in fact unknown until experiments were conducted after the accident.

On the morning of March 9, 1985 the 50 foot wood hulled fishing vessel GULF QUEEN was anchored while passengers fished in the Gulf of Mexico. The location was 50 to 55 miles off the coast of Louisiana in West Cameron Block 151. Visibility that morning was impaired by fog that was intermittent or “patchy”. The denser patches of fog reduced visibility to as low as 100 yards, while visibility increased intermittently to 500 yards at best, or one-fourth of a nautical mile.

The crew operating the ALAN McCALL at the time consisted of Captain Eugene Trahan, pilot, and Carl Fletcher, deck hand. A second crew was off duty and below deck sleeping. Captain Trahan had been proceeding on a regularly-travelled route from the Transco dock toward a particular drilling rig, but while en route was diverted via radio to go to a different rig to get a machinery part. This diversion involved travel over an area which was not set aside for vessel traffic.

Due to the fog conditions Captain Trahan assigned deck hand Fletcher to stand as lookout in the wheelhouse, and moved his radar down from twelve mile range alternating between the three and six mile ranges. He did not sound fog signals (neither did the GULF QUEEN) nor did he reduce his speed, but continued at full speed ahead or eighteen knots. Captain Trahan believed at the time, erroneously, that radar would detect a wooden vessel the size of the GULF QUEEN.

It was the policy of N.F. McCall Crews, Inc. to operate the ALAN McCALL with one captain and one deck hand on duty. It was also company policy for the deck hand on duty to go down to check the engine room. That morning Fletcher’s checks of the engine room averaged one three-to-five minute absence from the wheelhouse per hour, although company policy was for more frequent checks. There was no policy established or communicated by the company regarding procedures where the deck hand who was expected to make engine room checks would be called upon for lookout duty during conditions of restricted visibility, such as stopping the vessel during engine room checks or calling on relief lookout from the off-duty crew. Consequently the vessel running “full out” in fog without fog signals also ran minus a lookout during engine room checks. Trahan’s policy was simply to have Fletcher inform him each time he left the lookout post. Moments before the allision, however, Fletcher failed to communicate effectively that he was going below. Had Trahan known that Fletcher was below, he would not have slowed down. He would have looked up from the radar hood more frequently, alternating about four or five seconds between radar and window. At the time of the occurrence the radar was on the six mile range.

*580 Captain Trahan first saw the GULF QUEEN upon looking up from the radar when she was a mere sixty to eighty yards away. He jumped up and grabbed the throttles of the two forward engines and pulled them back. One engine died and the other went into reverse. He was unable to pull back the other two engines before impact.

Meanwhile Captain Jeptha Turner of the GULF QUEEN first noticed the ALAN McCALL on radar when the latter was two and three-quarters miles away. Although a bearings check revealed the vessel was headed into his vicinity at around twenty knots he did not take action at that time but continued to watch the radar. At one mile he heard the ALAN McCALL’s engines, and as the vessel sounded large and did not turn away, he began to pull anchor. At one-quarter mile the ALAN McCALL broke fog and Captain Turner began to sound fog signals. The anchor was snagged on rocks and Captain Turner engaged the GULF QUEEN’s engines in an attempt to run over the anchor and break the trip line. The trip line did not break. Now able to see the direction of the ALAN McCALL, Captain Turner placed the rudder hard left to swing her to port and out of the crew boat’s path. Shortly before impact deck hand Ken Knowles cut the anchor line per Captain Turner’s instructions. At about 11:30 A.M., the ALAN McCALL struck the port side of the GULF QUEEN at a forty-five degree angle, shearing off her stern eight feet forward of the transom.

Captain Eugene Trahan was twenty-three years old at the time and held a one hundred-ton ocean operator’s license.

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Bluebook (online)
683 F. Supp. 577, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3145, 1988 WL 33665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-complaint-of-cameron-boat-rentals-inc-lawd-1988.