Indian Towing Co. v. Tankship Lyons Creek

187 F. Supp. 774, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4234
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 21, 1960
DocketNo. 2953
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 187 F. Supp. 774 (Indian Towing Co. v. Tankship Lyons Creek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indian Towing Co. v. Tankship Lyons Creek, 187 F. Supp. 774, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4234 (E.D. La. 1960).

Opinion

CHRISTENBERRY, Chief Judge.

The foregoing matter having been tried to the Court without a jury, the Court having heard evidence and the arguments of proctors, and having taken time to consider the matters, hereby makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

Findings of Fact

1. At all material times libelant, Indian Towing Company, Incorporated, was the owner of the Tug Comanche.

2. At all material times, claimant-respondent, Trinidad Corporation, was the owner of the Tankship Lyons Creek.

[775]*7753. The Comanche was a 500-hp, single screw diesel tugboat, having a length of 54 feet and a beam of 17 feet. Her engine is pilothouse controlled.

4. The Lyons Creek is a 6000-hp turbo-electric tankship of the T — 2 class. She is 524 feet in length overall, with a beam of 68 feet.

5. On March 4, 1956, the Comanche departed Baton Rouge, Louisiana, bound downstream in the Mississippi River for New Orleans, en route to Mobile, Alabama. She was pushing a tow consisting of the loaded tank barges KY-17 and KY-18 made up in tandem, stern-to-stern, the KY-18 being the lead barge. Each barge was 195 feet in length, 45 feet in beam, 9 feet in depth and loaded with 9,000 barrels of petroleum products. Each had a freeboard of about two feet amidships and about three feet at the bow.

6. The Mississippi River was then within three days of reaching its peak or “crest”. The current, between 4 and 5 miles an hour, was approaching its maximum force, and traffic lights were in operation at Algiers Point. Visibility was good; an easterly wind of about 15 miles-per-hour prevailed.

7. The Comanche was faced up to the headlog of the KY-18 in the following manner; two parts of 5 inch manila line led from the Comanche’s bow bitts to the stern bitts on each side of the KY-18, serving as “jockey” or safety lines. One part of 1-inch wire cable, with its eye splice on the barge’s stern bitts, led to a winch amidships on each side of the Comanche. In addition, 1-inch wire with its eye splice on the Comanche’s stern bitts led to the port and starboard stern bitts of the KY-18, made taut with ratchets.

8. At approximately 10:15 p. m. on March 4, the Comanche flotilla arrived in the vicinity of Avondale Bend several miles above the Huey P. Long Bridge. The tow was handling well and all towing gear was secure. The Comanche was displaying proper red and green running lights atop her pilothouse and two red lights in a vertical line astern in accordance with the Western River Rules then in effect. The lead barge, KY-17, carried red and green running lights on her port and starboard bow, respectively, and an amber light in the center. These lights were powered by batteries which had been renewed on that very night.

9. As the Comanche emerged from Avondale Bend, favoring the west side of the river, her master, Captain Murrell, who was at the wheel, sighted an up-bound sea-going vessel some two miles below the Huey P. Long Bridge, apparently shaping up to pass beneath the west span of the bridge. Captain Murrell adjusted course to port, toward the middle of the river, and began to shape up to pass beneath the east span of the bridge. He reduced engine speed to half ahead in anticipation of encountering wave wash from the approaching ship.

10. The upbound vessel, which proved to be the Tankship Lyons Creek bound for Norco, Louisiana, in ballast, passed beneath the west span of the bridge at approximately 10:23 p. m.

11. During this time, the Tugboat San Bernard, with a quarterboat in tow, was heading downstream making good a speed of 12 to 14 miles-per-hour over the ground, and was preparing to overtake the Comanehe to port. That vessel was showing white towing lights in a vertical line and red and green running lights on each side of the pilothouse. Her range light was some 22 feet above the water, and her running lights were 15 to 16 feet above the water. The quarterboat, made fast with manila lines on the starboard hip of the San Bernard, had a green light on her starboard bow and an amber light on her port bow about 10 feet above the deck.

12. As the Lyons Creek cleared the west span of the bridge, the Comanche was approximately one and one-eighth miles above the bridge and navigating slightly east of midstream, approximately 500 feet to the eastward of the Lyons Creek’s course line. The San Bernard tow was approximately 250 feet to port and astern of the Comanche.

[776]*77613. The Lyons Creek continued to come on without reducing speed, and at 10:25 p. m., at a point approximately one-half mile above the bridge, she passed the Comanche starboard-to-starboard, less than five hundred feet off, at full ahead.

14. Just after the Lyons Creek passed, the Comanche encountered heavy wave wash and turbulence. Waves washed over the decks of her barges and set up severe stresses on the Comanche’s face wires.

15. As a result of this wave wash action, the Comanche’s starboard towing gear was caused to part, and she lost control of her tow in the swift current. Her master put the engines full astern in an effort to regain control at least sufficient to prevent the flotilla from striking the bridge pier. Sternway could not be gathered in time to make this maneuver effective, however, and the Comanche was swept downstream at an angle toward the abutment of the bridge.

16. Captain Murrell immediately ordered the engineer on watch to alert the crew. He attempted to free the tug from her barges by chopping the port towing line, but was unable to do so in time. The face barge, KY-18, struck the abutment and immediately thereafter, the tug herself struck the pier. The remaining wires and lines parted, and the Comanche rolled over to port and capsized as her barges drifted freely downstream. All four of her crew members leaped into the river, but only the master and mate survived.

17. The Sam Bernard had begun to overtake the Comamche, about 250 feet to port, and the head of her tow was opposite the Comanche’s stern as the Lyons Creek passed the Comanche. Thus, the lookout on the bow of the quarterboat in tow of the San Bernard had a clear view of the river. He saw waves wash over the barges in the Comanche’s tow. He watched them rise and fall in the swells before the turbulence struck the quarterboat causing it to pitch heavily, and the San Bernard to “bounce up and down,” causing her pilot to slow the vessel to half speed in order to protect the manila lines.

18. After passing the Comanche, the San Bernard engines were put full ahead again, and she continued toward the bridge. Her deckhand looked astern around the high superstructure of the quarterboat and saw the running lights of the Comanche’s lead barge, unaware of the Comanche’s difficulty.

19. The master of the Lyons Creek was on the port wing of the bridge at all material times, but did not see either the Comanche or San Bernard tows and could not recall even having looked to starboard in the vicinity of where those flotillas were.

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Bluebook (online)
187 F. Supp. 774, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-towing-co-v-tankship-lyons-creek-laed-1960.