Kenny v. Venetian Contracting Co.

60 F.2d 1053, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1407, 1932 A.M.C. 1006
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 31, 1932
DocketNo. 12539
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 1053 (Kenny v. Venetian Contracting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kenny v. Venetian Contracting Co., 60 F.2d 1053, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1407, 1932 A.M.C. 1006 (E.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

INCH, District Judge.

Libelant owned the deck scow Bermudez. On April 34, 1931, she was loaded with approximately 500 cubic yards of sand consigned to the respondent, which was also the owner of the dock at which the scow was to be unloaded.

This sand was placed on the Bermudez at a dock in the Raritan river. A tug then' took her to Perth Amboy, where another tug took her to Newtown Creek, Long Island, and from there to the vicinity of Twenty-Sixth street, East River, arriving at this place on Saturday afternoon April 25, at 2 o’clock. She then lay there until early morning on the following Friday, May 1, when the tug Rugge towed her to the plant of the respondent located on the East River at the foot of Tiffany street, Bronx, N. Y., arriving-there about 10 a. m.

By the usual contract the respondent had. agreed to furnish a safe and suitable dock with sufficient depth of water at which the scow could be so unloaded.

The respondent was both the wharfinger and the consignee. Kenny v. Balbach, etc. (D. C.) 6 F.(2d) 671.

The respondent’s duty was to use ordinary care to see that the berth into which the scow was placed was reasonably safe and free from anything that would be dangerous to the scow, or, at least, give due notice to libelant or the master of the scow of the existence of such dangers so that they might be avoided. Smith v. Burnett, 173 U. S. 430, 19 S. Ct. 442, 43 L. Ed. 756; M. & J. Tracy v. Marks, etc. (C. C. A.) 283 F. 100; C. F. Harms Co. v. Turecamo, etc. (D. C.) 49 F.(2d) 283; The Eastchester (C. C. A.) 20 F.(2d) 357.

The Bermudez was a deck scow, 112 feet long, 33 feet wide, 10 feet sides, with rake bow and stern. She could accommodate more sand but carried substantially a full load. Her master Waden was on board.

Respondent unloaded scows at this dock by means of a crane or digger which operated on a short track running at right angles to the face of the dock. There was no side movement of the crane permitted along the dock. Boats were brought in to a point in front of this crane.

When the tug brought the Bermudez to this dock, her master talked with an employee of the. respondent’s who was present with his helper and the former told the master where to make fast, the helper assisting with the lines. The scow was made fast where he was told to place her, which, apparently, was about in front of the crane.

The master had never been at this dock before. No one told him or libelant of any danger or that he should breast off the scow. It was then about high tide, and he and John Kenny, one of the executors of the estate owning the scow, and who had arrived at the dock about 15 minutes after the scow’s arrival, sounded the bottom and measured the water around the scow and found it to be between 10% and 11 feet in depth.

According to» Kenny if the scow on the ebb tide dropped 6 feet she would be aground, and he accordingly was anxious, and so informed the representative of respondent, to have work commenced as soon as possible so that the scow might be unloaded and lightened when that time came.

Accordingly, shortly thereafter Kenny measured the load of sand, and after this had been done and about 11:45 a. m. he left the place. Kenny says that some one of the Venetian Company helped him measure the load. Ganzi, who testified for the respondent, and who was on the dock when the scow came in, being in charge for the respondent of incoming boats, testified that Kenny measured it with the master of the scow; that, “I told him I would take his word.”

However this may be, after the load had been measured, Kenny left and the master went into his cabin. The scow had arrived and was up to that time in all ways seaworthy and not leaking.

Later, that afternoon, while the master was sitting in his cabin reading he heard a cracking sound, he immediately went down into the hold of the scow, and-there he saw some “stringers coming from the bottom.” He returned to the dock and called the engineer of respondent’s and together they went down and “looked it over.”

Apparently the man referred to by the witness was Ganzi, who testified that: “About half past one the captain came up and told me his scow,had been damaged. I went with him down inside of the scow, he went first with a search-light and I followed. He showed me some split timber on the side. We were down there about 10 minutes. The captain told me he was going to call up his boss.”

There is some dispute as to what happened thereafter, but this much is plain that [1055]*1055the master did g'o up to the office where Ganzi called him a “faker” and said that there was nothing broken. He thereupon left the office and called up the Kennys.

Ganzi, when called by respondent, testified to accompanying the master down into the scow and says all lie saw was some “split timbra’ on the side”; that he told the master that there was “nothing broken”; yet if respondent’s theory is to be believed all the very plain damage shown by the subsequent survey was present as it had, according to respondent, been sustained by the scow before she readied the dock.

The two Kennys, John, whose testimony has previously been referred to, and James, arrived at the plant that same evening and both of them testified that they saw the damage to the hot! om of the scow.

John says that lie saw that the scow had apparently come down on what ho terms a boulder to such an extent that “it broke the stanchion right up and it split the stringer overhead.”

James Kenny testified that he found the stringers “pushed up into the boat about 5 indies, the bottom stringers were split, the stringers on the deck above were pushed up.”

All the eyewitnesses for libelant to this condition of the scow mention this particular form of injury and that it was about 31 feet from the stem of the scow. They also mention the fact that the scow had somewhat of a twist so as to affect the closing of the cabin door and had a list from the dock.

John Kenny then took an axe and went over on to the dock and “cut a notch in the stringpiece opposite this injury to the bottom of the scow,” stating that he “knew that the boulder was about 8 feet out from that stringpiece and about 31 feet from the open hatch of the scow. That he did this for a marker.”

After the scow was loaded and she was taken to drydoc.k for survey which occurred a few days thereafter, all the witnesses seem to agree that about 8 or 10 feet in from the side of the scow there was a diamond-shaped impression which had damaged the bottom of the scow. The experts for the libelant testified that this indicated to them that the scow had rested on something which had pushed up the bottom plank and thus caused the injury.

To he sure there were other scoring and damage found, as might be expected in a scow engaged in this sort of work, but the exact extent of the damage is not at the present time the question to be decided. Whether or not the damage resulting approximately from this cause as claimed has boon exaggerated must be decided later.

The question requiring decision now is whether there was any damage done to li-belant’s scow by reason of a neglect on the part of respondent to use reasonable care in regard to this berth at which it placed the scow.

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Related

Sargent Barge Line v. New York Silk Dyeing Co.
3 F. Supp. 566 (E.D. New York, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 1053, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1407, 1932 A.M.C. 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenny-v-venetian-contracting-co-nyed-1932.