Laeisz v. Panama Canal Co.

373 F. Supp. 263, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9194
CourtDistrict Court, Canal Zone
DecidedApril 1, 1974
DocketCiv. No. 3222
StatusPublished

This text of 373 F. Supp. 263 (Laeisz v. Panama Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, Canal Zone primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laeisz v. Panama Canal Co., 373 F. Supp. 263, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9194 (canalzoned 1974).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

CROWE, District Judge.

This is a matter in admiralty begun by filing a Complaint in Personam on March 13, 1972 in the Cristobal Division of this court.

The first three findings are taken verbatim from the Pretrial Order.

1. This action arises from the grounding of the motor vessel PUNA in the vicinity of buoy #70, Mamei Curve, in the Panama Canal, at approximately [264]*2642230 hours on March 16, 1969, during the vessel’s northbound transit of the waterway. The cause of the accident was the application of port rudder to the vessel when her position in the channel required starboard rudder. Plaintiff contends that this port rudder was ordered by the Panama Canal pilot, in charge of the navigation and movement of the PUNA. Defendant contends that the pilot gave the correct — i. e., starboard — rudder order but the same was improperly executed by the PUNA’s quartermaster, who put the helm to port.

2. Captain J. A. Long was the Panama Canal pilot assigned to the PUNA on March 16, 1969. He was so assigned pursuant to 35 CFR 105.1 and was, at all times material hereto, in charge of her navigation and movement. Captain Long was, and still is, an employee of defendant Panama Canal Company. (Since the preparation of the pretrial order it has been learned that Captain Long is no longer employed by defendant.)

At all times material hereto, the Panama Canal Company was, and still is, a wholly-owned corporate agency of the Government of the United States, incorporated by the Panama Canal Company Act of June 29, 1948 (c. 706, sec. 2, 62 Stat. 1076), as amended by the Act of September 26, 1950 (c. 1049, sec. 5 et seq., 64 Stat. 1041). The incorporation statute now is contained in Title 2, Canal Zone Code, sections 61-75 and 121-123, 76A Stat. 8-15. The Panama Canal Company was, and still is, authorized by statute to maintain and operate the Panama Canal and its approaches, including the area in which the said grounding occurred, and to maintain and operate facilities and appurtenances necessary and appropriate for the accomplishment of the purposes of its corporate charter and to take such action as is necessary and appropriate to carry out the powers specifically conferred upon it. 2 C.Z.C. § 66(a)(1), (4) and (7), 76A Stat. 11. The Panama Canal Company is expressly authorized to sue and be sued in its own name. 2 C.Z.C. § 65(a)(3), 76A Stat. 11. The liability of the Panama Canal Company in this cause, if any be found, is governed by the provisions of 2 C.Z.C. §§ 292, 293, 76A Stat. 23.

3. The motor vessel PUNA is a single screw, cargo vessel of German registry with a gross tonnage of 5,434.71 and a net tonnage of 2,896.94. She is-of an overall length of 465.26 feet and a beam of 59.15 feet. Her mean authorized tropical fresh water draft is 24 feet, 9% inches. The PUNA was built in Hamburg, Germany by Deutsche Werft, A. G. At all times material hereto, the PUNA was owned and operated by plaintiff F. Laeisz, the present address of which is Hamburg, Germany. On the day of the accident the vessel was drawing 19 feet forward and 22.25 feet aft, and was bound from Puerto Limón to Hamburg with Captain Heinz Paulsen as her master.

4. Pilot J. A. Long had been a Panama Canal pilot for 17 months and was the holder of an unlimited master’s license and a Panama Canal license to pilot ships limited to 526 feet in length. The master of the PUNA, Captain Heinz Paulsen, and the third officer, Martin Reimer, were licensed officers who had wide sea experience and had passed through the Panama Canal on numerous occasions. Johannes Petrolino, the quartermaster, was an able-bodied seaman of Germany and had traversed the Canal some 30 times, sometimes as quartermaster on the wheel, and other times not. Ulrich Dobzin was the ordinary seaman on watch.

5. On March 16, 1969, the PUNA began a northbound transit of the Panama Canal. The transit was normal and without incident until the PUNA was in Gamboa Reach. Upon entering that reach Pilot Long gave orders to line the vessel up on the green northbound range lights and directed the quartermaster to “steady” on those ranges. As the vessel neared the northern end of the reach, Pilot Long noticed that the vessel was no longer aligned with the ranges but instead was getting close to the red buoys on the wrong side of the channel. [265]*265He informed the third mate (who was on watch on the bridge) of this fact and then gave rudder orders until the ship was again “on the ranges”. It appeared from this incident that the helmsman, Johannes Petrolino, was confused and unable to properly steer the vessel toward the range lights. Pilot Long then instructed the third mate to tell Petrolino in German to disregard the lights and to steer a compass course.

6. The PUNA then rounded into Mamei Curve. Her engines were on full ahead (maneuvering) and her speed was estimated by both the pilot and the master to be about 15 knots, and was within the prescribed speed limit for that area of the Canal. See 35 CFR 111.162(a). The pilot was at that time standing on the starboard wing of the bridge because visibility forward was better from that position than it was from the wheelhouse. The master was also on the starboard bridge wing, and he was talking to a woman passenger who had descended from the upper bridge where passengers were permitted and was en-route to the area below.

7. When the PUNA was between buoys 75 and 73, Pilot Long, in accordance with his usual practice, determined to begin the starboard turn into San Pablo Reach.

8. At this point the confusion begins. Pilot Long testifies that speaking in English he ordered the rudder put “starboard 10”. Shortly thereafter he noticed the ship begin to swing not to starboard but to port and ran immediately into the wheelhouse ' and looked at the rudder angle indicator. He says that the wheel had been put to port rather than to starboard and he says he ordered again “starboard 10”. Recalling the prior incident in Gamboa Reach involving helmsman Petrolino, where there was a misunderstanding, Pilot Long testified that he called to the mate on watch and said, “He has port 10; I want starboard 10.” The pilot ran back to the bridge wing to view the vessel’s heading and swing, leaving the mate talking to the helmsman in German. Pilot Long saw that the vessel was continuing to swing to port at an even faster rate and he raced back into the wheelhouse and observed that the rudder had been placed hard to port. He testified that he then yelled to the mate and helmsman, “I don’t want hard to port, I said starboard 10”, and in an effort to check the vessel’s accelerating swing to port he ordered “hard starboard” and he stayed there to make sure the vessel went to starboard. By this time the vessel was west of the center line and nearing' the west prism line of the channel and, although the vessel was beginning to swing back to starboard, Pilot Long realized the vessel could not clear the west bank and he ordered the vessel “full astern”. In spite of the “full astern” order, approximately one minute later the PUNA grounded outside of the channel in close proximity to buoy 70.

9. The crew of the PUNA tell a different story. The master testified that he noticed the vessel start to swing to port and he followed the pilot into the wheelhouse and heard the pilot order “more port”.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 F. Supp. 263, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laeisz-v-panama-canal-co-canalzoned-1974.