Lakewood S. S. Co. v. Superior Water, Light & Power Co.

88 F.2d 895, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3271, 1937 A.M.C. 784
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1937
DocketNo. 6006
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 F.2d 895 (Lakewood S. S. Co. v. Superior Water, Light & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakewood S. S. Co. v. Superior Water, Light & Power Co., 88 F.2d 895, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3271, 1937 A.M.C. 784 (7th Cir. 1937).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

The district court made the following findings:

“1. The Bay of Superior is * * * situated between the Wisconsin shore * * * and a point of land in * * * Minnesota known as Minnesota Point * * * ; the distance across the Bay * * * is approximately 4,000 feet; [896]*896* * * a navigable channel of the average width of 400 feet and a water depth of 27 feet, * * * extends through the Bay near the Wisconsin shore; a number of industries are located * * * on the Wisconsin side, including grain elevators ‘M’ * * * ; the elevators are so located on the Bay, and lake vessels of all sizes up to 60Ó feet in length very frequently dock in appropriate channels in the Bay provided for that purpose, so that cargoes of grain can be loaded and unloaded from * * * said elevators; * * *.

“2. The conditions above described existed on May 13, 1934 and for a great many years before that time; plaintiff * * * provided the water supply for * * * City of Superior * * * deriving such supply from Lake Superior by means of a water main, or intake pipe, extending from Minnesota Point across the Bay of Superior to the Wisconsin shore where it maintained a pumping station, * * * from which the water supply was distributed * * * (to) the City of Superior.

“3. Plaintiff used in connection with its water system a submarine electric power cable which also extended from Minnesota Point to the * * * pumping station on the Wisconsin side; plaintiff’s water main * * * was laid * * * in a trench beneath the bottom of the Bay and below low water mark * * * ; the said intake pipe was laid and constructed in the year 1891 and prior to the Act of Congress of March 3, 1889 (1899) [30 Stat. 1121], which provided that under certain conditions a permit from the War Department was required for the placing of similar structures * * *, and plaintiff’s water main was maintained in the same position where it was originally, located in 1891 until after May 13, 1934, * * * the date * * * of the accident which gave rise to this litigation; plaintiff’s submarine power cable was constructed and laid in a trench beneath the bottom of the Bay * * * in accordance with a permit from the War Department and was being so maintained at the time of the * * * accident * * *.

“4. Neither the water main nor the submarine cable .* * * were obstructions to navigation in the Channel.

“5. The Steamer Thomas Britt was a large (steel) freight steam vessel 409 feet in length * * * ; it was owned and operated by the defendant, Lakewood Steamship Company, * * * ; on May 13, 1934, around 2:00 o’clock in the afternoon, said steamer under the command * * * of its master, George A. Montgomery, was being navigated under its own steam * * * down the Channel * * * toward Elevator ‘M’ for the purpose of taking on part of a carload of grain; the vessel was light, * * * ; it was drawing about 3 feet of water forward and about 13 feet aft; on its way toward the elevator and before arriving there, upon the orders of the master of the vessel, who was in the pilot house, the starboard forward anchor was let go and dragged from that point a considerable distance before it reached plaintiff’s water main and submarine cable, breaking the cable which was an armored 3-inch cable, breaking and tearing away sections of the water main and continuing further on for a distance of 200 to 250 feet, where the anchor grabbed and caught the anchor chain of the Enterprise dredge which was * * * dredging * * * ; the said anchor continued to drag and said ship to move forward, breaking and tearing away the anchor chain of said dredge; the weather during the afternoon of said day up to and including the time of said accident was clear and the sun was shining; there was a light breeze, but it was comparatively calm.

“6. A warning sign was maintained by the plaintiff on * * * Barker Island, which land * * * 'was a mere projection of the Wisconsin shore; that said sign was a board structure 40.6 feet wide * * * by 10.8 feet high * * * ; the said sign faced towards the Channel and the intake pipe and cable; the board composing said sign was painted white and lettering thereon painted black; the letters were very large and conspicuous, reading ‘Water Main and Cable Crossing — Do Not Drag Anchor.’ The sign * * * was so placed * * * that (it was) * * * in * * * view of a vessel navigating the Channel, as the Steamer Britt was, for * * * several miles before arriving at * * * the sign, intake pipe and cable; * * * (it) was so located * * * as to constitute'adequate notice and warning to vessels navigating the Channel of the existence and approximate location of plaintiff’s water main and submarine cable ; * * * on Minnesota Point there was a wide opening through the trees and woods that were growing * * * in a diagonal line with the sign; this opening through the woods indicated the place where the water main and cable were located on the [897]*897shore of the Minnesota side * * * as extending from the warning sign on the Wisconsin side.

“7. George A. Montgomery, master of the Steamer * * * had an experience of sailing * * * of about 45 seasons and held a master’s license * * * for 33 years; he had sailed the Superior Bay as master * * * during practically every season of his 33 years as master; he was entirely familiar with the Superior Channel and with the plaintiff’s warning sign as located * * * and he was familiar with the opening or clearing through the woods on the Minnesota side * * * as indicating that the plaintiff’s pipe and submarine cable extended * * * through said opening, continuing from the Wisconsin shore * * * in the vicinity of the * * * warning sign.

“8. As the Thomas Britt approached the place where plaintiff’s water main and cable were located, 'the master of the vessel was in the pilot house (in command of) the vessel * * * ; the pilot house is well to the forward end of the ship.

“9. The master, * * * while said vessel was approaching the plaintiff’s water main and cable, failed to exercise ordinary care in observing the location of plaintiff’s water main and cable with respect to the position of said vessel as moving in the Channel, * * *.

“10. * * * There was ample space in the Channel after a ship had safely passed plaintiff’s water main and cable to make such maneuvers of the vessel as were necessary to safely * * * dock the same at Elevator ‘M’, and that had the master of said vessel exercised ordinary care in the management thereof he would not have dropped said anchor until after the vessel had safely passed plaintiff’s water main and cable, * * *.

“11. That there was no want of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff with respect to the location, maintenance or the marking of the location of its water main and cable, or otherwise, which in any manner caused or contributed to the accident or damage.”

In support of its position appellant argues: (a) Appellee’s water main was constructed without permit from the Secretary of War and in violation of the Acts of Congress and the statutes of Wisconsin, (b) It was an obstruction to navigation because a vessel is entitled to navigate on all the water in Superior Bay. (c) The water main was an illegal obstruction to navigation and therefore constituted a public nuisance. Appellee carried the burden, which it did not meet, of proving a permit from the Secretary of War. (d) Appellee was negligent in marking only the “approximate location” of its obstruction, when its plain duty was to mark the precise location.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 F.2d 895, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3271, 1937 A.M.C. 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakewood-s-s-co-v-superior-water-light-power-co-ca7-1937.