Lancashire Shipping Co. v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co.

43 F.2d 750, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356, 1930 A.M.C. 1494
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1930
DocketNos. 10483, 11022, 10522, 10479
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 750 (Lancashire Shipping Co. v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair 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
Lancashire Shipping Co. v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co., 43 F.2d 750, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356, 1930 A.M.C. 1494 (E.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

The four above-entitled suits were on stipulation tried together, and are brought to recover damages caused by an explosion on board the steamship Egremont Castle, as follows:

The first suit is brought by the owner of the steamship Egremont Castle to recover its damages; the second by the Tokio Marine & Fire Insurance Company, Limited, under subrogation to recover for general average charges against the Takata shipment; the third, by the Standard Oil Company to recover damages to its shipment of oil and naphtha; the fourth, by the Standard Transportation Company to recover for damages to its barge Soeony No. 251.

Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company is the respondent in each suit, and in the second above-entitled suit the Lancashire Shipping Company, Limited, was on the petition of the respondent Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company impleaded under the Fifty-Sixth Rule in Admiralty.

On the day in question .the respondent, Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company, under contract with the owner thereof, Lancashire Shipping Company, Limited, the libelant in the first above-entitled suit, was engaged in making repairs on the steamship Egremont Castle.

The vessel had left the yard of the respondent, Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company, and was lying at Pier 37, Atlantic Dock, on the afternoon of June 24, 1924, and agents or servants of the respondent were performing the work of burning a hole, with an toxy-aeetylene torch, between the after peak tank and the tunnel recess, for the purpose of installing a drain cock from the after peak tank into the tunnel recess.

The installation of the drain cock aforesaid had been ordered by Mr. Fairbairn, of Espíen Sons & MoNaught, under whose inspection and supervision the contract was being performed, and authorized by Mr. Komp, the representative of the respondent, the installation of said cock being item 40 of extra work, not included in the original [752]*752contract; that being the method pursued as to extra work on the vessel.

The vessel, to respondent’s knowledge, had already loaded eases of gasoline, which were stowed in the lower No. 4 hold, and at the time of the first explosion was engaged in loading eases of naphtha in No. 4 ’tween decks from barge Soeony No. 251, which was lying alongside No. 6 hatch.

There was other cargo aboard the vessel consisting of machinery owned by Takata Company, and also a shipment of wax and oil in drums.

The vessel had four holds and ’tween decks and six hatches.

About 3:10 o’clock p. m. on June 24,1924, an explosion occurred in the after part of the vessel, and two men, dunnage, a truck, and blind beams in the ’tween deck hatch came up from the No. 6 hatch.

Other explosions and fire occurred causing damage to said vessel and cargo.

The fact that there was an explosion at the time in question is not denied, but that fact alone would not be sufficient to warrant a recovery against Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company.

To sustain a recovery against the respondent in each suit, Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company, it must be shown that negligence of the Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company was the proximate cause of the explosion.

The libelants contend that the explosion occurred as a result of a spark, negligently caused by respondent’s agents or servants in using an acetylene torch in burning a hole through from the inside of the after peak tank into the tunnel recess, falling into the tunnel well where naphtha or gasoline and naphtha or gasoline vapor would find their way through a small hole or holes from the No. 4 hold into the tunnel recess, and causing a flash which was transmitted back through the said small hole into No. 4 hold, where the concentration of the vapor was such that an explosion of large proportions occurred in lower hold No. 4, causing the damage, of which complaint is made in each of the several suits.

The respondent, Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company, contends that they were not guilty of negligence, and that the explosion was not caused by such a spark from the acetylene torch used by its agent or servant^ but that the explosion was caused in the No. 4 ’tween decks and not in the No. 4 lower hold, by the Lancashire Shipping Company, Limited, its agents or servants, carelessly and negligently permitting a sling of eases to fall into the hold of the steamship Egremont Castle, or in carelessly and negligently causing to be used or using a torch aboard the steamship Egremont Castle.

The evidence is conflicting.

That the Egremont Castle was loading naphtha in cases in. the No. 4 ’tween deck, No. 6 hatch, from a lighter alongside at the time of the first explosion, and that an agent or servant of the respondent, Morse Dry Dock & Repair Company, was using an acetylene torch in burning a hole from the after peak tank to the tunnel recess, at the time of the first explosion, cannot be denied.

The steamship Egremont Castle was flying a red flag as a warning that she was loading an explosive cargo, and no one on the ship was smoking at the time.

But two possible causes for the first explosion have been mentioned, viz., a spark from the acetylene torch, or the falling of a sling of cases.

If the first explosion was caused by the spark from the acetylene torch, then it must have occurred in the No. 4 lower hold.

If the first explosion resulted from the falling of a sling of cases, then it must have occurred in the No. 4 ’tween decks.

At the time of the explosion there were eleven men in the No. 4 ’tween decks, Keller, a Standard Oil inspector, Murphy, the hatch boss, and nine stevedores. The Standard Oil inspector and four stevedores were killed in the disaster. Egenes (known as Olsen), one of the stevedores, died in the hospital shortly after the explosion, and another stevedore, Bloomquist, died prior to the trial. Murphy, the hatch foreman, Louis Larsen, John Young, and Jerry O’Brien, stevedores, who were in the No. 4 ’tween decks, were witnesses at the trial.

From the fact that they are stilLalive, as well as from their testimony and that of the-witnesses who were on deck, John Stange (referred to as John Strang), relief gangway-man, Paul Spillane, extra man, William. Fuerst, slingman, Tito Suo (known as Iron-head), gangwayman, John Lombardo, winch-man, Captain Cann, and Chief Officer Williams, I am convinced that on the first explosion two men, wood, trucks, and cases, and blind beams in the ’tween deck hatch, weighing about 850 pounds each, came up above the deck and at least one was found on deck, and that the first explosion occurred [753]*753in the lower No. 4 hold and not in the ’tween decks.

This opinion was greatly strengthened by the testimony of the witness John Stange, an intelligent and observant man, who certainly was not laboring under excitement but performed a manly and courageous part by remaining in a place of danger and continuing to play a stream of water from a hose on the ladder, so as to enable any one who might be alive to find their way by ladder to the deck, and whose opportunity for observation was of the best.

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43 F.2d 750, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1356, 1930 A.M.C. 1494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lancashire-shipping-co-v-morse-dry-dock-repair-co-nyed-1930.