Luhr Bros. v. Crystal Shipowning, PTE Ltd.

325 F.3d 681, 2003 WL 1389091
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 2003
Docket01-41085
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 325 F.3d 681 (Luhr Bros. v. Crystal Shipowning, PTE Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luhr Bros. v. Crystal Shipowning, PTE Ltd., 325 F.3d 681, 2003 WL 1389091 (5th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge:

Luhr Bros. Inc. (“Luhr”) brought this civil and maritime action seeking exoneration from liability for property damage and loss arising from the M/V EAGLE AURIGA (“EAGLE”) colliding into a drydock on the Sabine-Neches Waterway in August 1998. The drydock’s owner, Vessel Repair, Inc., suffered damages that have been stipulated at $475,000. The EAGLE, owned by Crystal Shipowning PTE. Ltd. (“Crystal”) also sustained $40,000 in stipulated damages. Luhr operated the push-boat, M/V VICKIE (“VICKIE”). Crystal alleges that the VICKIE embarrassed the navigation of the EAGLE resulting in an allision. Luhr alleges that the trial court 1 clearly erred in finding the VICKIE at fault for the allision. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

A. The Stipulated Facts

The waterway in question runs northeast to southwest between the Port of Port Arthur and the Neches River. Northeast from Port Arthur, beacons 54 and 56 mark progress toward the Neches River. Up-channel from the beacons on the west bank is the R&R Marine Maintenance (“R&R”) facility. Approximately one quarter mile north of the R&R facility is the Vessel Repair drydock which is also on the west bank. At the time of the incident, the *683 dredge LOUISIANA was working about a mile above the drydock on the east bank. Upchannel from the drydock is the Atlantic Shipper wharf, the Pabtex coke dock, and an area called North 40 which are all on the west bank.

On the morning of August 24, 1998, the VICKIE and its tow were operating in the Sabine-Neches Waterway Canal, en route from the lower Mississippi River to Trinity Bay, Texas. Overall, the VICKIE and its tow are approximately 685 feet long and 70 feet wide. That same morning, the EAGLE, a tank ship, was the second of a convoy of three loaded tank ships headed from the Sabine Sea Buoy to the ship berths. The EAGLE was proceeding behind the BERYL and ahead of the ALDEBARAN. At the time of the accident K.I. Selinidis (“Selinidis”) was the conning pilot on the EAGLE and James White (‘White”) was the captain of the VICKIE. Both Selinidis and White were properly licensed.

Before the accident, the MARINE DU-VAL (“DUVAL”) came to a berth at the R&R facility which is south of the drydock. Two tugboats, the HERMES and SPARTAN, were pushing perpendicular against the starboard side of the DUVAL to hold it in place portside to the R&R. As the DUVAL was berthing at the R&R, the VICKIE and the EAGLE met and passed one another abeam of the two harbor tugs and the DUVAL. Shortly thereafter, the EAGLE’s bow came into physical contact with the drydock, resulting in damage to the EAGLE and the drydock. The VICKIE did not come into physical contact with anything.

B. The Testimony before the Magistrate Judge

Captain White and Captain Selinidis testified that before the allision, the EAGLE was outbound and had proceeded midway between beacons 54 and 56 when it first saw the VICKIE. At that point, the VICKIE was traveling inbound and was halfway between North 40 and the coke dock coming toward the EAGLE. Most of the time, the EAGLE and the VICKIE proceeded on, or near, the centerline of the channel. The EAGLE and the VICKIE had slowed for other obstacles in the channel before increasing to full speed. When the EAGLE was in the vicinity of beacon 54, it became aware of the VICKIE which was between North 40 and the coke dock. White testified that it was physically possible to stop the VICKIE at the coke dock at this time. By the time the EAGLE communicated with the VICKIE, the EAGLE had passed beacon 56. At that time, the EAGLE maintained an average ground speed of 9.6 miles per hour. Just before the allision, the EAGLE began corrective maneuvers for the bank suction and shear in the vicinity of the R&R.

Selinidis testified that he had been trying to raise the VICKIE by radio but received no response. He testified that the captain of the first ship in the convoy, the BERYL, came on the radio and said that the VICKIE would not respond and was going to cause an accident. According to Selinidis, immediately thereafter, White, the captain of the VICKIE, came on and said that he would pass the DUVAL and meet Selinidis and the EAGLE “in one whistle,” meaning that the two vessels would pass port-to-port. White reportedly told Selinidis that he had been “running slow” but would “hook it up” and get past the DUVAL before Selinidis reached that point. Selinidis testified that he “pleaded” with White not to speed up but to go slow until the EAGLE cleared the DUVAL. Selinidis testified that he told White that the EAGLE was on “dead slow” speed and could not go any slower, and he asked White to let the EAGLE clear the DU-VAL. Selinidis feared that if White tried to clear the DUVAL, the wheel wash from *684 the tugs, pushing perpendicular on the DUVAL, would push the VICKIE in front of the EAGLE.

White testified that the VICKIE passed the BERYL, the first ship in the convoy without incident at the coke dock. White explained that before he reached the coke dock, he could see the EAGLE “way down the channel.” He then passed two other inbound tugs. According to White, after he passed the BERYL, he began trying to raise the EAGLE on the radio but he received no response. White was traveling at between seven and eight miles per hour and slowed down as he was coming to Vessel Repair. White testified that when the VICKIE was at Vessel Repair, he spoke with the pilot of the EAGLE, who told him that the EAGLE was “running slow.” According to Wdiite, they agreed that the VICKIE would speed up to pass the DUVAL at the R&R and that they would pass each other on one whistle. White testified that Selinidis did not ask him to stop or slow down.

White increased his throttle to full and positioned the VICKIE as far to starboard as possible, towards the tugs that were pushing the DUVAL. As White passed the second tug, he met the EAGLE. The vessels were then abeam of the DUVAL at the R&R. White testified that his vessel stayed on his side of the channel and did not cross the centerline but that the EAGLE was on White’s side of the channel. White passed the EAGLE without hitting it.

Selinidis testified that the VICKIE was over the centerline of the channel, and he had to take evasive action by forcing the ship to starboard so that the VICKIE could pass on his port side and avoid a collision. The EAGLE then experienced a sheer to port. Selinidis increased to full, tried to put the engines full astern, made a hard starboard rudder at the last minute and then ordered the anchors dropped. Selinidis’s efforts were unsuccessful, and the allision occurred with the Vessel Repair drydock on the EAGLE’s port side.

II. Standard of Review

We review legal conclusions and mixed questions of law and fact following a bench trial de novo. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Best Oilfield Servs., 48 F.3d 913, 915 (5th Cir.1995).

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

Related

Fontenot v. McCall's Boat Rentals, Inc.
227 F. App'x 397 (Fifth Circuit, 2007)
In Re Luhr Brothers Inc.
325 F.3d 681 (Fifth Circuit, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
325 F.3d 681, 2003 WL 1389091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luhr-bros-v-crystal-shipowning-pte-ltd-ca5-2003.