Maryland v. Spedden Shipbuilding Co.

14 F. Supp. 193
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedApril 14, 1936
DocketNo. 2028
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 193 (Maryland v. Spedden Shipbuilding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland v. Spedden Shipbuilding Co., 14 F. Supp. 193 (D. Md. 1936).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

This case presents a libel in personam for damages by fire to the steamship “Dupont” belonging to the State of Maryland. The respondent is the Spedden Shipbuilding Company of Baltimore, which, at the time of the fire on March 17, 1934, was engaged under written contract with the State in performing certain work on the boat. At the time of the fire the boat was on the Marine Railway in the shipyards of the respondent, but the interior of the boat was in charge of employes of the State and not of the respondent. The work that was being done by the Spedden Company was the placing and welding of certain steel doubler plates on the starboard and port sides of the boat near the water line. The amount of damage done by the fire is shown to have been $24,378.24, and the libellant claims this amount with accumulated interest aggregating in all $27,046.55. The State has collected all of its loss with the exception of $250 (not covered by the policy! from the Federal Insurance Company, for whose benefit by subrogation the suit is thus principally brought.

The work to be done was covered by a simple contract in the form of a letter dated March 8, 1934, from the president of the Spedden Company to the Conservation Department of the State of Maryland, Mr. Swepson Earle, Commissioner. In substance it recited an agreement on the part of the Spedden Company for $3,800, to “fit y¿' doubling plate over inside strake on water line * * * on each side for a distance of 52 feet” [194]*194at designated places along the water line; same to be electric welded. “Plates to be formed to present shape of hull and to have red lead freely used between plates and then drawn up hard before welding is commenced.” The agreement was evidently verbally accepted by the State and a few days later the boat was placed on the marine railway and the work of welding the doubler plates, which had previously been fitted to the hull of the boat on both sides, was begun on Thursday, March 15, continued throughout Friday the 16th, and was being further continued on Saturday, March 17th when, a little after ten o’clock in the morning, the fire was first discovered.

It should be said that the Conservation Department of the State of Maryland, whose activities it is well known relate very largely to the fish, crab and oyster industries in the Chesapeake Bay, has two boats, one the Dupont, and the other the McLean. Customarily the Dupont is used in summer and the McLean in winter. During the winter season the Dupont is customarily moored at the Spedden plant and it had been so moored during the winter season of 1933-34 prior to the repair work above mentioned. Shortly before ttndertaking the repairs it was discovered that a. leak had developed in the forward portion of the hull caused probably by the rather severe ice of that season which occasioned the necessity for certain repairs. As a result of determination to make these, it was also decided to add the doubler plates as covered by the contract mentioned. The repairs caused by the damage by ice were also apparently going forward at the same time and were covered by a separate contract which, however, is in nowise involved in this case. For some time prior to the fire of March 17, the steamer McLean had also been anchored temporarily at least near the Dupont; and the general custom was that one crew served both steamers, the main force, of course, being on the McLean, with some few members of the crew thereof giving necessary attention to the Dupont. One or more members of the crew slept at night on the Dupont to give necessary watchman service. Captain A. S. Creighton was in general charge of both boats. It appears that he was absent, however, from both boats at the time of the fire and for some few days prior thereto. He had delegated direct supervision over the Dupont to Capt. Samuel F. Creighton who was also absent at the time of the fire, having left Baltimore on Thursday to spend the week-end at his home on the Eastern Shore. Before leaving he had notified the Second Officer of the joint crew of the two boats, one Guy Andrews, to give necessary supervisory attention to the Dupont. The electric welding of the plates was, of course, being done on the outside of the steamer and the interior of the steamer was under the charge and control of the State employes at the time of the fire. On the Friday afternoon prior to the fire, Mr. Andrews had been personally present on the Dupont giving it supervisory attention and when he left about 4 p. m., while the welding work was still in progress on the outside, he instructed a seaman, one Dawson, to remain in the after cabin near' where the welding work was being done on the starboard side until the welders ceased work for the day. Andrews then went to the McLean for his supper and when the welders quit work for the day about five o’clock, Dawson also left the steamer, one Phillips, however, employed as an assistant machinist, staying on board for the night as watchman. It appears that Andrews had expected to resume personal supervision of the Dupont the next morning but did not do so because he was instructed by the First Officer of the McLean to go with it to a nearby point for coaling. It resulted that no member of the crew was present on the Dupont at the time of the fire except Phillips who was engaged in some repairs to the machinery in the engine room of the Dupont at the time of the discovery of the fire.

The size, deck arrangement, location of the machinery and of the doubler plates on the starboard side of the Dupont are all clearly depicted in a blueprint of the ship offered in evidence as Libellant’s Exhibit No. 1. From this it is shown that the Dupont was a steam vessel with length of 154.5 feet, breadth of 23.6 feet, depth of 12.8 feet; gross tons 303 and net tons 206. She had two decks, a main deck and a berth deck. On the berth deck aft in what are referred to as'the owner’s quarters, there were several staterooms, three on each side, being separated by a two-foot six inch passageway. On the starboard side there was a linen locker, five feet four inches wide, the door of which opened at the bottom of a stair which led [195]*195from the berth deck up to the main deck into the main cabin there situate. There was a porthole in the linen locker which was the fifth on the starboard side counting from the stern of the ship. The cabin above on the main deck had a door leading to the deck which apparently had been locked by Phillips, the watchman, on his rounds of inspection the night before the fire, and was still locked upon the discovery of the fire. No inspection had been made of the after part of the ship on either deck on Saturday morning prior to the discovery of the fire.

The fire evidently originated in or near the linen locker on the berth deck aft."* On that morning the two welders who, with their welding equipment had been furnished to the Spedden Company by the United Electric Welding Company, which had been impleaded into the case under admiralty rule 56, had started work at 7.30 o’clock. It is clearly established by the testimony that the welding work, the whole of which on the starboard side aft extended from a point forward of the linen locker to a point considerably aft of the locker, had been completed on Friday afternoon to a point some four or five feet aft of the linen locker. The welding on the starboard side immediately outside the linen locker had been done on Friday. At the time of the outbreak of the fire the welding was being done some ten or twelve feet aft of the linen locker.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Supp. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-v-spedden-shipbuilding-co-mdd-1936.