Mid-America Transportation Company, Inc. v. National Marine Service, Inc., and M/v National Progress, Her Engines,boilers, Etc.

497 F.2d 776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1974
Docket73-1347
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 497 F.2d 776 (Mid-America Transportation Company, Inc. v. National Marine Service, Inc., and M/v National Progress, Her Engines,boilers, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mid-America Transportation Company, Inc. v. National Marine Service, Inc., and M/v National Progress, Her Engines,boilers, Etc., 497 F.2d 776 (8th Cir. 1974).

Opinion

TALBOT SMITH, Senior District Judge.

Mid-America Transportation Company, Inc. invoked the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the district court, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(h), to recover for damage to its barge MAT-75, and the cargo carried therein, allegedly caused while in the tow of the M/V National Progress, a tug owned by National Marine Service, Inc., en route from St. Paul, Minnesota to St. Louis, Missouri on the Mississippi River. The court found for National Marine Service, and Mid-America appeals from the judgment entered. For convenience we will hereinafter refer to the barge owner as the plaintiff or the “barge,” and to the appellees, both the Motor Vessel National Progress and its owner and operator National Marine Service, Inc. (the interests of which are identical), jointly as the defendant or the “tug.”

On September 25, 1970 the fully loaded MAT-75 was placed in the tow with eight other barges of the M/V National Progress at St. Paul, Minnesota. The barge was in level trim, drawing nine feet, and remained so until the early morning hours of September 30. At midnight September 29, when the tug and its tow were just upstream of Lock 19 on the Mississippi, all was normal; the Captain went off duty and turned the helm over to Pilot Crawford. One or one and a half hours later (some four or five miles downstream) Captain Self was alerted that the MAT-75 was taking water. It had taken so much water, in fact, that one of its buoyancy tanks was filled to the level of the river and its stern was awash whenever the tow moved forward. From this evidence, and that of the damage to the hull, the trial court inferred that a grounding had occurred. No evidence was introduced, however, to show that specific *778 acts of negligence had caused the grounding, or that it occurred out of the channel or on a known obstruction.

The defendant’s principal witness was Captain Self, who was in his cabin at the time in question and could offer no testimony as to the time, place or cause of the grounding. He speculated that a rock from a dike may have been pulled into the channel by the current and struck by the barge, but he admitted that the channel was sought to be maintained by the Corps of Engineers at a minimum depth of twelve feet. No unusual conditions of current, wind or weather were shown to exist at the general time and place of the occurrence. Captain Self was the only member of the tug’s crew to testify at trial.

The crew of the National Progress attempted to pump out the barge, but by morning they had made no headway on the water level with their small pumps; the tug’s salvage crew was called and by 7:00 P.M. September 30 the buoyancy tanks had been pumped and repaired, and the downriver journey continued. The MAT-75 was delivered to the Universal Barge Company in St. Louis at 5:30 A.M. October 2; insubstantial amounts of water were then in the buoyancy tanks. On October 5, however, a salvage crew hired by the barge pumped five feet of water out of one buoyancy tank, three feet out of another, and made further repairs. The grain was removed October 9 and transferred to another barge; two conical columns of wet grain were left standing in the cargo hopper. These extended from the floor of the hopper to deck level. Wet grain also covered the aft floor of the hopper, inclining toward the stern.

The trial court concluded that the MAT-75 was grounded and damaged while in the tow of the National Progress some time between midnight on September 29, 1970, and 1:00 A.M. to 1:30 A.M. on September 30. But the court was “unable to determine the object on which the barge was grounded, [or] the specific time and the location of the grounding.” In addition the court further found that it was “unable to determine either the cause or source of the water which damaged the grain or the time at which such damage occurred,” and, consequently, “that plaintiff has not proven that the damage to the grain * * * was caused by” the negligence of the tug. The opinion of the trial court is reported at 356 F.Supp. 1358 (E.D.Mo.1973).

We will consider separately the damage to the barge and that to the grain. With respect to liability for damage to the barge the case is mi generis. The testimony does not disclose where, when, or how the barge grounded. In this situation the plaintiff-barge relies heavily on an asserted presumption, namely, that from the grounding of the barge while in tow “a presumption of negligence arose on the part of the Defendant.” The defendant-tug, on the other hand, asserts that “[n]o presumption of negligence arose from proof that the [b]arge * * * struck a submerged object or ‘grounded’ while in * * * tow * * *.” No proofs of specific negligence on the part of the tug were made by the barge; and the trial court, rejecting the argued “presumption of negligence” on the part of the tug, and finding as well that the tug was not under a duty, in the circumstances presented, to “explain away any presumption of negligence on its part,” held for the defendant on the issue of liability for damage to the barge. After careful review of the record we conclude that the court’s finding, that there was not sufficient evidence that the circumstances surrounding the grounding required the tug to explain the grounding, was clearly erroneous. 1 We reverse on this issue.

The law concerning contracts of towage has been settled in an abundance *779 of eases. The tug, neither an insurer nor a common carrier, is under a duty to exercise the reasonable care and maritime skill that prudent navigators employ in performing similar services, and the burden of proving negligence is on the party that asserts it. Stevens v. The White City, 285 U.S. 195, 202, 52 S.Ct. 347, 76 L.Ed. 699 (1932); Hart v. Blakemore, 410 F.2d 218 (5th Cir. 1969).

With respect to the grounding cases, the position of the grounded vessel at time of striking is, without more, of paramount importance. If she is outside the channel she has left it at her peril, and her grounding will not be excused on the argument that, possibly, her obstruction was unknown. 2 If she is inside the channel and strikes an unknown obstruction it is equally settled that she is not presumed to be negligent 3 but, per contra, if the object in the channel be known, and nevertheless struck, her negligence may be presumed. 4

The tug concedes as much. It contends, however, that “a presumption of negligence arises only if the evidence shows: (1) The grounding occurred outside the channel, or (2) occurred on a known obstruction in the channel.” It argues that “[ajbsent such proof, the mere fact of grounding gives rise to no presumption.”

What is overlooked here is that the circumstances presented may be such as to require the tug to show a reasonable explanation for the accident. The rule was expressed at least as early as in The Steamer Webb, 81 U.S. (14 Wall.) 406, 20 L.Ed. 774 (1871).

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Bluebook (online)
497 F.2d 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-america-transportation-company-inc-v-national-marine-service-inc-ca8-1974.