Navegacion Castro Riva v. the M.S. Nordholm

178 F. Supp. 736, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2578
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 24, 1959
Docket3620, 3628
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 F. Supp. 736 (Navegacion Castro Riva v. the M.S. Nordholm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Navegacion Castro Riva v. the M.S. Nordholm, 178 F. Supp. 736, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2578 (E.D. La. 1959).

Opinion

J. SKELLY WRIGHT, District Judge.

In the early morning of May 26, 1958, while ascending the Mississippi River below New Orleans on her maiden voyage, the M.S. Nordholm 1 was rammed by the sheering S.S. Theogennitor. 2 Alleging sole fault, both vessels claim full damages against'the other. In the alternative, the Theogennitor claims the right to limit liability. There is also in this consolidated litigation a cargo claim for general average contribution to the Nordholm.

Prior to the collision the Theogennitor was proceeding up river approximately one mile south of Bolivar Point 3 and three to four hundred feet off the east bank. She was making good seven knots over the ground against a four-knot current under the conn of a licensed Mississippi River pilot. At that time the Nordholm was approximately one-half mile astern of the Theogennitor, approximately in mid-river, and proceeding up at about thirteen knots over the ground. She sounded a two-blast signal requesting permission of the Theogennitor for a port passage. The Theogennitor assented by returning the two blasts. Whereupon the Nordholm put her wheel slightly to port and continued up river at the same speed preparatory to passing.

The Nordholm came abreast of the Theogennitor as both vessels were abeam of Bolivar Point Light, lateral distance between the two being 1,000 feet. The *738 Mississippi River pilot conning the Nord-holm, after satisfying himself that the passage would be without incident, went from the right wing to the left wing of the bridge to make a binocular survey of the river on that side up to Triumph Shoal Buoy Light, on which light the Nordholm was now steadying after having rounded the Point deep in the bend.

The Theogennitor, navigating in the slack water under the Point, was given easy right, then full right rudder in an effort to shape her course around the Point. As her bow came out of the slack water, it was met on the starboard side by the current of the river coming down and around the Point. The vessel, instead of taking the right rudder, proceeded ahead and across the river under the influence of the current. When it became apparent to her pilot that the Theo-gennitor was not rounding the Point, he flashed a light on the wheel indicator to see whether the Greek helmsman had executed his order for full right rudder. On seeing that the rudder was full right, he sounded the danger signal. At that time the Nordholm was little more than a shiplength away and the Theogennitor was aimed at her bow. Nevertheless, the Theogennitor continued full speed ahead until the vessels were only 200 feet apart. At that time, according to her pilot, the Theogennitor’s engines were ordered reversed. The scrape engine log of the vessel, however, contains the following entry: “0045, full astern, collision.”

Meanwhile, on the Nordholm the lookout on her bow saw the oncoming Theo-gennitor and ran astern for his life. The second mate on watch also noticed the oncoming Theogennitor a second before she sounded the danger signal. The Nord-holm’s pilot, still surveying the west side of the river, heard the danger signal, saw the Theogennitor, gave full left rudder and then, without waiting for the vessel to react, gave full right rudder. The collision occurred seconds later 700 feet off the west bank with the Theogennitor ramming the Nordholm immediately astern of her engine room spaces in the No. 4 hold at a 70-degree angle. Both vessels were heavily damaged.

The Theogennitor, apparently on the theory that a good offense is the best defense, contends that the Nordholm is solely at fault in that, being the overtaking vessel, she failed to keep out of the way of the vessel overtaken. 4 The Theo-gennitor places the blame for her own failure, as the overtaken vessel, to maintain her course 5 on the current. She further alleges that she was in all respects seaworthy in spite of her inability to control her own actions and that, in any event, she should be allowed to limit her liability.

The Nordholm’s position is that she was free from fault, that the sole cause of the collision was the failure of the Theogennitor to turn the Point. She maintains that this failure shows gross negligence and unseaworthiness on the part of the Theogennitor in addition to a violation of the Inland Rules covering overtaking situations. 6

The charge that the Nordholm was solely at fault in this collision is but a brazen attempt on the part of the Theo-gennitor to cover her own shortcomings. The evidence shows that this old Liberty ship was loaded to the gunwales. Whether she was above her Plimsoll mark is not definitely established. Her own log shows that when she left Port Kaiser, Jamaica, she was one inch above her summer mark. Her officers, after suggesting that this log entry is probably inaccurate since the measurement was made when the vessel was in a road-stead, then calculate that by the time *739 the Theogennitor reached the Mississippi River she had used enough fuel and water to bring her under her mark. The evidence on this issue of overloading is certainly not conclusive. The only certain conclusion one can draw from it is that if the Theogennitor was not actually overloaded, she was on the ragged edge.

Certainly the Theogennitor was too underpowered to control her load. The most persuasive proof of this fact is the fact that she did not. She was unable to turn the Point. To excuse this inability and to place the blame for this collision on the current would be to open the season on shipping in the Mississippi River. 7 Vessels are powered to control the current, not to let the current control them. This vessel, built in a wartime emergency, was marginally powered at birth with 2,500 horsepower. And since that time, as her own pilot testified, many of her horses have long gone to pasture. Moreover, instead of turning up her designed 76 RPM, the Theogennitor limited herself to 66. Under the circumstances it is understandable why the current took over the navigation of the vessel.

In addition to this apparent unseaworthiness on the part of the Theogennitor, there was also a human failure which contributed to this collision. Her pilot, knowing her deeply laden condition as well as her lack of power, continued the Theogennitor in the slack water under the Point until her starboard bow alone was subjected to the full thrust of the current. The effect thereof was to turn her head to port and thus place the vessel broadside to the current. The Theogen-nitor’s desire for the slack water under the Point is understandable, but her pilot should have realized that there would come a time when she would have to face the current and he should have prepared her therefor. He should have brought her out into the river before reaching the Point so that the whole vessel would be navigating with respect to the current when its full thrust was felt around the Point. Exposing the bow of this heavily laden, underpowered vessel to the current while her stern was still in slack water was a contributing cause of this collision.

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Bluebook (online)
178 F. Supp. 736, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/navegacion-castro-riva-v-the-ms-nordholm-laed-1959.