O'Brien Bros. v. Colonial Sand & Stone Co.

170 F. Supp. 675, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3279
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 25, 1958
DocketNos. 20087, 20182
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 170 F. Supp. 675 (O'Brien Bros. v. Colonial Sand & Stone 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
O'Brien Bros. v. Colonial Sand & Stone Co., 170 F. Supp. 675, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3279 (E.D.N.Y. 1958).

Opinion

MOORE, Circuit Judge

(sitting by designation).

These two suits arose out of the grounding of a scow, the “Wall Light”, owned by O’Brien Brothers, Inc., referred to as “O’Brien”, chartered to Colonial Sand & Stone Company, referred to as “Colonial” and being towed by a tug (No. 6) owned by Metropolitan Sand & Gravel Corporation, referred to as “Metropolitan”. The first suit, instituted after a claim for damage was made by O’Brien upon Metropolitan, sought limitation of or exoneration from liability, the second by O’Brien against Colonial for breach of charter and damages to the scow. Thereafter O’Brien filed a contingent claim against Metropolitan in the limitation proceeding asserting that any damage to the scow was the primary fault of Metropolitan and that, if O’Brien should recover against Colonial, Colonial should recover over against Metropolitan. By consent the suits were tried together. Limitation of liabili „ in the sum of $2,000 was stipulated.

On November 19, 1952, at about 5:00 P.M., the scow “Wall Light” ran aground in Hempstead Harbor, Long Island, N. Y., while under tow by the tug, Metropolitan No. 6. The scow at the time of grounding was loaded with sand and was being towed by Metropolitan’s tug to Metropolitan’s stakeboat in the Hempstead Harbor. While the tug and scow were south of Bar Beach proceeding in an easterly direction, the stern of the scow swung to the north and its bow to the south, and thereupon grounded, becoming suspended on both sides of the channel, with water beneath the center portion of the scow. Efforts to pull the scow off at the time were fruitless but at 10:00 P.M. that evening, about two hours before high water, she finally floated off on the flood tide. The damage claimed was aggravation of a twist in the scow. Prior to the grounding she was slightly twisted, apparently about two inches down on the port stern and the same amount on the starboard bow corner. After the grounding the twist was increased to about four inches on each corner. The area in which the scow grounded showed seven feet of water at [677]*677mean low water (approximately 6:13 P.M.). It should have been obvious that for some time before or after that hour a scow could not have been towed safely through such waters.

The primary liability of Metropolitan and the secondary liability of Colonial have been established. Neither Metropolitan nor Colonial has come forward with any evidence sufficient to rebut this conclusion. Accordingly, the only two issues before the court are the fact of damage and the amount thereof.

The “Wall Light” was one of a fleet of 42 scows sold to Colonial on July 29, 1953 for a bulk sale price of $514,000. Although Burton E. O’Brien, vice president of O’Brien, claimed in his deposition taken by Colonial that at the time of the sale an individual price was established for the “Wall Light”, he did not disclose what the price was, notwithstanding the fact that both O’Brien’s libel against Metropolitan and Metropolitan’s petition for limitation of liability had been filed prior to the consummation of this sale.

The price fixed for the “Wall Light” in the July 1953 sale would have had evi-dentiary value as to its market value nine months prior thereto. There were thirteen sister scows of the “Wall Light” involved in the sale. Presumably at least some of these were in normal and sound condition. A comparison of the July 1953 market value as depreciated, if any, of the “Wall Light” with the market value of its sister scows would have provided a ready and sound measure of damages. O’Brien, however, chose to rely in this litigation on a speculative figure for market value of $22,680, arrived at by O’Brien’s expert by estimating the reproduction cost and deducting therefrom the depreciation based upon an unexplained progressive depreciation table.

At the time of the July 1953 sale, O’Brien knew, or should have known, that the market value of the “Wall Light” and its sister scows were important and possibly determinative factors in this litigation. Its failure to preserve any market value figures for the “Wall Light” and its sister scows deprives it of an important item if in fact appraisals were obtained or valuations fixed on each barge in the sale. Not having established by any competent and credible evidence the normal market value of a scow of the class of “Wall Light” or the depreciated value of the “Wall Light”, O’Brien has failed to carry its burden of proving a recoverable depreciation loss.

The only point remaining is the ascertainment of the damages equivalent to the cost of repairs necessary to place the scow in as good a condition as before the accident. In this connection it should be noted that the witness who remained aboard as bargee after the 1953 sale of “Wall Light” and who did not leave this position until 1957 testified that the twist was still in the scow when he left. It was conceded by O’Brien that no attempts were made to remedy the twisted condition or to repair any damages caused by the twist. From all the testimony on the trial, I find that the twist did not render the scow unsea-worthy or unfit for service and that the “Wall Light” was thereafter regularly used in the normal course of business notwithstanding the twist. The only noticeable disability caused by the twist was the reopening of an old leak around the king posts. The testimony of the bargee revealed that his description of the damage noted on a post card mailed to O’Brien two days after the accident was in conflict with the testimony of others and with the actual use to which the barge was thereafter put.

On November 24, 1952 O’Brien had a survey made of the “Wall Light” while she was lying afloat at a shipyard in North Bergen, N. J. Two surveyors for Metropolitan were also present but did not sign the survey. The survey lists ten separate items of repair and states that the total cost of the listed repairs is $7,640. I find that this estimate, so far as it attributes these items to the grounding on November 19, 1952, is exaggerated, and accordingly reject it. No [678]*678attempt was made either in this survey or in the surveyor’s testimony at the trial to render a separate estimate for each of the ten items of repair. There is lacking credible proof to show that many of these items bear any relation to the aggravation of the twist. For example, the fifth item states “Roof covering on cabin wrinkled and cracked; covering is to be renewed after hull is straightened with all necessary flashings.” There is no credible testimony showing that the roof became wrinkled and cracked from the grounding. Colonial’s surveyor was emphatic in his testimony that the slight twist which was in the scow would not cause any such damage to the cabin.

Furthermore, O’Brien’s surveyor conceded that his survey was premised on the erroneous assumption that prior to the November 19 grounding the scow possessed no twist at all.

Lastly, most of the items of repair make express allowance for the removal or adjustment of admittedly sound parts and the replacement or readjustment thereof in order to effect the enumerated repairs, none of which were in fact ever made. As an instance, the tenth item directs that “Side wearing pieces in way of searphs are to be removed to effect caulking and afterwards replaced, any parts broken to be new.” The fact that repairs were not made, of course, does not prevent the award of damages for necessary repairs. Nevertheless, this fact can be considered in trying to arrive at a just and fair conclusion as to the seriousness of the injury.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F. Supp. 675, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-bros-v-colonial-sand-stone-co-nyed-1958.