Ohio River Co. v. Peavey Co.

556 F. Supp. 87
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 28, 1982
Docket80-376A(1)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 556 F. Supp. 87 (Ohio River Co. v. Peavey Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio River Co. v. Peavey Co., 556 F. Supp. 87 (E.D. Mo. 1982).

Opinion

556 F.Supp. 87 (1982)

The OHIO RIVER COMPANY, Plaintiff,
v.
PEAVEY COMPANY, in personam, and the M/V Gremco, her engines, tackle, etc., in rem, Defendant.

No. 80-376A(1).

United States District Court, E.D. Missouri, E.D.

December 28, 1982.

*88 Raymond L. Massey, Thompson & Mitchell, St. Louis, Mo., for plaintiff.

Gary T. Sacks, Goldstein & Price, St. Louis, Mo., for defendant.

MEMORANDUM

WANGELIN, Chief Judge.

This matter is before the Court for a decision after a trial on the merits during December 15-17, 1981. Since this is an admiralty case and within the Court's maritime jurisdiction under Rule 9(h) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and 28 U.S.C. § 1333, the Court heard the evidence without a jury. After considering the pleadings, testimony of the witnesses, stipulations of the parties and the various memoranda submitted on behalf of the respective parties, the Court makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Any finding of fact equally applicable as a conclusion of law is adopted as such and, conversely, any conclusion of law applicable as a finding of fact is adopted as such.

*89 Findings of Fact

1. Plaintiff in this action is The Ohio River Company (hereinafter Ohio), a West Virginia Corporation engaged in the business of river transportation and at all times relevant herein was the bareboat charterer and owner pro hoc vice of barges OR-3412, OR-225, OR-3830 and OR-3548.

2. Defendant is the Peavey Company (hereinafter Peavey), a corporation engaged in the river towboat business and at all times relevant herein was the charterer and operator of the M/V Gremco and Barge PV-2519.

3. The M/V Gremco is a river towboat, one hundred and forty feet long and forty five feet wide, with three engines, sixteen hundred HP each, with three steering rudders and six flanking rudders and was built in 1971.

4. In the early morning hours of January 7, 1979, four Ohio River barges (OR-3412, OR-225, OR-3830 and OR-3548) were moored and stationary at the Union Electric fleet at or about mile 161 on the upper Mississippi River. The barges had been delivered to that facility the preceding night. Barges OR-3548 and OR-3830 were empty barges tied off in the Union Electric fleet downstream from where loaded barges OR-3412 (which was loaded with approximately one thousand four hundred and sixty seven tons of coal) and OR-225 were tied. Said loading barges would have been unloaded and its buoyancy compartments pumped within a day of arrival. Barge OR-3412 was faced with its raked bow upriver. Directly behind OR-3412 was OR-225.

5. At approximately 5:30 a.m., January 7, 1979, defendant's river towboat, the M/V Gremco, was proceeding downstream through St. Louis harbor with a towage of four barges when its rudders became jammed due to heavy flowing ice in the river. The pilot, Captain Billy Wayne Moore, reversed the Gremco's engines in an attempt to slow the boat and tow down, but the force of the river carried the M/V Gremco and tow downstream into the Union Electric dock. The bow of the M/V Gremco's lead starboard barge PV-2519, whose rake in was pointing downriver, struck the bow of OR-3412, inflicting cracks in the bow rake compartment of OR-3412 and plaintiff's PV-2519. Peavey admits liability for the collision. After the collision, OR-3412 broke loose and floated downriver until it was retrieved by the M/V St. Genevieve. OR-3412 did not come in contact with anything after the collision and before the St. Genevieve picked it up. OR-3412 was then shoved under a dike area to protect the barge from heavy flowing ice and the river current. The steep bank of the Missouri River just under the dike negated any possibility of beaching OR-3412 at the dike and the barge's damaged condition obviated any chance of moving the barge one-half mile across the river to a sandbar.

6. Once OR-3412 had been pushed into the dike area, the crew of the St. Genevieve and the M/V Gremco began pumping the barge's compartments. While pumping OR-3412 the Captain of the Gremco attempted to acquire a crane barge to remove OR-3412's coal. The captain also inquired into whether Union Electric would allow him to move the barge to the Union Electric facility for unloading. These attempts were in vain. It was discovered that, although the M/V Gremco had caused damage only to OR-3412's rake compartment, the number three and number four buoyancy compartments of OR-3412 contained substantial amounts of water. Most of the water in the number three and number four compartments was eventually pumped out, however, the bow of OR-3412 kept settling lower in the water because substantial amounts of water had seeped in through preexisting fractures into the barge's hopper compartment. The frozen coal in the hopper made efforts to pump the hopper impossible. By 11:40 a.m., January 7, 1979, enough water had shifted forward into the hopper so that the barge sank thirty to fifty feet offshore in about thirty to fifty feet of water. The crews of the M/V Gremco and the M/V St. Genevieve had done everything possible to prevent the barge from sinking after the collision.

*90 7. OR-3412 is a fifteen year old double skinned river barge. OR-3412 was constructed with an outer skin of steel and an inner skin of steel divided by six separate bouyancy compartments designed to be water tight. The theory behind double skinned barges is that if water enters any of the compartments or the bottom of the barge from a tear in the outer layer of the barge, it will not sink unless the water tight integrity between the various weight water tight compartments, which are separated by a series of steel bulkheads, has been violated. Of course, it is common knowledge that all barges on the river, even new ones, usually contain some amount of water in the various "water tight compartments". The water tight compartments surround an open cargo hopper.

8. Defendant's evidence established that OR-3412 contained preexisting fractures which breached the water tight integrity of the barge. The gash in OR-3412's bow rake compartment caused by the collision did not result in the fractures in the number three and number four bouyancy compartments and in the hopper compartment that permitted water to flow into these areas. A ruptured bow rake compartment normally will not, in and of itself, cause a barge to sink.

9. It is undisputed that, absent the collision with the M/V Gremco, OR-3412 would have remained afloat without pumping for at least thirty days. Moreover, had OR-3412 been pumped, which it would have been by the crew at the Union Electric facility, it would have stayed afloat indefinitely.

10. The parties tendered several witnesses who testified as to the freeboard (the distance from the water up to the deck of the barge) of OR-3412 before the collision. Normally, a barge with the cargo load of OR-3412 should have at least three feet of freeboard. Deckhand Charles Liley of the M/V St. Genevieve testified that shortly after midnight on January 7, 1979, the M/V St.

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