Ore S. S. Corp. v. Pan Virginia

123 F. Supp. 346, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3007
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 7, 1954
DocketNo. 3466
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 F. Supp. 346 (Ore S. S. Corp. v. Pan Virginia) 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
Ore S. S. Corp. v. Pan Virginia, 123 F. Supp. 346, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3007 (D. Md. 1954).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, Chief Judge.

This case involves a collision which occurred on May 10, 1952, in the) so-called Cut-off Channel connecting the Brewer-ton and the Craighill Channels in the approaches to Baltimore Harbor, between the Steelore, owned by the libellant, the Ore Steamship Corporation, and the Pan Virginia, owned by the cross-libellant, the Pan American Petroleum & Transport Company.

The Steelore is a twin screw steam vessel, built in 1922, length 572 feet, beam 72 feet, and at the time of the collision was fully loaded with iron ore, drawing 34 feet forward and 35 feet aft. The Pan Virginia is a T-2 type tanker, 520 feet long, 68 feet beam, and at the time of the collision was carrying a full cargo of Venezuelan crude oil and drawing approximately 29 feet forward and 31 feet aft.

There is no real dispute as to the following facts: On the afternoon of May 10, 1952, the weather being mild with good visibility and the tide about slack low water, the Steelore, under control of a Maryland pilot, was proceeding up the Craighill Channel destined to the Bethlehem Steel Company plant at Sparrows Point. The Pan Virginia was also inward bound to Baltimore, and was following the Steelore up the Craighill Channel. The Steelore was proceeding at a speed of 7 or 8 knots, and the Pan Virginia, at a speed of about 12 knots, so that she was gradually overhauling the Steelore. When the Steelore had straightened out on the left hand, or the black buoy side of the next, or Cut-off Channel, the two vessels then being not more than a mile apart, the Pan Virginia blew a one blast passing signal which was answered by the Steelore with a one blast. Thereupon the Pan Virginia went full speed ahead (12 knots) on her own starboard, or the red buoy side of the Channel. Both vessels continued on their established courses for several minutes when the Pan Virginia’s bow began to overlap the stern of the Steelore, which, at this time, took a sheer to the right, towards the course of the Pan Virginia. The Pan Virginia’s port side, about abreast of her foremast, struck the Steel-ore about abaft her bridge. The Channel where the collision occurred is 600 feet wide, with a depth of about 39 feet.

The Maryland pilot in charge of the Steelore died suddenly a few weeks after the accident, and there is no testimony from him in any form except that given three days after the accident at a Coast Guard hearing. He then testified that he received two one blast passing signals from the Pan Virginia, the first one when the Steelore was in the angle between the Craighill and Cut-off Channels, and the second one when the Steelore was approaching no. 9-K buoy in the Cut-off [348]*348Channel, when the Pan Virginia was about a half mile astern. He testified that he assumed the Pan Virginia did not intend to pass in the straight of the Channel because this was not customarily done, but blew for a passing in order to advise the Steelore of an intended passing in the turn of the Channel which was wider; that he answered both of these passing signals with one blast; that he did not look astern to see whether the Pan Virginia altered her course at any time thereafter; that when the two vessels first overlapped, he could not say how far they were apart, but that after the overlap occurred, the Steelore began to sheer to starboard, whereupon her port engine was stopped in order to try to break the sheer and her wheel ordered hard left, but that nevertheless, the Steel-ore continued to sheer to her right, and after about 2 minutes of this sheering, the vessels collided; that the Steelore stopped her starboard engine (her port engine having already been stopped) and then dropped anchor to try to prevent running into the bank on her port side, but she nevertheless went aground. He further stated that he had piloted the Steelore a number of times before; that she did not handle particularly well, but that in his opinion, the cause of the collision was suction which sheered the Steel-ore to the right, brought about by the deeply loaded tanker passing too closely.

At the trial the testimony of the master of the Steelore was, for the most part, substantially the same as that of her pilot. He also testified that when the overlap of the two vessels first began, they were only 40 or 50 feet apart.

The chief mate of the Steelore, who was stationed on her bow at the time of the collision, also testified at the trial but he was a rather poor witness and added little. He stated that the Pan Virginia appeared to be only about 30 feet away when the Steelore began to sheer to the right. There was no credible testimony by any witness for the Steelore that it was unsafe to pass in that part of the Channel where the Pan Virginia attempted to pass.

The second officer of the Steelore testified at the trial that he was on the bridge as his vessel was being overtaken by the Pan Virginia, which had been proceeding dead astern of the Steelore and did not vary her course in order to pass until she was only approximately 600 feet astern of the Steelore, when she made a sharp turn to starboard and then swung back to port in order to remain in the Channel, which indicated to him that she was out of control. The rest of the testimony of this witness was not materially different from that of the master of the Steelore.

The testimony of the helmsman of the Steelore taken by deposition is fragmentary. He appears to have been a rather slow-minded individual. He was unable, to say whether or not the bow of the Steelore began to swing to starboard before he put her wheel hard left, but he testified that after he had done so, her bow “kept walking around to the starboard all the time.”

On behalf of the other vessel, the Pan Virginia, the pilot testified at the hearing and there was also the deposition testimony of the master, the chief mate and the helmsman, this last named person having testified at a Coast Guard hearing.

The pilot testified that the Pan Virginia, proceeding at about 10 knots, was gradually overtaking the Steelore, when at 4:06 p. m., he blew a one blast passing signal, to which the Steelore replied with one blast at 4:16; that the Pan Virginia was proceeding about 50 feet from her own right side of the Channel and the Steelore was on her own right side; that when the Pan Virginia first overlapped' the stern of the Steelore, the former was making between 11 and 12 knots, and the two vessels were from 150 to 200 feet apart; that the Pan Virginia never took any sheer and was never out of control; that he was aware of the necessity for not taking the Pan Virginia too close to the Steelore, although he admitted knowing nothing about suction under the given circumstances, and that it was his [349]*349speculation that the Steelore must have had engine or steering trouble.

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123 F. Supp. 346, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ore-s-s-corp-v-pan-virginia-mdd-1954.