Paktank Corp.—Deer Park Terminal v. M/V M.E. Nunez

35 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1125, 1999 WL 52363
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1999
DocketCiv.A. G-97-715
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 F. Supp. 2d 521 (Paktank Corp.—Deer Park Terminal v. M/V M.E. Nunez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paktank Corp.—Deer Park Terminal v. M/V M.E. Nunez, 35 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1125, 1999 WL 52363 (S.D. Tex. 1999).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

KENT, District Judge.

The above cause came on for a non-jury trial commencing December 15, 1998 and concluding on December 17, 1998, Honorable Samuel B. Kent presiding. The Court having carefully considered the testimony of all witnesses presented live and by deposition, all exhibits admitted during the course of the trial, all pleadings filed in the case, the Joint Pre-Trial Order, statements and arguments of counsel, and the proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law submitted by Plaintiff and Defendant, hereby enters its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

Paktank brings this suit for damages sustained by the No. 1 Breasting Dolphin of its No. 3 Ship Dock in an allision that occurred on January 19, 1996. Defendant’s tug, the M.E. NUNEZ and its tow, the barge HOLLYWOOD 2027 (“HW 2027”) allided with that structure and remained at that facility for an investigation immediately thereafter. The M.E. NUNEZ and its tow were traversing the area of the channel in which Ship Dock No. 3 is located at the time of the incident, and was not intending to dock at Ship Dock No. 3. According to the vessel’s captain, for some unknown reason, the vessel came left causing the forward port corner of the barge to allide with the No. 1 Breasting Dolphin of Ship Dock No. 3. Neither Paktank nor its dock facility caused or contributed to the allision. The barge was fully loaded with styrene at the time of impact.

Paktank contends that the barge damaged the wood and steel protective fender mat, casting it adrift. The barge then continued past the fender mat going underneath the cement dolphin structure striking a forty-two inch cylindrical support pile that is driven into the seabed. Defendant admits its vessel allided with the fender mat and damaged it to an extent, but denies its barge ever struck the forty-two inch pile supporting the cement dolphin.

I.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Paktank Corporation — Deer Park Terminal (“Paktank”) provides storage and handling facilities for various bulk liquid chemicals. Its Deer Park facility consists of a tank farm with the requisite truck, rail, and marine loading and discharge facilities. M & M Towing Company, Inc. (“M & M Towing”) is an inland tugboat operator, and was the owner and operator of the tug M.E. NUNEZ at the time of this incident.

The Allision

2. January 19, 1996, the tug M.E. NUNEZ and its barge, HW 2027, were inbound in the Houston Ship Channel. They were not intending to call at Pak-tank’s Ship Dock No. 3. According to the Captain, the vessel unexpectedly came left and allided with the No. 1 breasting dolphin of that facility. While Defendant admits its vessel struck the fender mat protecting the cement breasting dolphin, it denies the barge ever went past the fender mat striking the cement dolphin structure behind it. The fender mat consists of vertical wooden timbers mounted on a lattice of horizontal steel H-beams or “whales”. It is affixed to the cement dolphin by a large flexible rubber cylinder held in place by various sway chains. Vertically, it is supported by three steel “H” support beams driven *523 into the seabed and bolted to the bottom beam or “whale” of the fender mat. The dolphin cap consists of a cement structure or “cap” poured over six cylindrical support piles, also driven into the seabed. Each pile is a forty-two inch steel pipe with a one-inch wall diameter. Mounted on top of the breasting dolphin are two, one-hundred ton-rated bollards used to secure the mooring lines of vessels calling at the dock. The fender mat is designed to protect the cement structure from vessels breasting against the dock as the moor at Ship Dock No. 3. The vessels lay against the mat and impart a compressive stress at an angle 90"to the face of the mat In this case, the barge impacted the fender mat from the side. The mat is not designed to withstand shearing stresses imparted from the side. In addition to suffering damage, the mat came partially adrift from the dolphin. This is evident in the numerous photographs and was substantiated by testimony of a witness from both parties. The barge, which was fully loaded, continued on underneath the cement dolphin cap striking a support pile, breaking it loose from the cement cap. Due to the extent of the damage, the dolphin was unsafe to use and repair was necessary.

3.While Defendant denies ever striking the cement cap and metal support pile, chunks of cement and timber were found on the deck of the barge at the site of impact. Captain Miller of the M.E. NUNEZ admitted that there were no chunks of cement or timber on his barge before impact, but there were after impact. He admitted he might have “barely” struck the concrete portion of the structure. Plaintiffs Exhibit 7K was a photo taken shortly after the allision showing pieces of concrete and broken timber on the deck of the barge. At trial Capt. Miller identified this photograph as depicting the cement and wood he found on his barge immediately after the impact. He also stated that at the time of impact he was in the wheelhouse of the tug 285 feet aft of the barge’s bow. The barge came left and struck the dolphin with the port, or left, side of the bow. Capt. Miller admitted that at his next eye exam taken to renew his driver’s license some six months after the incident, his license was revoked because he had no sight in his left eye.

4. There is an eye witness who saw the bow of the barge stuck up underneath the fender mat and cement dolphin cap. Dockman Jesse Villarreal was in the dockman’s shack on Ship Dock 3 when he heard a loud crash. He walked to the edge of Ship Dock No. 3 to investigate. Villarreal had a clear view of the No. 1 Breasting Dolphin. He saw the bow of the HW 2027 underneath both the cement dolphin cap and the fender mat. The barge was stopped and he could hear the engines of the tug revving as the tug came astern in order to back out from underneath the dolphin cap. As the barge backed away, Mr. Villarreal heard scraping sounds of metal and concrete, and also saw the concrete that had fallen onto the deck of the barge. The deckhand sent by Capt. Miller to inspect the barge after impact, John Dickey, also testified he found cement debris on the deck of the barge where the impact occurred. It is the Court’s belief this cement fell onto the barge when it impacted the support pile, breaking cement loose from the underside of the cement cap where the pile was seated as seen in the numerous photographs of the underside of the cement cap.

5. The Captain of the tug was inattentive in his duties. Capt. Miller testified he was navigating close by the dolphin, yet he did not place a lookout on the bow of the barge. He failed to make use of all available means to determine that a risk of allision existed, including placing a lookout at the bow of his tow. M & M Towing did not provide the vessel with any maneuvering charac *524 teristics to aid the Captain in determining how his vessel would react to various helm and engine commands. M & M Towing did not inform the Captain of the weight of the cargo or the deadweight of the barge. There were no operations or safety manuals on board the vessel. The Defendant utilized an underpowered and/an un-seaworthy tug to push the barge in question. Defendant’s vessel violated Inland Navigation Rules 5, 6, 7 and 8. (33 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F. Supp. 2d 521, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1125, 1999 WL 52363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paktank-corpdeer-park-terminal-v-mv-me-nunez-txsd-1999.