Parker Bros. & Company, Inc., of the Tugs Gertrude and Annie O v. J. E. De Forest

221 F.2d 377, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4783, 1955 A.M.C. 786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1955
Docket14965_1
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 221 F.2d 377 (Parker Bros. & Company, Inc., of the Tugs Gertrude and Annie O v. J. E. De Forest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker Bros. & Company, Inc., of the Tugs Gertrude and Annie O v. J. E. De Forest, 221 F.2d 377, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4783, 1955 A.M.C. 786 (5th Cir. 1955).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge.

This appeal in admiralty is from a decree of the district court holding appellant liable for half of the damages sustained by appellee’s tug Florence, as a result of a collision which occurred on the evening of Juné 24, 1949, near Beacon No. 58, between the Lynchburg Ferry Crossing and San Jacinto State Park.

The tug Florence, owned and operated by appellee, was being used at the time of the collision for towing sand barges on the Houston Ship Channel. She was proceeding in an easterly direction down the channel, towing astern the . empty barge, H-56. Near Beacon No. 59, she safely executed a starboard to starboard passing with a steamship proceeding up the channel, but afterwards failed to pull back over to her starboard or south side of the channel, and persisted in maintaining her .north side of the channel where the collision subsequently occurred.

Immediately prior to, and at the time of the collision, an inexperienced deck hand, Edwin Mundine, was acting as helmsman for the Florence. While thus navigating the Florence and her tow over on the north side of the channel, Mundine sighted appellant’s tug Gertrude followed by its tug Annie O, both-of which were proceeding in the opposite direction up the channel, but made no effort to bring the Florence and her tow over to her proper south side of the channel because in his confusion he mistook the lights of the Gertude for those of the ferry across the channel near the mouth of the San Jacinto River, and remained on the north side of the channel in order to turn in a northerly direction into the River.-

In the meantime, appellant’s tugs, Gertrude and Annie 0, continued navigating in a westerly direction up the channel with the tug Gertude in front and pushing the Barge PT-803, which was loaded with shell. Both of appellant’s tugs were maintaining their proper starboard or north side of the channel. The Gertrude’s Captain, Arthur Maxwell, was at the wheel and was also acting as lookout. No other person was acting as a separate or independent lookout either aboard the tug or the forward barge PT-803 at the time of the collision.

The collision occurred at about 9 P.M., but it is undisputed that the night was not very dark, the weather was clear, and visibility was good. There was no appreciable wind or tide, and all three tugs and their tows were displaying proper lights. When Maxwell observed the Florence over on the Gertude’s north side of the channel, he sounded one blast on the Gertrude’s whistle, calling for a port to port passing, which was the proper and safe passing under the circumstances. The testimony of Mundine aboard the Florence is that he never heard the Gertrude’s whistle signal requesting a port to port passing, but the district court found that, as the only person aboard the Florence in a position to hear the signal, he probably did hear it sounded, but was so confused he did not recall or answer it. No other whistle signals were blown by either tug. After the Gertrude’s one blast whistle signal, however, the Florence did change her course momentarily to starboard, or in the direction of her proper south side of the channel. The collision resulted when the Florence abruptly again changed her course to her port, and toward the north side of the channel, which last minute maneuver apparently threw her directly in the path of the oncoming Gertrude and her tow. Although the Gertrude reversed her engines, it was then too laté; to avoid a collision between the Gertrude’s forward barge PT-803 and the Florence, as a result of which the barge being towed by the Florence, the H-56, overran her and caused the greater portion of the damages for which recovery is here sought. Though the Annie O rendered assistance to the damaged tug Florence, neither she nor her crew were *379 negligent, nor did they have any part in causing the collision or resulting damage.

From the above findings of fact, the district court concluded that the negligence of the Florence, and those in charge of her, in a number of respects proximately caused the collision, 1 and further found “that the ‘Gertrude’ and those in charge of her were negligent in one particular only, * that is in failing to keep a proper lookout and to have a proper lookout on the Barge PT-803.” Concluding that the Gertrude’s failure to maintain a proper lookout was probably a contributing cause of the collision, the district court held that this Court’s decision in Smith v. Bacon, 5 Cir., 194 F.2d 203, required a division of the damages, and a decree to that effect was accordingly entered.

Appellant concedes being “virtually in complete accord” with most of the above findings, but insists that the district court erred in failing to find it entirely free from fault, and particularly in assessing against the Gertrude one-half of the damages sustained because of her failure to have “a proper look-out”. In some twenty-four specifications of error, appellant argues, in effect, that the rule laid down by this Court in Smith v. Bacon, supra, which the district court sought to follow in finding the Gertrude mutually at fault, does not require or justify division of the damages under the facts here shown; that the admitted failure of the Gertrude to have a separate and independent lookout, other than her Captain and helmsman, Maxwell, either aboard the tug or on the forward barge PT-803, was not negligence, since the collision occurred on a clear night with excellent visibility in a wide channel, and while the Gertrude was pushing a single loaded barge only 175 feet in length; finally, conceding arguendo that the Gertrude was negligent in not having the separate and independent lookout supposedly required by the rule of the Smith case, supra, such negligence on her part could not possibly have been a contributing cause of the collision, since the district court found and the testimony conclusively reveals that Maxwell timely sighted the Florence and her tow, and was continuously aware of their every significant maneuver until the instant of collision, taking every avoiding action reasonably required or possible under the circumstances.

Appellee, while relying mainly for affirmance upon the prevailing rule of factual review for an appeal in admiralty 2 nevertheless insists via cross-assignments of error that a review de novo re *380 quires additional findings of fault on the part of the Gertrude proximately causing the collision which were not made by the district court, such as her alleged attempt to pass to port of the Florence against the latter tug’s green running light indicating a starboard to starboard passing, and without ever having received any assenting whistle signal to her proposed port to port passing, as well as the Gertrude’s failure to reduce speed, change course, blow a danger signal, or stop and reverse her engines until it was too late to avoid the collision. In any event, appellee insists that, because of appellant’s admitted failure to station a separate and independent lookout either on the Gertrude or the loaded barge she was pushing ahead while navigating an open bend of the Houston Ship Channel at night, the district court was required, under the rule of The Pennsylvania, 19 Wall. 125, 86 U.S. 125, 136, 22 L.Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
221 F.2d 377, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 4783, 1955 A.M.C. 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-bros-company-inc-of-the-tugs-gertrude-and-annie-o-v-j-e-de-ca5-1955.