Partenreederei Wallschiff v. the Pioneer

164 F. Supp. 421
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMay 21, 1958
Docket13101, 13549
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 164 F. Supp. 421 (Partenreederei Wallschiff v. the Pioneer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Partenreederei Wallschiff v. the Pioneer, 164 F. Supp. 421 (E.D. Mich. 1958).

Opinion

164 F.Supp. 421 (1958)

PARTENREEDEREI WALLSCHIFF owner of THE M/V WALLSCHIFF, Libelant,
v.
THE Steamer PIONEER, her engines, etc.,
and
The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co., owner of the Steamer Pioneer, Respondents.
The Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co., as chartered owner and operator of the Steamer Pioneer, Cross-libelant,
and
M/V Wallschiff, her engines, etc., Cross-respondent.
AMERICAN SEATING COMPANY et al., Libelants,
v.
THE Steamer PIONEER, her engines, etc., Respondents.

Nos. 13101, 13549.

United States District Court E. D. Michigan, S. D.

May 21, 1958.

*422 Foster, Meadows & Ballard, Detroit, Mich., Haight, Deming, Gardner, Poor & Havens, New York City, for Partenreederei Wallschiff and others.

Hill, Lewis, Andrews, Granse & Adams, Detroit, Mich., for American Seating Co. and others.

McCreary, Hinslea & Ray, Cleveland, Ohio, and Watson, Lott & Wunsch, Detroit, Mich., for respondents.

O'SULLIVAN, District Judge.

On October 2, 1953, at about 11:00 P.M., a German motorship, the Wallschiff, and the Steamer Pioneer came into collision on the Canadian side of the St. Clair River, opposite the City of Port Huron, Michigan. Both ships were damaged, and the Wallschiff was sunk.

The Pioneer, a conventional Great Lakes ore carrier, with an overall length of five hundred feet and a cargo of nine thousand tons of iron ore, was downbound in the river. The Wallschiff, with an overall length of two hundred and five feet and a gross tonnage of eight hundred and eighty-eight tons was upbound on her maiden voyage through the St. Clair river. Captain Timothy O'Leary, sixty-three years old, was master of the Pioneer and had sailed the Great Lakes for approximately forty-three years. He obtained his pilot's license in 1921 and his master's license in 1925 or 1926. He had been in command of Great Lakes vessels for about thirteen years prior to the occurrence involved here. Other members of the Pioneer's crew who were sworn as witnesses were for the most part experienced sailors. The Wallschiff crew consisted of Captain Harold Patterson, designated Sailing Master or Pilot, who came on board at Kingston, Ontario. Captain Patterson, seventy-three years of age, was a retired Canadian Great Lakes Captain. The members of the crew were German nationals of varying ages, but relatively young on the average. The wheelsman on duty at the time was fifteen years of age with a few months of experience as a sailor. None of the crew of the Wallschiff, except the Canadian pilot, had ever been in the St. Clair river previous to the night of the collision. The collision occurred some time around 11:00 P.M. The Canadian pilot died during the events involved in the collision. The cause of his death was given as coronary thrombosis (with death occurring immediately at its onset) with an additional contributing cause specified in the death certificate as, "exertion anxiety— was aboard ship in collision". Only two of the German crew spoke English. Orders of the Canadian pilot, given in English, were translated by the Wallschiff's captain and transmitted in German to the respective members of the crew.

The crews of the respective vessels gave accounts of the collision which were in sharp dispute. Members of the Wallschiff crew, whose depositions were taken before their return to Germany, testified that the Wallschiff was proceeding upstream and had received a one-blast passing signal from the downbound Pioneer, which they construed to indicate the Pioneer's election of a port-to-port passage. The Wallschiff's captain, supported by some members of his crew, testified that he replied to the signal with one blast, and in conformity therewith, directed his boat to accomplish a port-to-port passage; that shortly before the collision, the Pioneer suddenly changed its course from starboard sharply to port and was heading for the Canadian shore; that the Wallschiff, then also proceeding toward the Canadian shore, vainly tried to avoid collision by reversing its engines and going hard to starboard, but was rammed by the Pioneer.

The Pioneer's crew, supported by a substantial number of disinterested witnesses, gave a strikingly contrary account of the events which preceded the collision. When still above the Blue Water Bridge, Captain O'Leary, master of the Pioneer, saw a green light blink out on a boat that appeared to be bedding down at the Water Works dock on the Port Huron shore of the river. This would be a considerable distance south, or downstream. He intimated that this light was probably on the Wallschiff. *423 His first certain view of the Wallschiff was when he was about one-half mile from it. It was then coming upstream close to the American shore, approximately one hundred feet therefrom, and in such a position that he considered a port-to-port passing, which was usual in that part of the river, impracticable. He gave a two-blast signal, exercising his right of election as the down-bound boat to choose a starboard-to-starboard passing, and directed his course to port. His first signal was unanswered by the Wallschiff and after a thirty second interval, he gave a danger signal followed by a second two-blast. During this time the Wallschiff continued on a parallel course close to the American shore, and the Pioneer continued on a port course, but all of its signals remained unanswered. After the second two-blast signal, the Wallschiff suddenly changed its course to starboard and proceeded at about a forty-five degree angle directly across the course of the Pioneer, in such a manner as to make it impossible for the Pioneer to avoid it. The collision occurred somewhere south of midstream in Canadian waters.

After the collision, the Pioneer kept its bow in the side of the Wallschiff to prevent it from sinking in midstream, and pushed it toward the Canadian shore. Contact was broken shortly before the Wallschiff sank, close to the Canadian shore.

This Court's conclusions as to which of these accounts is the truth will be discussed hereinafter.

This action was commenced by the Partenreederei Wallschiff, owner of the Wallschiff, against the Pioneer and its owner, the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company. The parties will hereinafter be referred to as the Pioneer and the Wallschiff. A cross libel was filed by the Pioneer against the Wallschiff. A second action was commenced by the American Seating Company and its underwriters against the Pioneer for loss of the Wallschiff's cargo, owned by the Seating Company. Trial was had to determine liability, it being suggested by counsel for all parties that when liability became fixed, the matter of the amount of damages involved could probably be agreed upon. No evidence was introduced on the question of extent of damages. Both ships, however, were damaged in the collision and the cargo of the Wallschiff was either lost or damaged. Pleadings asserted that the Wallschiff's damages amounted to $500,000; the Pioneer's damage was alleged to be $50,000, and the cargo loss was put at $50,000.

At the conclusion of proofs, all parties conceded that the collision occurred in Canadian waters, and that liability should be determined in accordance with the Canada Shipping Act of 1934, Section 640, Chapter 44, and the Brussels Convention of 1910. Counsel likewise conceded that on the questions of due care and negligence and the applicable Rules of Navigation, the law of Canada is substantially the same as the law of the United States. It was recognized, also, that if the Court should find mutual liability, damages would be apportioned according to the above Canadian law and the Brussels Convention.

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