Patton-Tully Transp. Co. v. Turner

269 F. 334, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1851
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1920
DocketNos. 3374, 3420, 3421
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 269 F. 334 (Patton-Tully Transp. Co. v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton-Tully Transp. Co. v. Turner, 269 F. 334, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1851 (6th Cir. 1920).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

The Patton-Tully Company was the owner of what was called a derrick boat, used in loading logs upon the [336]*336deck of the barges by which the logs were transported on the Mississippi river to the company’s sawmill at Memphis. The derrick was operated by steam power. While the boat was in the state of Mississippi, the boiler exploded. The master and the fireman and four of the crew were killed, two were hurt (one of those hurt also losing some personal property), and the boat was sunk. It was raised and taken to Memphis, and the Patton-Tully Company filed in the court below, in admiralty, its petition for limitation of liability under R. S- § 4283 (U. S. C. S. § 8021). 'The two surviving members of the crew and the representatives of all those killed appeared and filed proofs of claim and answers to the owner’s petition. The answers denied the existence of admiralty jurisdiction, insisted that the explosion was the result of negligence by, or with the consent of, the owners, and asked that the petition should be dismissed. The court below sustained the jurisdiction, found that the owner was not entitled to a limitation of liability, and that liability existed in favor of all claimants excepting the representatives of the master and the fireman, and directed a reference to assess damages. The commissioner’s report, pursuant to this reference, was later made and confirmed. The Patton-Tully Company and the representatives of the master and fireman appeal.

The question of liability centers around the fusible plug in the crown sheet of the boiler. This boiler was provided, as is quite common, with four devices which pertained to safety from explosion. Two were for the information of the fireman, through his observation or use of them in the performance of his duty. These were the glass water gauge, which indicated the height of the water in the boiler, and gauge cocks in a vertical row shortly above the crown sheet, hy trying which he could ascertain where the water level was, as to each one which he tested. The other two safety devices were intended to be automatic. One was the usual safety valve, which normally comes into frequent use during operation, and without any attention by the fireman relieves the steam pressure, if it becomes too high. The last was the fusible plug. A hole was drilled and suitably threaded in the crown sheet in its center and highest point. Into this was screwed a threaded plug of a metal which would melt as soon as the water disappeared from the upper side, and the steam in the boiler would be blown down through the opening, extinguishing the fire. It was familiar knowledge that, as soon as all the water above the crown sheet was turned into steam, the crown sheet could and would become overheated, perhaps red hot, and if then water were pumped into the boiler and came into contact with this hot metal it would flash into steam, making an increase of steam pressure which might be too great and too sudden for the safety valve to take care of, and an explosion would follow. Prior to this accident, the master and the fireman had inserted in this crown sheet opening an iron or steel plug, and the absence of the fusible plug which had formerly been in position was undoubtedly one of the efficient causes of the explosion.

'[1] I- The Jurisdiction. In the trial court, the crew—the death and damage claimants—insisted that the derrick boat was not a structure pertaining to navigation; in other words, that the injuries were not mar[337]*337itime torts, and hence that there was no admiralty jurisdiction. The owner insisted to the contrary. The ultimate action of the District Court having been favorable to the crew, they lost interest in their jurisdictional objection and do not mention it in this court. Even the administrators of the master and fireman, who were denied recovery, do not touch this question in their assignments of error. On the other hand, the owvier now suggests, rather thán urges, to this court that there was no jurisdiction in the court below.

The question wheth.hr this derrick boat, situated as it was, should be treated as appurtenant to the land or to the navigable water impresses us as close. In Cope v. Vallette Dry Dock Co., 119 U. S. 625, 630, 7 Sup. Ct. 336, 30 L. Ed. 501, it was held that a floating dry-dock was not within the admiralty jurisdiction, though doubtless it was capable of being towed from place to place and might be used for transporting the apparatus and appliances which constituted its permanent cargo. In The Blackheath, 195 U. S. 361, 25 Sup. Ct. 46, 49 L. Ed. 236, it was decided that admiralty had jurisdiction over an injury by a floating vessel to a permanently fixed beacon. Many of the cases are cited and reviewed by Judge Cochran in Barnes Co. v. One Dredgeboat (D. C.) 169 Fed. 895, and by Judge Rellstab in Berton v. Dry Dock Co. (D. C.) 219 Fed. 763. The derrick which this boat carried was a loading apparatus, and especially intended to take logs from the bank and deposit them upon an adjacent boat. The machinery was of the type commonly found upon permanent wharfs. From the cases cited, we assume (without expressly deciding) that a wharfboat or floating wharf, carrying this type of loading machinery, but firmly moored to the land, would be outside the maritime jurisdiction, even though it was contemplated that it might, on occasion, be towed to another location; and we likewise assume that a barge carrying similar machinery, but customarily moved about a harbor and transferring cargo from one vessel to another, would be within that jurisdiction. It is at least not clear in which class this particular derrick boat should be placed, considering what the record shows and fails to show as to its capacity and uses; but we think the question suggested becomes immaterial in this case. The derrick boat was, at this time, undoubtedly in service as an instrumentality of interstate commerce, and if the Limited Liability Act is intended to reach such a boat, constitutional basis for that result is found in the commerce clause, even if it might not be in the admiralty and maritime clause. Providence Co. v. Hill Co., 109 U. S. 578, 589, 3 Sup. Ct. 379, 617, 27 L. Ed. 1038. Is, then, a boat like this within the intended scope of the Liability Act?

Section 4283 reaches “any vessel.” It was the theory of the act that always when a vessel was on a voyage between ports, and commonly until its return to the home port, the owner would have scant opportunity for personal control, and therefore ought to be relieved from the full effect of the respondeat superior rule. This theory applied with lessened force to ordinary vessels upon inland lakes and rivers, and with little, if any, force to the class of quasi vessels which often remain in or about one harbor and have no propelling power—barges, lighters, etc. Accordingly, section 7 of the original act of 1851 (R. S. [338]*338§ 4289 [Comp. St.

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Bluebook (online)
269 F. 334, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-tully-transp-co-v-turner-ca6-1920.