Petition of Oskar Tiedemann and Company for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Oskar Tiedemann and Company, Sabine Transportation Co., Hess Inc., American Trading & Production Corp., American Oil Company, Atlantic Refining Company, California Shipping Company, Cities Service Oil Company, Gulf Oil Corporation, Humble Oil & Refining Company (Esso), Keystone Shipping Company, National Bulk Carriers, Sinclair Refining Company, Socony Mobil Oil Company, Sun Oil Company, Texaco, Inc., Tidewater Oil Company and Trinidad Corporation, Amici Curiae. Petition of United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability as Owners of the U.S. N.S. Mission San Francisco. United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc.

289 F.2d 237
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 25, 1961
Docket13259_1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 289 F.2d 237 (Petition of Oskar Tiedemann and Company for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Oskar Tiedemann and Company, Sabine Transportation Co., Hess Inc., American Trading & Production Corp., American Oil Company, Atlantic Refining Company, California Shipping Company, Cities Service Oil Company, Gulf Oil Corporation, Humble Oil & Refining Company (Esso), Keystone Shipping Company, National Bulk Carriers, Sinclair Refining Company, Socony Mobil Oil Company, Sun Oil Company, Texaco, Inc., Tidewater Oil Company and Trinidad Corporation, Amici Curiae. Petition of United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability as Owners of the U.S. N.S. Mission San Francisco. United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Oskar Tiedemann and Company for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. Oskar Tiedemann and Company, Sabine Transportation Co., Hess Inc., American Trading & Production Corp., American Oil Company, Atlantic Refining Company, California Shipping Company, Cities Service Oil Company, Gulf Oil Corporation, Humble Oil & Refining Company (Esso), Keystone Shipping Company, National Bulk Carriers, Sinclair Refining Company, Socony Mobil Oil Company, Sun Oil Company, Texaco, Inc., Tidewater Oil Company and Trinidad Corporation, Amici Curiae. Petition of United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability as Owners of the U.S. N.S. Mission San Francisco. United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., 289 F.2d 237 (3d Cir. 1961).

Opinion

289 F.2d 237

Petition of OSKAR TIEDEMANN AND COMPANY for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability.
Oskar Tiedemann and Company, Appellant,
Sabine Transportation Co., Hess Inc., American Trading & Production Corp., American Oil Company, Atlantic Refining Company, California Shipping Company, Cities Service Oil Company, Gulf Oil Corporation, Humble Oil & Refining Company (Esso), Keystone Shipping Company, National Bulk Carriers, Sinclair Refining Company, Socony Mobil Oil Company, Sun Oil Company, Texaco, Inc., Tidewater Oil Company and Trinidad Corporation, amici curiae.
Petition of UNITED STATES of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., for Exoneration from or Limitation of Liability as Owners of THE U.S. N.S. MISSION SAN FRANCISCO.
United States of America and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc., Appellants.

No. 13258.

No. 13259.

United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit.

Argued March 6, 1961.

Decided April 10, 1961.

Rehearing Denied May 25, 1961.

Harold G. Wilson, Washington, D. C. (William H. Orrick, Jr., George Cochran Doub, Asst. Attys. Gen., Leonard G. Hagner, U. S. Atty., Wilmington, Del., Morton Hollander, George Jaffin and Robert D. Klages, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., on the brief), for the United States and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries.

T. E. Byrne, Jr., Philadelphia, Pa. (John W. Ennis, Jr., Krusen, Evans & Shaw, Philadelphia, Pa., P. A. Beck, New York City, Ernest S. Wilson, Jr., Morford, Young & Conaway, Wilmington, Del., on the brief), for Oskar Tiedemann & Co.

Arthur M. Boal, New York City (Raymond T. Greene, New York City, Richard F. Corroon, Wilmington, Del., Boal, McQuade & Fitzpatrick, Kirlin, Campbell & Keating, New York City, Berl, Potter & Anderson, Wilmington, Del., on the brief), for amici curiae.

Abraham E. Freedman, Philadelphia, Pa. (Marvin I. Barish, Freedman, Landy & Lorry, Philadelphia, Pa., on the brief), for claimants-appellees.

Before GOODRICH, McLAUGHLIN and FORMAN, Circuit Judges.

GOODRICH, Circuit Judge.

These appeals, heard together, arise from interlocutory decrees (28 U.S.C. § 1292(a) (3)) of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. That Court refused both exoneration and limitation of liability to the United States and Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc. and denied exoneration but granted limitation of liability to Tiedemann and Co.1 The opinion fully and carefully discusses the Court's reason for both conclusions. 1959, 179 F.Supp. 227.

The litigation arises from a collision between the ship USNS Mission San Francisco (hereafter called "Mission") and the SS Elna II ("Elna"). Mission was a navy tanker operated by Mathiasen's Tanker Industries, Inc. The Elna is an old cargo ship operated under the Liberian flag, owned by Oskar Tiedemann and Company. The collision occurred about 12:20 in the morning of March 7, 1957. The Mission was proceeding up Delaware Bay. She had discharged a cargo of jet fuel (grade JP-4) at Newark, New Jersey, the day before and was returning to Paulsboro, New Jersey, to take on a new cargo. Elna was southbound. She had discharged a cargo of pulp wood at Wilmington and was proceeding to Baltimore.

Too full a description of the vicinity of the collision will not help in understanding the legal questions here involved. But a short summary will be useful. The general area is called "Goose Point" on the New Jersey side. A northbound vessel leaves New Castle Range by making a 34° turn to starboard on what is called the Bulkhead Bar Range. This is a short range about 1200 yards in length. It, in turn, leads into Deepwater Point Range. The vessel must make another 34° right turn into Deepwater Point Range. Some vessels navigate the bend in two distinct turns; others make one sweeping turn especially at floodtide.

Mission was proceeding northbound at floodtide and, with the help of the tide, going about 22 land miles an hour. The vessels were visible to each other some 15 or 20 minutes before the accident and Elna saw Mission's mast lights across Goose Point when the vessels were perhaps four miles apart.

As the District Court said [179 F. Supp. 231], "there was something terribly wrong on the bridge of the Mission that night." Further down the river Mission had crowded another tanker called Gulflube almost out of its channel. As she proceeded in the direction of Elna she kept up her speed, stayed either in the middle or slightly to the New Jersey side of the river and failed to acknowledge both the signal from her own lookout at the bow and the port-to-port signal blown by Elna. After a short interval Elna blew a second signal blast. By this time the catastrophe was inescapable. Elna reversed her engines. Whether this procedure had become effective or not is not of the greatest importance for it was too late to avert the collision. Immediately after the ships struck the tanks on Mission exploded. The bridge and the midship housing collapsed into the hull the sides of which were blown out by the force of the explosion. The pilot and the navigating officers of Mission were killed. Mission's own speed kept her going in the neighborhood of some 460 yards beyond the point of explosion when she sank.

We need not spend much time discussing the fault of Mission in causing the collision. She violated Article 25 of the Inland Rules (33 U.S.C.A. § 210) directing that in a narrow channel steam vessels are to keep to that side of the fairway or mid channel which lies on their starboard side. She also violated Article 18, Rule 1, 33 U.S.C.A. § 203, in failing to acknowledge the one blast signal of Elna. These two statutory violations and her faulty navigation in general were clearly causal. The district court properly denied exoneration to the United States and Mathiasen.

The chief subject of controversy when the case was presented to this Court had to do with the negligence or lack of negligence on the part of the Mission for the condition of the empty tanks. The district court concluded that there was negligence in this regard and that the United States and Mathiasen had privity and knowledge of the negligence. This defeated their petition for limitation of liability.

When jet fuel is pumped out of the tanks upon unloading of the cargo, vapor is generated by the fuel which remains at the bottom of the tanks and on the sides. This vapor mixed with air is dangerously explosive. While the Government's argument objects to the trial court's characterization that Mission was "as dangerous as a ship laden with explosives" we need not discuss whether the analogy is perfect or not. There was plenty of testimony showing the relations of air and vapor which made the mixture dangerous or nondangerous according to the proportions of each and that the mixture was a dangerous one in this case is certainly shown by what happened.

The core of the controversy is whether adequate precautions were taken. What the Mission did was to close the tanks. This, it was vigorously argued, was the safest way to handle the matter and the way, it was testified, the industry does.

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