Pure Oil Co. v. The Vessel M/V Pennsylvania

124 F. Supp. 121, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2826
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 16, 1954
DocketNo. 27
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 F. Supp. 121 (Pure Oil Co. v. The Vessel M/V Pennsylvania) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pure Oil Co. v. The Vessel M/V Pennsylvania, 124 F. Supp. 121, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2826 (W.D. Ky. 1954).

Opinion

SHELBOURNE, Chief Judge.

This suit in Admiralty was instituted March 12, 1952, by the Pure Oil Company, a corporation, owner of the Motor Vessel McElroy, by the filing of a libel in rem against the Motor Vessel Pennsylvania, to recover damages to libelant’s barges in the tow of the McElroy when the tow of that vessel came in collision with the tow of the Pennsylvania in the Ohio River at or near Point Pleasant, West Virginia in the early hours of the morning of October 15, 1951.

[122]*122The Union Barge Line Corporation filed its answer and cross-libel against the McElroy seeking a recovery for damages to cross-libelant’s barges in the tow of the Pennsylvania.

The case was tried to the Court February 19 and 20, 1953 solely on the issue of liability under the usual stipulation that the damages, if any, be ascertained by a Commissioner in accordance with the Court’s determination of liability.

Due.to the illness of Counsel, briefs were not filed until March 10, 1954.

The Court makes the following—

Findings of Fact.

1. The town of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, lies on the left descending bank of the Ohio River at which town the river is traversed by two parallel bridges located, according to a Navigation Chart introduced in the evidence, 528 feet apart. The upstream bridge is a railway crossing and that downstream is a highway vehicular bridge. Both extend from West Virginia to Ohio.

The sailing line at the two bridges is near the Ohio shore, extending in a long diagonal from the West Virginia shore approximately one and one-half miles above the railway bridge about opposite the Marine Ways and Plant of the Marietta Manufacturing Company.

The channel span of the railway bridge is 400 feet wide. The span of the highway bridge is 675 feet. Each span is marked, in aid of navigation of the Draws, by a green light in the center suspended from the steelwork of the bridge and by red lights on the piers at either side of the span.

2. The McElroy was up-bound, pushing a tow of four loaded oil barges, each 240 feet in length, made up two and two. The McElroy was 118 feet in length and 45 feet across her beam.

3. The Pennsylvania was bound down river, pushing a large tow of twenty barges — ten loaded and ten empties. Captain Reece Loyd, Master and Pilot of the vessel, described the tow as made up having a length of 935 feet which with the length of the boat of 166 feet, gave the flotilla an aggregate length of 1,101 feet. He described the make-up' of the barges in the tow thus; “We had; on the head of the tow nine empties, andi then of course as you go back through the tow, we had nine loads. * * * The empties were three wide across the head,, plus an additional barge which was more or less hanging on our starboard side * * * The nine loads were made up, that is, they were eight standard loads and one large regulation tank barge. We had the standard loads made up, four wide — two four’s in other words. Then the large regulation tank barge on ahead of those and then with the empties made up around this one tank load.”

4. The McElroy went into the Kanawha River to Stone’s Landing to pick up-a boiler barge. The mouth of the Kanawha is approximately one-half mile below the lower or highway bridge at Point Pleasant and it is on the left descending bank of the Ohio. Stone’s Landing is two-tenths of a mile up the Kanawha from its mouth.

The McElroy went into Stone’s Landing and picked up the Boiler barge upon which there was a watchman, andi with this barge attached to the fore part of the tow on the starboard side, the McElroy sounded three long blasts of its whistle and backed out of the Kanawha into the Ohio and proceeded up stream again.

The stern of the Boiler barge was then forward and it was necessary to “top this barge around”. This was accomplished by the Mate and two deckhands with the aid of hand flashlights and the search light of the McElroy, which was operated by the pilot from the pilot house. The stern end of the boiler barge in the tow was held fast and the front end (as it then was fastened to the tow) was released so that the forward motion of the flotilla caused the boiler barge to turn and it was then made fast again to the starboard side of the tow, with its bow ten or fifteen feet back from the head of the original tow.

[123]*123A green signal light was placed on the starboard side of the bow of the boiler barge. There was an amber signal light, on the center of the bow of the tow and a red light on the port of the forward barge.

5. The McElroy had on the head of the tow a teletalk by which a member of the crew or lookout could communicate with the pilot and, which picks up sounds of wave wash of nearby vessels. The Pennsylvania was equipped also with a teletalk and both vessels were equipped with radar. Each pilot was able, by the -equipment of his boat, to communicate by radio telephone with the shore and with other river craft and with each other.

6. When the mate and two deckhands ■completed the topping around of the boiler barge on the McElroy, the head of that tow was about 100 yards below the lower of the two bridges. The Mate ■came immediately to the pilot house and was advised that the McElroy would tie up on the Ohio shore as soon as she passed under the two bridges. The two deckhands had also left the tow so that the McElroy was without any lookout on her tow.

When the mate came to the pilot house, the fog then seemed to the pilot “a solid bank” at and above the bridges.

As the head of the tow passed under the first bridge and into the fog bank, the pilot blew three short blasts (the regulation fog signal) of the whistle. When the McElroy passed under the first or lower bridge her pilot could see in the fog a distance of about fifty feet and the fog was much thicker as she reached the second or upper bridge.

From the mouth of the Kanawha to the lower bridge the McElroy ran at from slow to half speed and when the head of her tow reached the fog bank at the lower bridge, she came at full speed ahead so that, as explained by her pilot, he would have better steerage control and could get through the bridges before the fog shut out the channel lights on the bridges.

When the stern of the McElroy had cleared the upper bridge, the engines were stopped and placed in full reverse. The flotilla continued forward about 250 feet when the collision occurred.

7. The Pennsylvania passed the Keeley more than nine miles up-river from Point Pleasant. It was then very foggy, so much so that the Keeley tied up immediately after the passing and remained tied up some eight and one-half miles above Point Pleasant until after the collision.

The Pennsylvania passed Point Pleasant going at either slow-bell or floating. Above Point Pleasant and again opposite the Marietta Marine Ways, it blew fog signals which were noticed by Charles Harman, a guard, and Wayne Love, a watchman, both employees of the Marietta Manufacturing Company.

Gene Juniper, a deckhand, on the Pennsylvania, lived with his family in a house-trailer about two blocks below the Marine Ways at Point Pleasant. About twelve hours before the boat was scheduled to pass Point Pleasant he had been permitted to leave the boat to visit with his family and to be picked up by the Pennsylvania when she came into Stone’s Landing on the Kanawha to pick up mail. Juniper heard the Pennsylvania blow a fog signal before it passed his trailer.

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124 F. Supp. 121, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pure-oil-co-v-the-vessel-mv-pennsylvania-kywd-1954.