Reederei Franz Hagen Ex Rel. Verein Bremer Seeversicherer v. Diesel Tug Resolute

400 F. Supp. 680
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 22, 1975
DocketCiv. 73-907-H
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 400 F. Supp. 680 (Reederei Franz Hagen Ex Rel. Verein Bremer Seeversicherer v. Diesel Tug Resolute) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reederei Franz Hagen Ex Rel. Verein Bremer Seeversicherer v. Diesel Tug Resolute, 400 F. Supp. 680 (D. Md. 1975).

Opinion

ALEXANDER HARVEY, II, District Judge:

In this admiralty action, the owners of the MV OTTO PORR and the insurer of its hull seek to recover damages because of a grounding which allegedly occurred following undocking of this vessel at the Curtis Bay Ore Pier in the Port of Baltimore. Named as defendants are the tug RESOLUTE, its owner, Baker-Whiteley Towing Co. (hereinafter Baker-Whiteley) and the tug’s master and mate, Anthony H. Gentile and Bernard F. Freburger.

Suit was originally brought by the OTTO PORR’s owner, Reederei Franz Hagen (hereinafter Hagen), a German corporation with offices in Hamburg, West Germany. Verein Bremer Seeversicherer, a German firm with offices in Bremen, West Germany, was added as a use plaintiff because it had insured the hull of the OTTO PORR and paid for repairs to the vessel’s rudder and steering engine.

On April 26, 1973, after the OTTO PORR had completed the loading of a cargo of chrome ore at the Curtis Bay Ore Pier, the tug RESOLUTE assisted in undocking her. 1 The tug’s services had been furnished pursuant to a written towage contract between Hagen and Baker-Whiteley. During the operation in question, defendant Gentile, who was master of the tug RESOLUTE, was on board the OTTO PORR and acted as docking master. Defendant Freburger, who was mate of the RESOLUTE, remained aboard the tug at the time as her acting master.

Before the operation commenced, the OTTO PORR had been moored port side to the Curtis Bay Ore Pier, bow in, and the RESOLUTE had been made up to the vessel’s starboard bow. Using both the OTTO PORR’s and the tug’s engines and rudders, the vessel was backed into the Curtis Bay Ore Pier channel and then was turned 180° by the tug counterclockwise somewhere in the channel between the Ore Pier and the Coal Pier. 2

Following the turning operation, the OTTO PORR, which was now turned around and heading out, proceeded on its own power and under the direction of a Bay Pilot down the Curtis Bay Channel to the Patapsco River and then down river for approximately nine miles. The Bay Pilot then observed that the vessel’s rudder angle indicator was not registering correctly and so advised the master, Captain Helmut Fenske. Following an investigation, Captain Fenske found that the steering gear was damaged, where *682 upon he called for the assistance of tugs and returned the vessel to the pier. Later inspection revealed damage to the rudder, steering gear and steering engine, which necessitated extensive repairs before the vessel could resume her normal operations.

Plaintiffs contend that during the turning operation, the OTTO PORR grounded at the edge of or outside the Curtis Bay Ore Pier approach channel. Asserting that the grounding was caused by the negligence of the defendants Gentile and Freburger and by the unseaworthiness of the tug RESOLUTE, plaintiffs here seek damages from the individual defendants and from Baker-Whiteley, which owned the tug in question and employed defendants Gentile and Freburger. Damages in the amount of $108,108.68 are claimed, representing costs paid by the owner of the OTTO PORR and its insurer for repairs to the vessel, losses for detention of the vessel and other charges incurred as a result of the alleged grounding and the subsequent repair work. By agreement of the parties, the issues of liability have been tried separately, with questions relating to the determination of the amount of damages being reserved for later trial, if necessary.

Defendants contend that the evidence is insufficient to show that any grounding at all occurred shortly after the OTTO PORR was undocked. Claiming that there is no direct evidence that the vessel’s rudder struck bottom outside the Ore Pier channel, defendants assert that the damage, which was discovered shortly after the undocking operation, occurred either before defendants assisted in the undocking of the OTTO PORR on April 26, 1973 or after the undocking and turning had been completed. As a further defense, defendant Baker-Whiteley argues that even if defendant Gentile were negligent, no recovery can be had against it because of exculpatory provisions of the pilotage clause included in the contract of towage. Defendant Gentile relies on a similar exculpatory clause contained in the agreement between him and the shipowner for the performance of his services as docking master. Defendant Freburger contends that proof is lacking that he was negligent in any way.

I

Negligence of Defendant Gentile

At the lengthy trial, 3 the evidence relating to the cause of the damage to the OTTO PORR’s rudder and steering gear was sharply conflicting. Plaintiffs produced proof that at the direction of defendant Gentile, who was on board the OTTO PORR at the time, the vessel was turned around by the tug RESOLUTE at a location in the Curtis Bay Ore Pier approach channel where the channel was not wide enough for the turning maneuver. If the testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses is accepted, it would appear that the stern of the OTTO PORR ran outside the channel while the vessel was being turned and that the rudder was thereby caused to ground and remain locked in position while the tug pushed the vessel’s bow counterclockwise and turned it completely around. 4 Were the vessel turned at or near the location where plaintiffs’ proof indicates the turning actually occurred, plaintiffs would quite clearly have satisfied their burden of proving that defendant Gentile was negligent in deciding, while acting as docking master on board the *683 OTTO PORR, to maneuver the vessel in this part of the,channel.

On the other hand, defendants have produced proof indicating that the OTTO PORR was in fact turned very near the Coal Pier, where the channel widened out and the depth of the water on both sides was such that no grounding would in fact have occurred. Defendants assert that at the time the grounding allegedly occurred, no one on the vessel noticed any bump, jolt or other physical indication that any part of the OTTO PORR struck bottom. Defendants point out that the vessel proceeded for some nine miles before Captain Fenske discovered damage to the steering gear, and they contend that the damage which occasioned the repairs in question occurred either before the undocking maneuver during other voyages of the OTTO PORR, or after the RESOLUTE and its crew had finished the undocking and turning maneuver.

On the record here, this Court finds that the OTTO PORR did go aground on April 26, 1973 during the turning maneuver. The actual location in the channel where the vessel was turned, although between where plaintiffs’ witnesses placed it and defendants’ witnesses placed it, was quite close to the spot shown by plaintiffs’ proof. The credible evidence indicates that the vessel was too long to be turned at that location, that the stern ran out of the channel and that the vessel’s rudder grounded during the turning maneuver, with resultant damage to the rudder, steering gear and steering engine. The evidence produced was circumstantial, but with due regard to the credibility of the witnesses, this Court is satisfied that plaintiffs have met their burden of proof as to this issue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
400 F. Supp. 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reederei-franz-hagen-ex-rel-verein-bremer-seeversicherer-v-diesel-tug-mdd-1975.