Rideout v. Charles Nelson Co.

55 F.2d 783, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3793, 1932 A.M.C. 280
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1932
DocketNo. 6541
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 F.2d 783 (Rideout v. Charles Nelson Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rideout v. Charles Nelson Co., 55 F.2d 783, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3793, 1932 A.M.C. 280 (9th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

MeCORMICK, District Judge.

A few minutes after midnight of July 7, 1930, the steamer Doylestown, a steel freighter, 2,600 ton gross and 300 feet in length over all, while attempting to dock at the private wharf of the Sperry Flour Company at Yallejo, Cal., brushed the side of the tugboat Halcyon, driving her on the barge Rideout No. 5 and squeezing both tug and barge against the dock to which they were moored, thereby causing damage to them. Their owner filed a libel against the Doylestown and her owner in the District Court for the Northern District of California to recover damages. Issue was properly joined, and after a hearing on the merits the district judge filed a memorandum opinion [50F.(2d) 439] wherein he found the Doylestown free from fault and exonerated her from any liability for the collision. A final decree dismissing the libel with costs was accordingly entered, and this appeal by the libelant is from such decree. The assignments of error are numerous hut relate entirely to the findings of fact by the trial court and its application thereto of rules of law. It is therefore unnecessary to consider or discuss the assignments seriatim.

Appellant concedes that the facts are substantially correctly stated in the opinion of the district judge. That opinion and the record before us, which we have examined, discloses the following situation. The doek in question is about 725 feet long with, its face lying northerly and southerly. The damaged barge, Rideout No. 5, with its attached towboat Halcyon, was moored along the face near the south end. Toward the north end, also alongside the face of the dock, there was moored another barge, Rideout No. 6, also with an attached tugboat, the Penguin. Both docks and barges were owned and operated at tbe time of the collision by the libelant, appellant herein, E. V. Rideout Company. Each bargo and tugboat was about 110 fee¡k long and extended out from the dock approx[784]*784imately 50 feet. Both the tugs and barges carried proper lights at the time of the collision. The clearance or space between the two barges that were thus moored along the face of the doek was estimated by the captain of the Doylestown to be about 360 feet. There is other credible evidence showing this clearance to have been approximately 450 feet.

Before leaving San Francisco on the afternoon of July 7, the master of the Doylestown made arrangements with the Sperry Flour Company to dock at the Vallejo wharf about twelve o’clock midnight following. He was assured that the landing would be free and unoccupied at that'time. Instructions to keep clear for the Doylestown at the appointed time were received by the Sperry Company employees at the Vallejo wharf during the afternoon, and the officers of both tugs and barges were told of this requirement, either in the early evening of July 7 or during that night, and at least an hour prior to the arrival of the Doylestown.

Barge No. 6 had been loading cargo at door 20 of the dock. This was the opening through which the Doylestown was to be loaded and in front of which she was to dock according to previous arrangements. Although this barge finished loading between eight and nine o’clock that night, she did not pull out or leave the face of the doek to make berth for the Doylestown, as those in charge of her had been twice told to do by the dock watchman and as they had agreed to do, but instead she was pulled along the dock’s face, closer to the northerly end thereof, and tied up in such position, where she remained at the time of the collision. The reason her officers assign for not leaving for San Francisco when loaded, as they had promised to do, was that they were waiting for a convenient and favorable ebb tide. It was proven, however, that high water occurred at Vallejo on July 7 at 10:45 p. m. and that ebb tide began there immediately. It was also shown that as soon as this barge was moved northerly along the doek her officers and those of her tugboat “turned in” and gave no further attention to the Doylestown’s movements or to doek conditions until after the collision.

Barge No. 5, with the tug Halcyon, arrived at the wharf about 10:45 p. m. of the night in question. She was first moored just south of barge No. 6, and, upon being told by the doek watchman that a steamer was coming in at midnight and that the barge must be moved out of there, she was merely pulled along the face of the doek to the southerly end thereof, where she was tied when the collision happened. There is a conflict in the testimony as to whether those in charge of barge No. 5 were told by the dock watchman to moor on the face of the doek near the southerly end or to moor around the southerly end thereof. The trial court found that this barge could have and should have tied up. around the/ end of the wharf. Such finding, having ample support in the evidence, will not be set aside on appeal. The Yucatan (C. C. A. 9) 226 F. 437.

The Doylestown, with her captain on the bridge, third mate and quarter master in the wheelhouse, and a proper lookout stationed in the bow, approached the doek at a slow speed of four miles, or less, per hour through a narrow channel. The master seasonably blew the proper landing whistle indicating his intention to dock. It was a moonlight but somewhat cloudy night. It was very dark, however, along the shore line of the Sperry mill. There was a strong northwesterly breeze at the time and the tide was setting in the same direction and toward the dock. The steamer’s' course was properly directed for the north end of the wharf and to door 20 thereof, where she had previously arranged to berth, but which was observed by the ship’s officers to be occupied by the tugboat and barge No. 6. This situation was first seen by the ship’s master when about 1,200 feet squth of the doek. At that point, on account of the arrangement of the lights upon and about the dock and by reason of the position of the moon and because of shadows thrown over the south end of the wharf and surrounding waters, the location of barge No. 5 and its towboat, toward the southerly end of the dock, was illusory. They and their lights then appeared to the officers and lookout of the Doylestown to be moored on the inside of the doek. Upon seeing her berth at the north end unavailable and having then sufficient headway to make this expected and promised berth, the master of the Doylestown backed the ship full astern in order to take the headway off. At that time the steamer, slowly moving, was about 300 feet south and about 100 feet olf the doek. Then for the first time the real position of barge No. 5 and her tugboat was discernible and revealed to the Doylestown. They were so moored at the dock as to prevent their being visible to incoming vessels until that position was reached., The tide and wind “were then setting the steamer toward the dock and threatened to push her against barge No. 5 and the Halcyon. The wheel was put hard astarboard for the pur[785]*785pose of swinging the Doylestown away from the dock, and she was placed on, half speed ahead in an effort to get the ship out in the stream so as to avoid the dock, barges, and tugs and enable her to proceed to the turning basin some distance northerly. The wind and tide were so strong that the maneuver was impossible without hitting the tugboat and barge and sideswiping the dock with the stern. Thereupon, and in this extreme emergency, the wheel was changed hard aport, and the how of the ship put directly behind barge No. 6. The master realized that he would have to dock between the two barges, with tide and wind setting the ship toward the wharf. It is clear that when he was able to discover where the Halcyon and barge No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 F.2d 783, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3793, 1932 A.M.C. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rideout-v-charles-nelson-co-ca9-1932.