S. C. Loveland Co. v. Lavino Shipping Co.

37 F. Supp. 386, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1709
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 19, 1939
DocketNos. 167, 93, 137
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 386 (S. C. Loveland Co. v. Lavino Shipping Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. C. Loveland Co. v. Lavino Shipping Co., 37 F. Supp. 386, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1709 (E.D. Pa. 1939).

Opinion

KALODNER, District Judge.

The above three admiralty cases were consolidated and tried together before me without a jury. A brief exposition of some of the undisputed facts will facilitate an understanding of the claims involved in each suit.

General Chemical Company was the owner of a cargo of sulphur aboard the steamship “Commercial Bostonian.” On the morning of September 14, 1937, the steamship was moored, bow in, to the south side of Pier G, Port Richmond, Philadelphia, ready to discharge the cargo of sulphur.

At that time, General Chemical Company had contracted with S. C. Loveland Company, Inc., to furnish a lighter for the transportation of the sulphur to Camden, New Jersey; and had also contracted with Lavino Shipping Company to take the sulphur out of the steamship hold by means of buckets, and load part of it upon the lighter — the S. C. L. No. 9.

[387]*387The lighter was furnished by the Love-land Company and the loading performed by the Lavino Company. Shortly after the loading of the lighter was completed, the lighter careened, capsized and dumped her cargo into the water. The cargo was lost. The lighter then floated bottom up and was subsequently righted by the use of tugs; the lighter had been damaged by the capsizing and her owner was forced to expend money in repairing those damages.

In the ensuing litigation:

The General Chemical Company, as owner of the cargo, filed a libel in personam against the Lavino Company (the stevedore which loaded the lighter) for recovery of damages to the cargo, and the Loveland Company, as owner of the lighter, also filed a libel in personam against the Lavino Company (the stevedore) for the recovery of damages to the lighter.

The third proceeding was a petition filed by the Loveland Company, owner of the lighter, for exemption and limitation of liability. In this proceeding, the General Chemical Company contested the exemption and limitation of liability, and also filed its claim therein against the Loveland Company for the loss and damage of the cargo of sulphur.

There is no contention or claim that any fault resided in the General Chemical Company; its right to recovery of the damages suffered by it in the loss or destruction of the cargo of sulphur is clear; the question is, from whom recovery should be decreed; from the owner of the lighter, from the stevedore, or from both.

The stevedore company appears in only one capacity; it asserts that the loading was done in a proper manner, and that the disaster to the lighter was due to her unseaworthiness.

The Loveland Company, owner of the lighter, appears in' a double capacity; contending that the lighter was seaworthy, it defends the cargo owner’s action against itself; it seeks to place the blame for the disaster upon improper loading of the lighter,' and thereupon rests its claim against the stevedore company for recovery of damages to the lighter.

The General Chemical Company takes the position that (a) the lighter was unseaworthy, (b) the loading was done improperly; through the operation of each and both causes, the lighter capsized; it seeks recovery against both the Lavino Company and the Loveland Company.

This much is perfectly obvious and m effect conceded by all parties: Only one of two, or both, causes resulted in the disaster: (a) unseaworthiness of the lighter, (b) improper loading.

If the lighter is found to have been seaworthy, then General Chemical Company, the owner of the cargo, should recover all its damage from the stevedore Lavino Company; and furthermore, Loveland, the owner of the lighter, should also recover for damages to the lighter from the stevedore Lavino Company.

If the loading was not done improperly, then General Chemical Company, the owner of the cargo, should recover all its damage from Loveland, the owner of the lighter; and Loveland can recover nothing from the stevedore Lavino Company.

If the lighter capsized through the operation of both causes — unseaworthiness and improper loading — then the owner of the lighter and the stevedore ,are jointly and severally liable to General Chemical Company for damage to the cargo, but neither can recover anything against the other.

A determination of what caused the lighter to capsize will furnish the answer to the queries impliedly propounded just above, and fix the relative rights and liabilities involved. A more detailed study of the facts now becomes necessary for that purpose.

The lighter was a wooden box-like affair with raked ends, and with a small house aft. The ends went in 10 feet downward from the deck. The dimensions of the deck were 110 feet 7 inches by 32 feet. The dimensions of the bottom were 90 feet by 32 feet. The depth of the lighter was 10 feet. Her draft unloaded was approximately 28 inches forward and 37 inches aft — a mean draft of 2.7 feet. She carried her cargo on deck, not in the hold. Her carrying capacity was 600 tons. A cargo-bin of boards had been built to hold the sulphur: the side-boards were 2 feet high and the cargo space within the bin was 30 feet by 90 feet.

The lighter was first loaded from No. 3 hatch and No. 4 hatch of the “Commercial Bostonian” to the extent of 254 tons 1460 pounds of sulphur (all tons are long tons — 2240 pounds each). She was then shifted forward along the steamer and moved abreast the Nos. 1 and 2 hatches. From those hatches she was loaded with about 62 tons and 740 pounds [388]*388more. During the two loadings just referred to, the starboard side of the lighter was the side contiguous to the steamer. Then the lighter was turned around, so that her port side was next to the steamer, and about 20 tons more loaded on to her in that position, resulting in a total load aboard the lighter in the amount of 337 tons.

The loading was completed about 11:30 P. M. on the same day — September 14, 1937. At 12:30 A. M. on the morning of the next day, September 15, about an hour after the loading was completed, the lighter capsized — turned over and floated bottom up.

Witnesses called by the owner of the lighter testified that prior to the time the lighter was turned around all the sulphur loaded ori to her from the steamer was being dumped in the space between a line running fore and aft through the center of the lighter (amidships the lighter) and the starboard rail (within the cargo-bin).

The loading was accomplished in this manner: two booms were being operated, both fixed to the mast of the steamer; one lowered an iron bucket into the hold of the steamer, picked up a load of sulphur, and swung it upward out of the hold; then the other boom went into operation and swung the bucket over to a point somewhere above the deck of the lighter, lowering it thence to a point where Seeney, a Lavino Company employee, standing on the deck or on the sulphur already loaded, tipped the bucket with a 6-foot pole, so that the load of the bucket fell onto the deck of the lighter. The witnesses called by the owner of the lighter further testified that this boom, through the angle of elevation at which it was operated, carried to a distance somewhat short of the midshipline of the lighter, so that any load dropped from the bucket must perforce fall on the starboard side of the lighter (so long as the starboard side was next to the steamer).

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Related

United States v. Lopez
328 F. Supp. 1077 (E.D. New York, 1971)
General Chemical Co. v. Lavino Shipping Co.
37 F. Supp. 396 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
37 F. Supp. 386, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-c-loveland-co-v-lavino-shipping-co-paed-1939.