Shell Petroleum Co. v. Peschken

184 F. Supp. 950, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJune 24, 1960
DocketCiv. A. No. 793-59
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 F. Supp. 950 (Shell Petroleum Co. v. Peschken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shell Petroleum Co. v. Peschken, 184 F. Supp. 950, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886 (D.N.J. 1960).

Opinion

WORTENDYKE, District Judge.

This case properly invokes the Admiralty jurisdiction of this Court. The cause of action alleged in the libel arises .out of a collision between the British Motor Tanker Lembulus, owned by libel-ant, and the draw section of a New Jersey State Highway bridge over the Hackensack River, a navigable body of water of the United States, on December 20, 1957. The bridge is also locally known as the Lincoln Highway bridge, .and extends between Jersey City and Kearney, New Jersey. The respondents were employees of the New Jersey State Highway Department, who were charged with and engaged in the performance of the duty of operating the highway drawbridge with the draw section of which the collision here involved occurred.

The Bridge Act of 1906, 33 U.S.C. ■§ 499 provides that it shall be the duty of all persons operating and tending drawbridges built across the navigable rivers and other waters of the United States “to open, or cause to be opened, the draws of such bridges under such rules and regulations as in the opinion of the Secretary of the Army the public interests require to govern the opening of drawbridges for the passage of vessels * * *, and such rules and regulations * * * shall have the force of law.” Rules and regulations have been promulgated by the Secretary of the Army for the operation of the Lincoln Highway bridge and are to be found in 33 C.F.R. 203.200(d) and (e), which provide:

“(d) When a vessel approaches within signaling distance of a bridge for passage, the master thereof shall signify his intention by three blasts of a whistle or horn. * * * The signal of the craft shall be immediately answered by the tender or operator of the bridge. If the draw is ready to be immediately opened, the answer shall be three blasts of a whistle or horn from the bridge. In case of delay in opening the draw, as is provided for in this section, or as may be necessary by accident to the machinery or other contingency the signal from the vessel shall be answered by two long blasts of a whistle or horn from the bridge * * *. In all cases when delay signals have been given, a signal of three blaáts of a whistle or horn shall be given as soon as it is possible to open the draw.
“(e) Upon hearing or perceiving the signals prescribed, the tenders or operators of a drawbridge, except * * * shall at once open the draw signaled for so as to allow the prompt passage of any vessel: * *

Other regulations promulgated by the New Jersey State Highway Department for the operation of the drawbridge provided that if the opening were delayed abnormally, due to traffic conditions or failure of equipment, “the signal of two blasts is to be repeated at intervals until the draw can be moved.”

The evidence at the trial disclosed that the vessel had been moored at Kopper’s Wharf on the westerly bank of the river at Kearney Point, New Jersey, some distance north of the Lincoln Highway bridge, discharging cargo. After cargo discharge, the vessel, in ballast, for a voyage to Curacao, Dutch West Indies, cast off from the wharf and proceeded downstream upon the river, followed by two tugboats which had assisted in turning the vessel about after she cast off. She had been moored at the wharf port-side to, with the bow in an upstream direction. The Lembulus was [952]*952466 feet 2 inches in over-all length, had a beam of 54 feet 7 inches, and a loaded draft of 25 feet 7% inches. Her gross tonnage was 6,503. In ballast, as she was upon her departure, her forward draft was 13 feet and her after draft 17 feet. She was clear of the wharf at 1529 hours on the date stated, and headed downstream, or seaward, at 1542% hours. The wind was fresh to strong from the southeast, and squally, with intermittent rain showers, and there was an incoming tide.

Before reaching the bridge with which the collision occurred, in her progress down the river, it was necessary for the vessel to negotiate, in the following order, the Lackawanna Railroad Bridge, and the so-called City bridge, a short distance to the south of the Lackawanna bridge, both of which are drawbridges, and then to pass beneath the fixed Pulaski Skyway bridge. Because of her position at the wharf during the cargo discharge operations, it became necessary for her to be turned around. There was some conflict in the testimony respecting the location at which the vessel, with the assistance of the two tugs, was turned about. The master of the vessel testified that this maneuver was executed to the south of the Lackawanna bridge, after the vessel had been towed stern-first through that draw, whereas evidence for the respondents was to the effect that the turn-around took place to the north of the railroad bridge and that the vessel passed through the draw of that bridge bow first. The vessel’s Deck Log book discloses: “1537 V/L swinging in river. 1542%, V/L swung, slow ahead, proceeding downriver. 1543%, Lackawanna bridge opened. 1546 dead slow ahead, V/L cleared Lackawanna Bridge.” These entries are confirmed by similar entries in the bridge movement book and in the engine movement book of the vessel. Whatever may have been the manner of her passage of the Lackawanna drawbridge, she accomplished it without incident, and her passage through the City bridge draw was also uneventful. Her navigation, while proceeding downstream, was under the control of Captain John Bassett, a Dock Master and River Pilot, employed by the owner of the two tugboats above mentioned, but his testimony could not be presented because of his death before the ti-ial. However, the testimony of Captain Hawkins, the Master for the vessel, who was with the Pilot on the vessel’s bridge during the operation, disclosed that, at 1546 hours, while passing through the draw of the City bridge, which crosses the river at a point 1.1 nautical miles to the north of the bridge with which the vessel collided, the Pilot signalled for the opening of the latter bridge by three blasts of the vessel’s whistle. The giving of this signal is corroborated by the Chief Bridge Operator in his written report, following the collision. This signal was acknowledged by the Highway bridge by two blasts of its horn (the prescribed warning of delay in opening the draw), but the drawspan of the bridge nevertheless commenced to rise almost immediately.

The bridge operator, respondent Peschken, stated in his post-collision report to the New Jersey State Highway Department: “We knew that the tugs had gone up the river for the steamer and we were watching for them. When we seen (sic) them coming I signalled the gatemen to close the gates and I gave the steamer two long blast (sic) on the horn. Due to electrical trouble on the bridge this was done before the steamer reached the Skyway. The span was in upward motion before the steamer was under the Skyway.” He testified on the trial, however, that he gave a second two-blast signal after the respondent Hines told him the vessel was “coming down pretty fast.” Respondent Hines testified to a similar effect.

As the vessel was in the vicinity of the Pulaski Skyway bridge, its speed had been reduced to slow ahead. At 1555 hours the bridge drawspan appeared to the master to have stopped rising and the vessel’s engines were immediately brought to dead slow ahead and then to stop. At 1555% hours they were [953]*953•driven full astern. By that time the position of the vessel with reference to the drawspan was such as to create doubt whether her masts would clear the draw-span of the bridge.

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Bluebook (online)
184 F. Supp. 950, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-petroleum-co-v-peschken-njd-1960.