Sir William Reardon Smith & Sons, Ltd. v. Tug San Pedro

226 F. Supp. 879, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4571
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1962
DocketNo. 2182
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 226 F. Supp. 879 (Sir William Reardon Smith & Sons, Ltd. v. Tug San Pedro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sir William Reardon Smith & Sons, Ltd. v. Tug San Pedro, 226 F. Supp. 879, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4571 (S.D. Tex. 1962).

Opinion

GARZA, District Judge.

This cause involves a collision in the Houston Ship Channel on the night of March 24,1961, between the M/Y BRADFORD CITY, an ocean-going merchant vessel of British registry, and a barge being towed by the tug SAN PEDRO.

The owners of the BRADFORD CITY filed a libel against the tug SAN PEDRO and Gissel & Company Barge 2001, and others, as respondents. The owners of the tug and barge, in turn, have cross-libeled the M/Y BRADFORD CITY. In Admiralty 2249 filed in this Court, Signal Oil & Gas Company, which owned the cargo on the Gissel Barge No. 2001, in turn, sued the M/V BRADFORD CITY and her owners as respondents. A motion to consolidate those causes was granted, and this cause is being tried in Admiralty No. 2182 as noted above, with Sir William Reardon Smith & Sons, Ltd., as owners of the M/V BRADFORD CITY, as Libellants and Cross-Respondents, and J. S. Gissel & Company as Respondents and Cross-Libellants, and Signal Oil & Gas Company as Intervenor.

Both the owners of the M/V BRADFORD CITY and the tug SAN PEDRO and its barges are claiming that the collision in question was the result of the unseaworthiness and navigational faults [880]*880of each other. Signal Oil & Gas Company, as Intervenor, is claiming the loss of its cargo was due to the unseaworthiness and navigational faults of the M/V BRADFORD CITY. The case was tried by the Court and after three days of testimony and argument of counsel, the Court made its preliminary findings of fact.

These findings were to the effect that the Court could not" accept the testimony of the witnesses in behalf of the M/V BRADFORD CITY that the SAN PEDRO changed her course from the right side of the channel and crossed over to the left and across the BRADFORD CITY’S bow; that the tug SAN PEDRO and the barges in her tow, prior to the collision in question, had been traveling on its left side of the channel, in violation of Article 25 of the Inland Rules (33 U.S.C. § 210); that at the time that the SAN PEDRO and the BRADFORD CITY could have seen each other, the BRADFORD CITY was traveling along the middle of the channel; that the BRADFORD CITY gave a one-signal blast, and received an answer of a one-signal blast from the SAN PEDRO, which acknowledged to the BRADFORD CITY that the SAN PEDRO would make a port-to-port passing; that the SAN PEDRO then realized that the wrong signal had been given, as she was on her port side of the channel, and proceeded to give a two-signal blast to which they received no reply; that the BRADFORD CITY was not keeping a proper lookout, or they would have realized that a port-to-port passing could not be made; that because of the failure of the BRADFORD CITY to keep a proper lookout, the BRADFORD CITY failed to take the necessary steps to avoid the collision; that the captain of the tug SAN PEDRO put his engine full astern and was trying to take his tow toward the edge of the channel and that this maneuver was what caused the BRADFORD CITY to think the SAN PEDRO had crossed its bow.

The Court found, generally, that the collision was the result of the SAN PEDRO violating the rules of the road and not keeping to its right, but if the BRADFORD CITY had been keeping a proper lookout it could have avoided the collision.

The Court found that both ships were seaworthy and that the collision was not the result of anything being wrong with the lights or the lack of any equipment on the part of either vessel.

The Court further found that this was a case of mutual fault.

At the conclusion of the findings of the Court as generally outlined above, the proctors for the M/V BRADFORD CITY asked the Court if the Court had given any thought to ruling on the major-minor fault of the parties. The Court at that time said that in its opinion the major fault was on the part of the tug SAN PEDRO, but that if the M/V BRADFORD CITY had been keeping a proper lookout, it could have avoided the collision.

Having made the findings as generally outlined above, the parties were asked to present briefs on the question of whether under said findings the judgment should be for one of mutual fault or on the apr plication of the major-minor fault rule. Extensive briefs have been submitted to the Court.

Proctors for the tug SAN PEDRO and the Intervenor argue that the major-minor fault rule is not present in the instant case; that this rule being “vague and unreliable”, as characterized by Gilmore and Black at page 403, the BRADFORD CITY should not be excused because it was guilty of a substantial contributory fault; and that that fault of failing to keep a proper lookout was in fact a statutory fault.

Proctors for the BRADFORD CITY argue that the sole fault for the collision was on the SAN PEDRO; that when the BRADFORD CITY received from the SAN PEDRO a signal confirming that she was on her own right hand side of the channel and in a position to pass port-to-port, the proper concern of the BRADFORD CITY narrowed to one of making [881]*881the bend at Buoy 98 and holding as much to the BRADFORD CITY’S starboard as possible to accomplish the passing as agreed; that prior to her turn, the BRADFORD CITY was holding to mid-channel which is a judicially recognized custom for ocean-going vessels in the Houston Ship Channel. (See Royal Navy of Italy v. Standard Oil Co. of New Jersey (CCA 5, 1929), 27 F.2d 331); that at the time the tug blew the two-blast signal as found by the Court, the events which followed were in extremis and are not to be considered in assessing fault.

After reviewing the evidence once again and the briefs of proctors, this Court has reached the conclusion that the one-blast signal of the tug SAN PEDRO, in answer to the one-signal blast of the BRADFORD CITY, excused the BRADFORD CITY from any fault of keeping a proper lookout; that it had a right to assume that a port-to-port passing could be made in safety; that after these signals were exchanged, the events that followed were in extremis, and the failure of the M/V BRADFORD CITY to keep a proper lookout cannot be taken into consideration as a fault in the collision.

There is no question that the major fault, as originally found by this Court, of the collision in question was the violation of the Inland Rules by the tug SAN PEDRO, and when said tug compounded its fault by agreeing to a port-to-port passing, it makes this a proper case for the application of the Major-Minor fault rule. Major fault being on the tug SAN PEDRO, the sole fault of this collision is found to be that of the tug SAN PEDRO and the barges she had in tow.

The Court is, therefore, entering as its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law those submitted to the Court by proctors for the M/V BRADFORD CITY by their letter of September 18, 1962.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

As a result of a collision which occurred in the Houston Ship Channel on March 24,1961, the owners of the British Motor Vessel BRADFORD CITY filed a libel against the Tug SAN PEDRO and Gissel Barges 1302 and 2001, all owned by the Respondent, J. S. Gissel & Company. J. S. Gissel duly filed a cross-libel against the BRADFORD CITY. The Signal Oil and Gas Company, which owned certain cargo lost as a result of the collision, subsequently filed its separate libel against the BRADFORD CITY and her owners.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

No. 20528
328 F.2d 623 (Fifth Circuit, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 F. Supp. 879, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sir-william-reardon-smith-sons-ltd-v-tug-san-pedro-txsd-1962.