Smith v. Flowers Transportation, Inc.

377 F. Supp. 1112, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8211
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedJune 5, 1974
DocketGC 72-136
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 377 F. Supp. 1112 (Smith v. Flowers Transportation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Flowers Transportation, Inc., 377 F. Supp. 1112, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8211 (N.D. Miss. 1974).

Opinion

*1114 MEMORANDUM OPINION

READY, Chief Judge.

Eddie Smith, plaintiff, brings this admiralty action against Flowers Transportation, Inc., defendant, seeking damages for serious personal injuries sustained in the course of his employment, by defendant as a deckhand aboard the M/Y LADY REE. The accident occurred on December 10, 1970, at 11:30 p. m. on the Tennessee River, when a portion of the vessel’s tow was being locked downstream through the Gilbertsville Dam at Gilbertsville, Kentucky. The plaintiff asserts liability because of unseaworthiness of the vessel and its gear, Jones Act negligence on the part of the defendant, and also for maintenance and cure in excess of the paid portion. Defendant denies that it was negligent or that the vessel and its tow were unseaworthy and affirmatively claims that the negligence of the plaintiff was either the sole or a contributing proximate cause of the accident. After a nonjury trial and consideration of memorandum briefs, the court now determines the merits of the action, incorporating herein its findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Rule 52(a), F.R.Civ. P.

Plaintiff raises several claims of unseaworthiness and negligence as follows: (1) Defendant provided a towing line which was defective since it was either worn, too short, of inadequate size and tensile strength for a lock line, or, being of polyethylene material, possessed characteristics upon breaking that made it a dangerous rope; (2) defendant’s failure to provide plaintiff with a reasonably safe place to work by sending an excessive number of barges through the lock at one time; and (3) defendant’s failure to apprise the plaintiff of the special dangers and procedures for safely checking barges through the Gilbertsville lock during night hours. Defendant’s challenge to these contentions raises issues which are primarily of a factual nature.

Many basic facts are undisputed. Plaintiff, 22 years old and a resident of Counce, Tennessee, had for the previous 15 months worked as deckhand and relief mate for towing companies other than the defendant on the Ohio and Upper and Lower Mississippi Rivers. He had, however, no prior experience on the Tennessee River or locking through any of its dams. Tommy Pickens, Captain of the LADY REE, telephoned plaintiff at his home on the night of December 9, to advise that there was an immediate opening for the position of deckhand, and possibly later as mate, and requested plaintiff to board the vessel that same night at River Heights, Tennessee. Plaintiff did so, arriving at the boat at 11:30 p. m. Plaintiff advised the cap- ’ tain that he understood the job. He was given no instructions or supervision of any kind, and stood the forward watch as the vessel and its tow proceeded downstream to the Gilbertsville Dam, which it reached the following night at 10:45.

Upon its approach to the lock, the LADY REE’s tow consisted of 11 empty grain barges made up 3 abreast and 4 long, with the two stern barges and the towboat on the port side, aft. Because of the size of the flotilla, it was necessary to double-trip through the lock, and a forward cut of 9 barges was first placed in the lock chamber, while the LADY REE and the two stern barges pulled back to await later passage. The lock chamber, which was 110 feet wide and 600 feet long, was practically filled by the forward cut which measured 105 feet in width and 585 feet in length (the grain barges were each 35' x 195'). Two crew members, plaintiff and Carlos Swain, the mate, remained on the cut of barges. Plaintiff and the mate first secured the barges to floating timber heads attached to the lock wall, and the water level within the chamber was reduced to the downstream pool stage. At this point, the water level was approximately 35 feet below that portion of the long lock wall which extended downriver 400 feet on the port side. Pullout lines were then handed out from the lock crew to an electric mule,” a device which op *1115 erated upon a track at the top of the port wall, to pull the string of barges through and beyond the opened downstream lock gate. The mule moved the barges for several hundred feet at “middle speed,” or less than one mile an hour, until the barges floated outward. During this entire maneuver plaintiff was stationed alone at or near the quarter kevel on the port stern barge, about 50 feet forward of the stern, and handled the pullout line when it was released by the mule. Meanwhile, Swain was at the head of the tow, about to handle a line to keep the lead barge close to the lock wall and prevent the tow’s “topping out” into the river. Another deckhand was positioned upon the lock wall near the head of the tow to assist Swain in handling the lock line.

Swain, a veteran seaman in locking through Tennessee River dams, was at this point rendering off a 2" polyethylene or plastic lock line, the eye of which he had hooked over a nearby peg in the port lock wall, thus guiding the head of the tow. Simultaneously, plaintiff, at the stern, was handling a 1%" plastic line, the eye of which he had placed on a peg in the first row of pegs past the downriver gate, and he was feeding off on this line as the sternmost of the cut passed by the first row of pegs. Plaintiff then proceeded to check or reduce the speed of the barges by placing several figure eight patterns on the port quarter kevel and gradually rendered off the line. Noting the speed of the barges, plaintiff continued to apply pressure on the line, throwing a fourth figure eight over the kevel and sitting back on the line. When he jerked the line for slack, it fouled or kinked on the kevel, making taut the line to the lock wall peg. This action brought the barges to a sudden halt, slamming the stern against the lock wall. The stern line parted with a loud, popping noise and snapped back as plaintiff unsuccessfully tried to elude its whipping movement. The broken end of the line attached to the quarter kevel struck plaintiff in both legs and hurled him into the water behind the cut, where he remained 30 minutes or more until rescue efforts could be effectively employed. After the accident, the eye end of the line, approximately 70 feet long, was found hooked to the first row of pegs in the lock wall; the other portion of the line, with four figure eights wrapped on the stern kevel, had nearly 50 feet of free line on the deck of the barge.

When plaintiff began to apply greater pressure by making the fourth and last turn and sitting back on the line, the buzzer horn for the all-clear signal had not been sounded by the lock operator, and the lower lock gate had not entirely closed. Plaintiff and Swain, at their respective locations, were not within sight of each other, and had no method of communicating the timing of their movement. Swain, still checking the large barge against the port lock wall, had not commenced to restrain the forward speed of the barges, and was awaiting the all-clear signal. Thus, when the stern barges slammed against the lock wall, Swain’s line at once became slack, and he tied off the barges before going to the stern to see what had happened. With respect to his own line, Swain on cross-examination testified:

“A I don’t stop the barges until they blow a buzzer horn, let me know it’s all clear. Then I help them stop the barges.
Q That’s, right. And they had not blown the buzzer, or the horn, in that case?
A No, sir.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
377 F. Supp. 1112, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-flowers-transportation-inc-msnd-1974.