Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Tug Capt. Vick

443 F. Supp. 722, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12092
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 30, 1977
DocketCiv. A. 75-1271
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 443 F. Supp. 722 (Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Tug Capt. Vick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Tug Capt. Vick, 443 F. Supp. 722, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12092 (E.D. La. 1977).

Opinion

JACK M. GORDON, District Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

This civil action arises out of a collision that occurred between the three-barge tow of the pushboat CAPTAIN VICK and the. Berwick railroad bridge. The Court allowed the Southern Pacific Transportation Company to orally amend its complaint to join the M/S CREOLE STAR and LeBeouf Brothers Towing Company, the vessel owner, as additional parties defendant in the matter, along with the M/S CAPTAIN VICK and her owner, A-Line Towing Company. Trial of the matter was held March 10, 1977, after which the parties were afforded the opportunity to present additional briefs. The Court then took the matter under submission.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1.

During July, 1974, continuing to the present:

(1) Southern Pacific Transportation Company, a corporation duly qualified to do business in Louisiana, has been the owner and operator of the Berwick Bay railroad drawbridge which spans the Atchafalaya River near the Louisiana towns of Morgan City and Berwick; (2) A-Line Towing Company, a Texas corporation, doing business upon the navigable waters of Louisiana, owned and operated the towboat M/V CAPTAIN VICK; and (3) LeBeouf Brothers Towing Company, Inc., a Louisiana corporation, owned and operated the towboat M/V CREOLE STAR.

2.

The Berwick Bay railroad drawbridge is a single track bridge with a vertical lift span. The bridge provides 73 feet of vertical clearance and 320 feet of horizontal clearance through the draw. Four dolphins, each located on a corner of the 320-foot draw of the bridge and approximately 110 feet from the bridge, form the protective fender system. Each dolphin is surrounded by pipe pilings, added to give the dolphins additional protection from the impact of a vessel. Based on the permit issued by the Secretary of the Army and the specific approval granted by the United States Coast Guard, the bridge owners are authorized to maintain the bridge and its fender system in the condition that existed in July of 1974. Located on the east side of the bridge is a bridge tender’s hut which houses bridge tenders, who are on duty 24 hours a day to safely operate the bridge.

3.

Positioned respectively approximately 600 yards and 700 yards north of the railroad bridge are the new Highway 90 replacement bridge and the old Highway 90 bridge structure. Approximately a mile and one-half above the railroad bridge, on the Morgan City side of the river, lies the Conrad Shipyard, which is positioned in a bend of the river, making it difficult for down-bound vessels above the shipyard to see any water traffic in or near the railroad bridge.

4.

On the morning of July 14, 1974, the river conditions on the Atchafalaya were considered swift with a three-to-four mile per hour current flowing south. Because of the velocity of the flow of the Atchafalaya River in the vicinity of the three bridges, on this day the Coast Guard had in effect a special “Local Notice to Mariners” No. 1-74. The bridge tender, Harry Kirsh, testified that the visual signals indicating that the Notice was in effect, were displayed on the top span of the railroad bridge.

Various restrictions were placed on tugboats navigating through the three-bridge area when the mariners’ notice was in effect. Of importance to the parties involved in this litigation were the following requirements:

(1) Any southbound tug with a non-integrated tow (a tow consisting of barges with varying beams and drafts) had to trip each *726 individual barge through the bridge openings, rather than proceed through with barges in tandem; and

(2) All northbound vessels had to yield the right of way to any downbound vessel when both vessels were going to enter the bridge opening at the same time.

5.

On the morning of the accident, the Berwick Bay railroad bridge tender, Tommy St. Marie, was on duty. The bridge house had two VHF radios which continually monitored VHF channels 16 and 13, call channels for marine traffic. The bridge house also had reporting devices which continuously recorded all transmissions from either channel. The tape recorder would automatically commence recording as soon as any transmission was received on the radio sets in the bridge house and automatically shut off when the transmission was concluded. Though it is impossible to discern the exact time of all the transmissions made on the morning of the collision, the recording does give an accurate chronological account of pertinent conversations between certain vessels and between vessels and the bridge. This recording has made it possible for the Court to piece together the events of the morning climaxing with the collision between the M/S CAPTAIN VICK and the Berwick Bay railroad drawbridge.

6.

Just prior to making any radio contacts relative to passage through the three bridge openings, the CAPTAIN VICK was traveling down the Morgan City-Port Allen route, southbound in Flat Lake, heading for the Berwick Bay railroad bridge. The tug, a small pushboat with a 600-horsepower, single screw engine, was pushing three empty barges, comprising a tow of some 550 feet in length. Because of the varying beams and drafts of each of the individual barges, the tow was classified as non-integrated and, thus, came within the force and scope of the Mariners’ Notice.

7.

Douglas Spikes, who was captain of the CAPTAIN VICK that morning, had traveled through the three bridges on several occasions and was familiar with the location of each bridge and with the general position of the three bridges below the Conrad Shipyard. Captain Spikes also had knowledge of the Local Notice to Mariners No. 1-74, which at times was imposed on vessels navigating through the bridge openings.

The captain contends that the day markers signifying the imposition of the Notice were not visible to any downbound vessel until that vessel reached a point below the highway bridges; the newly constructed span of the replacement Highway 90 bridge allegedly obscured vision. Yet, Spikes did admit that he realized that the river was running swift that day. He also acknowledged that he was aware that Coast Guard restrictions were imposed under like conditions to aid navigation through the bridges. Though he was aware that a Coast Guard vessel and a bridge tender, both located in the vicinity, had knowledge of any restrictions imposed, he never attempted to call them to inquire about restrictions. While suggesting that the Coast Guard or bridge tender should have disclosed that the Notice was in effect, Spikes admitted that he never disclosed that he was pushing a non-integrated tow.

8.

South of the railroad bridge, the CREOLE STAR was proceeding northbound in the lower Atchafalaya River, with one loaded gasoline tank barge, measuring approximately 195 feet in length. Just pri- or to any radio contact relevant to passage through the bridge openings, the CREOLE STAR was at a location known as “One-arm Landing,” approximately one-half mile below the railroad bridge and just below the entrance to the Intracoastal Canal.

9.

Pilot Loupe and Captain Dupre of the CREOLE STAR were both familiar with the location of the bridges, navigational

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443 F. Supp. 722, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12092, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-transportation-co-v-tug-capt-vick-laed-1977.