Standard Towing Corp. v. Tidewater Coal Docks Corp.

85 F. Supp. 659, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2524
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 9, 1949
StatusPublished

This text of 85 F. Supp. 659 (Standard Towing Corp. v. Tidewater Coal Docks Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Towing Corp. v. Tidewater Coal Docks Corp., 85 F. Supp. 659, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2524 (S.D.N.Y. 1949).

Opinion

HULBERT, District Judge. ,

Libellant sues to recover the value of the barge Jean, which it delivered under charter to the respondent for the transportation of coal from Port Reading, New Jersey, to respondent’s coal dock at 145th Street and Harlem River, in the Borough of Manhattan, New York City. The libel alleges the delivery of the barge in good condition, which the respondent challenges. Of course, no redelivery was possible since the vessel sank.

The Jean was a canal barge about twenty years old. During the 1944 season she was employed in, the transportation of bauxite ore from New York Harbor to Oswego with return cargoes of bulk sulphur. The Jean discharged her last such cargo from Oswego at Carteret, New Jersey, five or six days before she went on charter to respondent, and then went to libellant’s yard [660]*660for inspection and-repair. Mr. Evans, who inspected the vessel'and supervised repairs “looked: her ove'r'with caulkers, the scarves and butts above the light water line, (and) renewed any planks that might have been bad”. Two caulkers were employed two days and used about. twenty pounds of oakum. A daily report was turned in and entered in a book received in evidence, from which it appears that $520.22 was expended'-for- reconditioning the vessel in addition to $365.90, similarly expended in 1943. But the book did not disclose and Vice' President Herrmann could not give any 'details. ■ Evans testified the vessel was in condition to carry loads. 'For the'use of the boat, the respondent was- charged and agreed to pay $16 per day, and the libellant agreed to man the boat with a captain.

On November 29th the barge Jean was taken to “Liberty Stake Boat” off’Bedlo'e’s Island where it was grouped with other barges in tiers of three, and towed to the New Jersey terminal of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, and loaded, with coal. The loading operation was accomplished by dumping coal cars which were on a trestle into’ a "shute and moving the boat báck and forth with equipment' provided for that purpose to distribute the coal. This operation required from 45 minutes to an hour. The boat was then put into another tow and brought to the Liberty Stake Boat where the'tow was'broken up in order that .the vessels could be taken to the various, parts of the- Harbor to, which they were consigned. The Jean was towed to a rack established and maintained, by the City of New York in the East River, about “20 yards” or “100.feet”'off East.96th Street. . At -this point, the captain of the barge deserted her. •

The barge remained at the rack fo'r'two days /awaiting another captain. Finally, it was towed to the respondent’s dock- at 145th Street on December 6, 1944, about'7 or 7:30 A.M.,- and a discharge of the cargo was begun.- About 2 P.M. this work stopped because considerable water was being encountered in the coal. A sounding was made ■ at that time and there was approximately 3 to 3-J/£ feet of water in the barge. Mr. Harve, who was supervising the discharge of the barge, telephoned to Mr. Herrmann and told him that there was considerable water in the boat, that tru. captain had not; returned, that the cabin door was locked and., there t was not any pump on the outside. He asked permission to break the lock to get a pump out of the cabin, to which Mr. Herrmann agreed. The lock-.was broken but.no pump was found in the cabin. However, two employees of the libellant arrived in Connors Marine launch, in which they brought a pump from Hobokén.

“They tinkered around with the pump and they decided it was getting dark and they might have some trouble returning through Spuyten-Duyvil to Hoboken so they put the pump in the cabin and left.”

.The crane engineer had been .hoisting some watey oyer the side of the vessel. A hand pump. was.th.en put on and operated until 4:30 or- 5 o’clock; that, afternoon, when respondent’s men shaping -up. the coal started to clean the bow to get as much water toward the stern as possible so it could be pumped out. There were two men with boots in the bow and the water was close to one foot on their boots and they were standing in the coal.

On December 7th the Jean was shifted to 147th Street — there was still no captain on board when Harve had a conversation with Mr. Herrmann and told him respondent wanted to get’the boat back to the coal pier for another 'load.- Herrmann stated they were, making efforts to find the captain or get another one. Late that afternoon, about 3 or 4 o’clock, Harve met the captain coming along 145th Street with a load of groceries under his arm and he went aboard the barge. After a while, Mr. Harve went over'to 147th Street where she was moored and found Mr. Williams, libellant’s funner, attempting to make some repairs on the pump. He heard a conversation between the captain and Williams who stated that he , would either get the pump fixed or get another one. However, the barge was towed to the rack at 96th Street where Walter G. Anderson, who was hired by Mr. Williams, went aboard as 'captain. The boat was-then towed to the Liberty Stake Boat and thence to Port Reading and [661]*661loaded with a second cargo of coal, put in a tow on December 14th, and taken back to 96th Street with a stop at the Liberty Stake Boat.

Anderson testified that as soon as the re-loadíng of the barge at Port Reading began, he saw that she was going to need pumping and he took the gasoline pump out of the cabin and tested it. The engine worked all right but he did not pump any water then because he was busy getting 'his boat into the tow. When he did get the pump in operation, it worked a few minutes and stopped; again worked a few minutes and stopped. Anderson, who had taken pumps apart and repaired them, found that the difficulty with this particular pump was that the motor was worn out — it could not pick up or throw the water. The tow was then an hour out from Port Reading. He employed the hand pump from about 3 o’clock in the morning to 11 o’clock that night on the way up to the Stake Boat, not steady, but as much as he physically could and then until the barge reached 96th Street, when there was a foot or a foot and a half of water in her. This was around 5 or 6 A.M.

Capthin Anderson went ashore to make a •telephone call. His wife was then employed in a war plant making bomb sights. When Anderson was hired he received a card from Mr. Williams upon which appeared the latter’s telephone number. Anderson 'had given this card to his wife. He knew she would be leaving the plant, where she worked, at 7 A.M. He called her there on the telephone and asked her to telephone Mr. Williams and tell him the boat was at 96th Street, leaking, and to send a man with a pump as her husband was sick and was going home. She complied. Mr. Anderson testified that he had a bad cold and that the grate in the stove in the cabin in the Jean was broken, that he had propped it up with a brick in order to build and maintain a fire but he could not spend all of his time in the cabin. Moreover, the rack at which the barge was moored was 60 to 80 feet from the shore. He had the opportunity to go ashore when he did but he then had no means and did not know when he would have facility to return to the barge. The weather was very cold and he went home.

When Mr. Harve came to work on the morning of December 15th, he learned that the barge Jean was at the rack at 96th Street. Later that morning he had a telephone conversation with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
85 F. Supp. 659, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-towing-corp-v-tidewater-coal-docks-corp-nysd-1949.