Staub v. Delaware Dredging Co.

38 F.2d 844, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1907
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 7, 1930
DocketNo. 59
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 F.2d 844 (Staub v. Delaware Dredging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staub v. Delaware Dredging Co., 38 F.2d 844, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1907 (E.D. Pa. 1930).

Opinion

THOMPSON, District Judge.

Michael Staub, M. D. Kolyn, J. W. Thines, and Albert Mattson, copartners, trading as Michael Staub & Kolyn Construction Company, filed a libel in a cause of collision against the tug Kard and Delaware Dredging Company to recover damages to the dredge Leo incurred while the Kard was towing the Leo through the draw of the Petty Island railroad bridge of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company which is built across the channel of the Delaware river between Petty Island and the New Jersey shore. The dredging company, claimant of the Kard impleaded the Pennsylvania Railroad Company under the Fifty-Sixth Admiralty Rule (28 USCA § 723).

The Leo is a derrick barge sixty feet long, twenty-four feet beam, drawing about four feet of water, and at the time of the collision was equipped with a derrick boom rising seventy feet from the deck. The barge had no steering apparatus, but was dependent entirely upon the tug for her navigation.

On May 17, 1&26, the libelants by verbal contract engaged the Kard to tow the Leo from the Delaware river dock of the Philadelphia Electric Company at Port Richmond to a point up the Cooper river where the libelants were engaged in the construction of a bridge. The Kard took the Leo in tow on a short bridle and proceeded across the Delaware river past the upper end of Petty Island. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company maintains a bridge crossing the river between Petty Island and the New Jersey shore equipped with a draw of “jackknife” construction. The draw can be raised to an angle of eighty-four degrees from horizontal position, and is operated by a bridge tender in the employ of the railroad from a house on the bridge.

Upon approaching the bridge, the Kard blew three blasts of her whistle, whereupon the bridge tender set the signals on the bridge to stop on-coming trains and opened the draw without, however, giving any signal in response to the signal of the tug. Instead, however, of raising the draw-span to the full height to which it could be raised, he raised it to only about fifty degrees from the horizontal. The master of the Kard, seeing that the bridge was being raised, proceeded to enter the draw, whereupon the boom of the Leo was brought into collision with the raised [846]*846draw-span, and, as a result, the derrick was broken, the “A” frame was knocked down, the house was crushed, and the barge otherwise damaged. The tug thereupon anchored the Leo at the mouth of the Cooper river.

Representatives of the libelants, the respondents, and the railroad company shortly after the collision held a survey, as a result of which it was agreed orally that the Kard should tow the Leo to a plant maintained by the respondent Delaware Dredging Company at Wilmington, where repairs agreed upon would be made. Mr. Kolyn, representing the libelants, agreed to place a hand pump on the Leo and to have two of the libelants’ mechanics assist the Delaware Dredging Company in making the repairs. After that agreement had been entered into, the Kard on the afternoon of May 17 took the Leo in tow, and, instead of towing her to Wilmington, towed her out of the Cooper river to the wharf of the Campbell Soup Company at Camden, arriving there at about 6 p.m. The Leo was made fast by the crew of the Kard to a mud scow lying on the northerly side of the dock, and the Kard took its towlines from the Leo and left it in that position without leaving any one in charge for safeguarding or caring for the Leo. Under the direction of Mr. Kolyn, two mechanics in the employ of the libelants installed a hand pump on the Leo and pumped out what water was then in her hold. They left the Leo about 8 o’clock p. m. These men were acting under the direction of a foreman in the employ of the libelants named Parker who had been so directed by Mr. Kolyn. The Leo lay in that position overnight.

The arrangement for leaving the Leo at the Campbell Soup Company’s dock was not in accordance with the agreement made between the representatives of the three parties at the time of the survey. The arrangement then made was that the Kard was to proceed to the Delaware Dredging Company’s plant at Wilmington. There was no agreement that there should be a stop on the way unless stopping to take the two mechanics of the libelants aboard was impliedly included in the agreement.

When Parker, the foreman for the libel-ants, arrived at the dock at 5 o’clock on the following morning, the Leo was riding high in the water, but the Kard was not in attendance. About an hour later, the two mechanics reported for duty at the dock, and it was then discovered that the Leo was making considerable water and had taken a list to starboard aft. The hand pump was immediately manned, but the Leo filled and sank within an hour. Through the sinking of the Leo and her subsequent raising, she was further damaged and the libelants-put to considerable expense. /

The rules- and regulations applicable to the operation of the drawbridge in question, promulgated by the War Department, under authority of the River and Harbor Act of August 18, 1894 (28 Stat. 338), axe as follows:

“1. Signals. — When at any time during the day or night any vessel, tug, or other water craft unable to pass under the bridge, approaches it with the intention of passing through the draw, the signal for the draw to be opened shall be three blasts of a whistle or horn blown on the vessel or craft.
“If the draw is ready to be opened immediately when the signal is given on the vessel or craft, the signal shall be answered immediately by two blasts of a whistle or horn blown on the bridge; and if the draw is not ready to be opened immediately on the signal being given on the craft, the signal shall be answered, immediately by one blast of a whistle or horn blown on the bridge.
“2. Opening the Draw. — Upon hearing or perceiving the prescribed signal, the bridge tender shall immediately clear the draw span and open the draw to its full extent for the passage of the vessel or other craft: * * * ”

The bridge'tender did not comply with those rules and regulations. Upon hearing the signal of the Kard and, after setting the signals to protect on-coming trains, he raised the span but not to its full extent. He did not look to see what was coming. He knew from the signal a tug was approaching, and gave himself no further concern. If he had looked he would have observed that the tug had the Leo in tow with her seventy-foot boom, the top of which was at least seventy-four feet above the water, and he would have seen enough to warn him that raising the draw-span partway, as he did, was not sufficient to give the boom clearance. The rules require that, either upon hearing or perceiving the signal, the bridge-tender shall immediately clear the draw-span and open the draw to its full extent for passage of the vessel or other craft. He did not open it to its full extent.

The engineer for the railroad company produced a blueprint from a drawing made by him showing the draw-span in closed position and also showing it at an angle of fifty degrees from the horizontal. The drawing showing the latter position was prepared in accordance with statements made to him by [847]*847the bridge-tender. If it had been raised, in accordance with the rule, to its full extent, it would have been at an angle of eighty-four degrees from the horizontal, which would have afforded clearance for the derrick barge to pass through in safety.

The rule stated in Clement v. Metropolitan West Side El. Ry.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 F.2d 844, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staub-v-delaware-dredging-co-paed-1930.