Sullivan v. Young Bros. and Co. Inc.

893 F. Supp. 1148, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 106, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10940, 1995 WL 455749
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJuly 26, 1995
DocketCiv. 93-271-P-C
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 893 F. Supp. 1148 (Sullivan v. Young Bros. and Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Young Bros. and Co. Inc., 893 F. Supp. 1148, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 106, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10940, 1995 WL 455749 (D. Me. 1995).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

GENE CARTER, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Rodney Sullivan, by his insurer, seeks to recover for property damage to the fishing vessel SEA FEVER resulting from the sinking of that vessel on April 4, 1992. Plaintiff claims against Defendant Vernay Products, Inc. and Defendant Young Brothers and Company Inc. under the theory of strict liability (Count I), negligence (Count II), and breach of implied and express warranties (Count III). 1 Young Brothers cross-claimed against Vernay Products for indemnification and contribution (Docket No. 6) and Vernay Products has similarly cross-claimed against Young Brothers for indemnification and contribution (Docket No. 9). Subject matter jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C. § 1382(a).

I. FACTS

SEA FEVER is a forty-foot, fiberglass hull lobster boat built by the Defendant and Cross-Claimant Young Brothers of Corea, Maine in 1989. SEA FEVER was purchased new from Young Brothers by Plaintiff Rodney Sullivan in February 1990 for $122,000. Tr. Vol. I at 76. 2 Sullivan added various items of gear and furnishings at a cost of approximately $10,000. Tr. Vol. I at 21. SEA FEVER was built with a wet exhaust system constructed, in part, of six-inch diameter Vernatube fiberglass marine wet exhaust tubing manufactured by Defendant Vernay Products. The fifteen-foot-long span of Vernatube was connected to the engine at the exhaust manifold by a flexible rubber hose and rigidly installed in the hull of the vessel by fiberglass where the Vernatube passed through the fish hold bulkhead, the lazarette bulkhead, and the transom. 3 Ex. 601. Aft of the manifold, the Vernatube was fiberglassed to each of the two bulkheads and the transom. The distance between the manifold and the fish hold-engine compartment bulkhead was about two feet, the length of the fish hold was eight feet, and the length of the lazarette was about five feet. Tr.Vol. Ill at 159. The Vernatube exhaust was supported by a %-inch marine plywood bracket lined with urethane rubber at about the midway point of the fish hold. Tr.Vol. Ill at 164. H & H Propeller Shop was Vernay’s distributor in Maine and the parts supplier from which Young Brothers purchased the Verna-tube installed aboard SEA FEVER.

Vernatube is sold in ten-foot lengths. To make up the necessary fifteen-foot length, Young Brothers fiberglassed together a ten-foot and a five-foot length of Vernatube, making, in effect, a single length of tube. Tr.Vol. Ill at 159. The Vernatube wet exhaust system installed in the SEA FEVER was installed in conformity with generally accepted methods of installation among builders of similar vessels in Maine. Tr. Vol. I at 171-75, 312-13; Tr.Vol. II at 11-14, 33-34, 42, 45-46, 50-51, 106-08. SEA FEVER was equipped with a Rule 1500-gallon automatic bilge pump. This pump, capable of discharging up to 1500 gallons of water per hour, could be operated manually or automatically. Tr.Vol. Ill at 169-70, 172-73.

Plaintiff operated SEA FEVER as a commercial lobster vessel during the 1990 fishing season without significant problems. Tr. Vol. I at 21-22. During early 1991, a crack developed in the portion of the Vernatube exhaust

*1152 located in the lazarette, permitting water to enter the vessel, to the point of near sinking. Tr.Vol. I at 22-24, 82-84. Upon being notified of the crack, Colby Young, part-owner and vice president of Young Brothers, repaired the crack by fiberglassing over the break. Tr.Vol. I at 84. Colby Young then notified H & H Propeller of the crack in the Vernatube. Tr.Vol. Ill at 194. Neither H & H nor Colby Young notified Vernay of the crack. 4 Tr.Vol. Ill at 110-11, 122-23, 192-94. The cause of this crack was never investigated or discovered. Tr.Vol. I at 85; Tr. Vol. II at 179-80; Tr.Vol. Ill at 192-94.

After the repair, SEA FEVER was operated with no further problems until it sank in April 1992. Tr.Vol. I at 38, 116. Plaintiff fished the 1991 season until January 1992, when he hauled all his traps for the winter. Tr.Vol. I at 71, 110-117. Thereafter, SEA FEVER lay tied to the dock at Great Boat Club in Eliot, Maine until March 1992, when it was hauled for routine maintenance, including bottom painting. During the time SEA FEVER was out of the water, the exhaust system was not specifically observed. Tr.Vol. I at 52, 67-71, 118, 149-50. On March 17, 1992, Edward S. Blackmore, a marine surveyor appointed by Plaintiffs marine hull insurance company, surveyed SEA FEVER while it was afloat at the dock. Blackmore found the vessel to be in “A-l” condition with a fair market value of $130,-000. Ex. 161C. The inspection included observation of the Vernatube exhaust. At the time of the inspection SEA FEVER was not loaded and, thus, the exhaust tube did not have any water in it. 5 Nothing unusual was noted about the condition of the Vernatube. Tr.Vol. I at 167-69, 179. Blackmore observed no fractures, no discoloration, and no staining or other evidence of failure in the Vernatube. Tr.Vol. I at 167-70, 179, 192, 196.

SEA FEVER was not operated during the period from January 12, 1992, to April 4, 1992. On April 4, 1992, Plaintiff and his sternman, Kevin Wood, made an eight-to-ten-mile trip aboard SEA FEVER, picking up approximately eighty lobster traps, and returned to the slip at Great Cove Boat Club. Tr. Vol. I at 83. They tied SEA FEVER to the dock at about 1:00 p.m. and went home for the day. Due to the weight of the lobster traps, the vessel was trimmed down by the stern and the end of the exhaust discharge port was several inches under water. Hence, the Vernatube had water in it. Tr.Vol. I at 43—44, 88-90,116-17,123; Tr.Vol. Ill at 200-01. SEA FEVER was left with the automatic bilge pump switch in the “off’ position rather than the “automatic” one. Tr.Vol. II at 82, 95; Tr.Vol. Ill at 136-37, 180-81; Ex. 950 at 5. At approximately 7:30 p.m. on the same day, Plaintiff was notified that SEA FEVER had sunk at the dock. 6 Tr.Vol. I at 45. Shortly thereafter, Plaintiff retained Wayne Godfrey, a salvage diver from D & G Diving Services, to raise the vessel. SEA FEVER was surveyed by Werner Splettstoesser of Marine Safety Consultants on behalf of Plaintiffs insurer. Tr.Vol. II at 140.

II. DISCUSSION

The cause of the sinking of SEA FEVER was a crack in the Vernatube located a few inches forward of the bulkhead between the lazarette and fish hold. Tr.Vol. II at 95-96, 176; Exs. 201(5), 601. The full-circumferenee crack in the Vernatube in 1992 was a fatigue failure caused by tension stresses over time exceeding the axial strength of the tube. Tr.Vol. IV at 115, 134, 157; Tr.Vol. II at 190. Witnesses, including the vice president and general manager of Vernay; a representative of H & H Propeller; experienced boat builders; and marine surveyors, knew of no other instance in which a Vernatube had cracked under circumstances such as were involved in this action. Tr.Vol. IV at 44; Tr.Vol. Ill at 112-13, 168; Tr.Vol. II at 52-54.

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893 F. Supp. 1148, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 106, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10940, 1995 WL 455749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-young-bros-and-co-inc-med-1995.