Sun Oil Co. v. The Gulfstar

136 F.2d 461, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4145, 1943 A.M.C. 847
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1943
DocketNo. 7934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 136 F.2d 461 (Sun Oil Co. v. The Gulfstar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sun Oil Co. v. The Gulfstar, 136 F.2d 461, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4145, 1943 A.M.C. 847 (3d Cir. 1943).

Opinion

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal in an admiralty suit brought by the Sun Oil Company to recover for injuries sustained by its motor tank vessel “Sun” in a collision with the steam tank vessel “Gulfstar” owned by the Gulf Oil Corporation of Pennsylvania. The district court, holding the Gulfstar at fault and the Sun free from fault, decreed that the libellant should recover from the Gulf-star and its claimant the damages sustained by reason of the collision. 42 F.Supp. 440. The Gulf Oil Corporation of Pennsylvania, respondent and claimant of the Gulfstar, has appealed.

The collision took place about one o’clock A. M. on July 16, 1937, in the Gulf Stream off the east coast of Florida at a point approximately fifteen miles northeast of Fowey Rocks Light. At the time of the collision the Sun was bound for a port in the Gulf of Mexico and the Gulfstar was bound for Philadelphia. The night was clear with no moon but with average visibility. There was a light breeze and the sea was smooth.

Shortly after 9 o’clock P. M. on July 15th the Sun, then abeam of Great Isaac Light House, set her course at 222° true and maintained that course until about 1.02 o’clock A. M. The time referred to is that shown by the Sun’s clocks. During this period of time the Sun proceeded at normal full speed of between 11 and 11J£ knots through the water. For approximately one-half hour before the collision the Gulfstar was steering a course of Io true and was proceeding at her usual speed of 9.8 knots through the water. At about 12.20 o’clock A. M. the Sun’s lookout reported and the watch officer saw the range lights of the Gulfstar bearing from two to three points on the port bow and from seven to eight miles away. Between 12.40 [463]*463o’clock and 12.45 o’clock A. M. the green light of the Gulfstar likewise was observed.

The Gulfstar first sighted the Sun about 30 minutes before the collision bearing about three points on the starboard bow and apparently on a course crossing that of the Gulfstar from starboard to port at an angle of about 45°. At about the same time the United States Submarine S-30 accompanied by the Submarine S-l was proceeding on a course of true north running on the surface at a speed of approximately 5% knots. The S-l maintained a position broad on the bow of the S-30 with the tracks of the vessels about 500 yards apart. The Gulfstar for some time prior to the collision was astern of the submarines proceeding on substantially the same course and overhauling them at the rate of about 4 knots.

In the crossing situation which was thus developing between the Sun and the Gulf-star the Sun was the privileged vessel and had the right of way over the Gulfstar, the S-30 and the S-l. According to the courses and speeds being maintained by the Sun and the Gulfstar, the latter would cross the course of the Sun a mile or more ahead of her, while it would be necessary for the submarines to pass under the Sun’s stern.

About five minutes before the collision the Gulfstar did in fact cross the course of the Sun a mile or more ahead of her but within a minute thereafter the Gulfstar commenced a right swing after blowing a one blast signal and in about two minutes had swung sufficiently to the right to open her red (port) light to the Sun, whereupon the Gulfstar steadied on and headed directly for the Sun. About two or three minutes prior to the collision the watch officer of the Gulfstar ordered her engines to increase their speed to a maximum.

The Sun’s watch officer maintained her course and speed for about two minutes .after first observing the Gulfstar beginning to cross her course. When the Sun’s watch officer first observed the Gulfstar swinging to the right he believed it to be a steering yaw and held the Sun’s course and speed for the time being but at approximately 1.02 o’clock A. M. when the Gulfstar had swung sufficiently to the right to show both her red and green lights to the Sun and had steadied on a course heading directly for the Sun her watch officer put the Sun’s wheel hard right and blew one blast on the whistle. He did so' in the belief that action by him was necessary to avoid a collision, that the Gulfstar would continue to swing to the right and that a collision might thereby be averted.

The Gulfstar, however, instead of resuming her right swing continued to steady on a heading directly at the Sun which was then about three-quarters of a mile away. The Sun’s watch officer then ordered her engines reversed, keeping her wheel hard right. As a result of this order the Sun’s engines were actually turning astern for about one minute before the collision. Very shortly before the collision the Gulf-star’s watch officer put her wheel hard right and kept it there until after the collision. During all this time the Gulfstar continued at top forward speed.

At about 1.04 o’clock A. M. the vessels collided, the bluff of the Gulfstar’s port bow striking the port side of the Sun somewhere abreast of No. 1 tank. The angle of impact was about 1 point. The port sides of the two vessels raked along each other until there was contact between both sterns, after which the vessels cleared each other.

These are the facts regarding the collision as found by the district court and our independent consideration of the evidence leads us to adopt them as correct. They are strongly controverted by the witnesses for the Gulfstar who contend that the Sun swung to the left rather than to the right while the Gulfstar was attempting to pass under her stern and thereby caused the collision. We agree, however, with the district court that this version of the collision cannot be accepted for the reasons ably stated in the very satisfactory and convincing opinion of Judge Kalodner, 42 F.Supp. 440.

As Judge Kalodner has pointed out, the record made by the Sperry compass and course recorder, with which the Sun was equipped, which record was in our opinion properly proved, demonstrates unerringly that the Sun’s change of course prior to the collision was to the right and not to the left. The Gulfstar strongly urges that the testimony of the officers of S-30 as to their observations of the vessels at and before the time of the collision supports the story of the Gulfstar rather than that of the Sun. Although there may well be an inconsistency between their testimony and the exaggerated version of the Sun’s story as presented by the Gulfstar experts we find no inconsistency between the testimony of the S-30’s officers and the facts as we have [464]*464found them. The difficulty with the expert’s testimony is that it was based upon the premise that the testimony of the eye witnesses as to times and distances possessed a literal accuracy which under the circumstances clearly it could not have had.

Under these circumstances the fault of the Gulfstar was clear and egregious. The Sun, as the vessel approaching from the starboard, had the right of way under Article 19 of the International Rules (33 U.S.C.A. § 104) and it was, therefore, the duty of the Gulfstar as the burdened vessel to keep out of the Sun’s way. This it was proceeding to do by continuing on its course to a point where it had crossed the Sun’s bow at least a mile ahead of that vessel. The Gulfstar was thus in the clear when without any apparent reason it commenced a right swing which brought it back directly into the path of the Sun.

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Bluebook (online)
136 F.2d 461, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 4145, 1943 A.M.C. 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sun-oil-co-v-the-gulfstar-ca3-1943.