The Cullen No. 32

45 F.2d 859, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 18, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 F.2d 859 (The Cullen No. 32) 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
The Cullen No. 32, 45 F.2d 859, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556 (S.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I hold the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., liable for the accident hereinafter described; I deny its petition to limit its liability, and I hold that the claimants in that petition are entitled to their several bills of costs.

I dismiss the libel as against W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., by the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., with costs.

I dismiss the libel of W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., as against the Port Fueling Corporation, with costs.

I dismiss the libel óf the -Long Island Railroad Company as against W. E. Hedger & Company, Inc., and Port Fueling Corporation, respondents impleaded, and the petition of Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., against them with costs to such impleaded respondents as against the Cullen Fuel .Company, Ine., on whose petition they are made parties to this suit.

I. The parties concerned in this riverside drama are as follows:

The Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., was the owner of the seow Cullen No. 32, whose capsizing caused the damage out of which these several suits have arisen.

W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., was the charterer of the seow No. 32 under the familiar harbor demise charter and had been engaged by the Grasselli Chemical Company to unload a cargo of copper barytes from the steamship Berk for which the berth on the northerly side of the Brooklyn Bridge pier had been engaged, and to transport that cargo to the Grasselli plant in New Jersey.

The Long Island Railroad Company was the lessee of Pier 22, next above the Brooklyn Bridge pier, and was the owner of the carfloat No. 10, which was lying at Pier 22, when the accident hereinafter described happened.

The Port Fueling Corporation is a corporation engaged hereabouts in loading and unloading cargoes and fuel and, on the occasion in question, was acting as contracting stevedores engaged by Hedger & Company, the charterer of the Cullen No. 32, to unload the Berk.

II. The procedural pattern of this case which is somewhat complicated should, perhaps, have a word of mention here.

The Cullen Fuel Company, Inc., was sued by the Long Island Railroad Company in the Supreme Court of New York State for damage to its leased pier, Pier 22, East River.

The Long Island Railroad Company also sued the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., which impleaded W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., and the Port Fueling Corporation, in this court for damage to its carfloat No. 10. This carfloat was lying overlapping the end of Pier 22, which is somewhat shorter than the pier under the Brooklyn Bridge at which the Steamship Berk was lying.

W-. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., was demise charterer of the seow Cullen No. 32 of the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., and as such was bailee of the cargo on board the seow. It has brought suit in this court against the seow Cullen No. 32, the Cullen Fuel Company, Inc., and the Port Fueling Corporation, seeking to cast the responsibility for the loss of the cargo of the No. 32 on the seow or on one of those respondents.

Across this network of litigation the limitation proceeding filed by the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., as owner of the scow Cullen No. 32, was drawn, with the result that all the proceedings in which the.No. 32, or the Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., were sued, or were in the position of defendant or respondent, were stayed and all claims against them for this accident were drawn into the limitation ease.

The Cullen Fuel Company, Ine., not content with defensive tactics only, however has sued W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., as demise charterer) for damage to the seow No. 32, and W. E. Hedger & Company, Inc., not having been active in connection with the [861]*861loading and management of the scow, brought in by petition the Port Fueling Corporation as a joint respondent.

Consequently, outside of the limitation proceeding, which is the dominant proceeding before me, there still remains unstayed and to be dealt with independently the libel of the Cullen Fuel Company, Inc., against W. E. Hedger & Company, Inc., the Port Fueling Corporation impleaded, and the suit by W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., as bailee of the cargo in so far as the Port Fueling Corporation is the respondent, and the suit of the Long Island Railroad Company against the Cullen Fuel Company, Inc., in so fa,r as the claims against W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., and the Port Fueling Corporation are concerned.

Therefore the opinion which I am rendering herein deals not only with the liability of the Cullen Fuel Company, Inc., for the loss hereinafter described and with its right to limit its liability therefor, bat also with its right to recover for damage to the scow No. 32 against W. E. Iledger & Company, Inc., and the Port Fueling Corporation; with the right of W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., to recover against the Port Fueling Corporation, and the right of the Long Island Railroad Company to recover against W. E. Hedger & Company, Ine., and the Port Fueling Corporation.

III. In any matters like this it has always seemed to me highly important that the locus in quo should he as clearly described as may be, and consequently I have been at some pains to get into the record the dimensions of the various vessels concerned, and also the width of the slip and the length of the piers where they were lying.

The Cullen No. 32 was a deck scow of a length of 112 feet at her deck and 90 feet at her bottom, with a 33-foot beam and with 12-foot depth of side. She had three bulkheads, which were not watertight, running fore and aft of her, dividing her interior into substantially three equal parts.

The steamship Berk is agreed to have been 346 feet long and of 54 foot beam. She was lying bow in on the north side of the Brooklyn Bridge pier with her stern considerably in from the end of that pier, which is 487 feet long.

Pier No. 22 is irregularly shaped, its downstream side, which slants slightly up the river, is 243 feet long’, and the upstream side, which is at right angles to the river, is 262 feet long.

Thus it will be seen that as Pier 22 is shorter than the Brooklyn Bridge pier, there is a comparatively wide stretch of water between the end of the Brooklyn Bridge pier and the end of Pier 25, which is the next pier above Pier 22.

The width between the river ends of the Brooklyn Bridge pier and Pier 25 is 262 feet, and the width of the slip between the Brooklyn Bridge pier and Pier 22 is 150 feet at the river end. Pier 25, though it may not be of any relevance whatever, is 527 feet long.

IV. On August 12, 1925, the Cullen No. 32 had been brought down to the slip between the Brooklyn Bridge pier arid Pier 22 and had on that day loaded a part eargo at the No. 2 hatch of the steamship Berk, which assumedly would be forward of the engine room.

The No. 32 had been loaded on August 12th by the United States Trucking Company derrick No. 2, and the evidence is that she had been loaded on an even keel with her cargo fairly distributed.

On the day of the accident, August 13th, the No. 32 had been moved to the No. 3 hatch of the Berk to be further loaded, and was there loaded during the morning by the Port Fueling Corporation’s crane No. 2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Holland v. Pennsylvania R.
47 F. Supp. 173 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1942)
Flat-Top Fuel Co. v. Martin
15 F. Supp. 543 (E.D. New York, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 F.2d 859, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cullen-no-32-nysd-1930.