The Fullerton

167 F. 1, 92 C.C.A. 463, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4915
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1908
DocketNo. 1,557
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 167 F. 1 (The Fullerton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Fullerton, 167 F. 1, 92 C.C.A. 463, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4915 (9th Cir. 1908).

Opinions

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

The libel in this case was filed in the District Court for the Territory of Hawaii by Henry Wiithof, the first officer of the American barkentine Fullerton, against the barkentine and claimants, to recover for personal injuries received by him while in the performance of his duties on board the vessel.

It appears from the evidence that the barkentine Fullerton, owned by the Mission Transportation Company of Los Angeles, Cal., departed from the port of San Francisco on December 19, 1906, in tow of [3]*3the steam tug Monarch. On December 21, 1906, at a point from five to eight miles off Port Harford, the tow was transferred to the steamer Lansing, and by the latter vessel the barkentine was towed to Kihei, Island of Maui, one of the Hawaiian Islands, arriving at Kihei at 1:30, January 3, 1907. The Fullerton is a four-masted sailing vessel fitted for carrying oil. Her gross tonnage, as appears from the government register, is 1,554 tons, and her net tonnage is 1,494 tons. The steamer Lansing, as appears from the same record, is a vessel of 4,560 gross tons and 3,428 net tons. On the voyage in question both vessels were laden with oiJ, the Fullerton having on board 15,500 barrels and the Lansing 40,000 barrels. When the Lansing took tile Fuller Ion in tow off .Port Harford on December 21st the towing hawser of the Lansing was connected with about 20 fathoms of the port anchor chain of the Fullerton. The chain came on board the Fullerton leading through the hawse pipe on the port side, passed aft near the towing bitt, and then over the wildcat of the windlass on the pyrt side, down through the spurling gate or deck pipe into the chain locker, where the end of the port anchor chain was connected with the starboard anchor chain by means of a large shackle. The wildcat is part of the windlass, and has a mechanism for holding the chain consisting of compartments or divisions on its outer circumference for receiving the links of the chain. To make the holding device effective, it is necessary that the links of the chain shall correspond in length with the length of the compartments or divisions of the holding mechanism, so that each link of the chain fitting into a compartment shall lie securely and each alternate link he caught and firmly held by the shoulders of a compartment. When the size and shape of the link correspond to the size and shape of the compartment, the wildcat becomes an exceedingly effective holding device, whether the windlass is revolving or at rest; but in the present case the lengths of the links of the port anchor chain did not correspond to the lengths of the compartments of the port wildcat. The lengths of the compartments were each .10 inches, while the lengths of the links of the anchor chain varied from 11% 4° 11% inches, so that the ends of the links as they were drawn around the wildcat projected over the ends of the compartments, and the holding device was not brought into play, or. at best, only to a limited extent.

When the Fullerton was taken in tow by the Lansing off Port Harford, lier port anchor chain, as part of the towing line, was further secured by lashing the chain to the towing bitt a few feet in front of the windlass. This lashing was done by the crew under the direction of the appellee as first officer, and under the supervision of the second officer and master, the latter being on the forecastle head at the time with the megaphone, through which he was communicating with the .Lansing. The lashing was done with an inch and a half rope, which had been previously used for a like purpose when the barkentine was in tow of the tug Monarch. The appellee proposed to take a new 3% inch rope for the lashing on this occasion, but he was told by the master that it was not necessary to waste good rope; that he could use the old rope for that purpose, and because the mate, who saw the chain [4]*4slipping, protested that it might be dangerous and somebody get hurt, he was told by the master that he could go below; that he (the master), and the second mate would attend to it. The Lansing, with the Fullerton in tow as described, on December 21st proceeded on the voyage to Kihei. At about 10 p. m. of the evening of December 21th, at a distance of about 582 miles from Port Harford, and between 1,500 and 1,600 miles from Kihei, the Fullerton pulling heavily on her tow and running into a choppy head sea, the man on the lookout notified the appellee, who was then on the poop; that the chain was slipping over the windlass. The appellee called his watch together and proceeded to the forecastle head, where it was discovered that the lashing which had fastened the chain to the towing bitt had carried away and had been drawn forward into the hawse pipe. The appellee took the new rope which he had proposed to use when the lashing was first made, and with the assistance of the crew proceeded to again lash the chain to the towing bitt. This towing bitt is about 3% feet square and about 4 feet high. It is on the forecastle head, about 3% feet forward of the windlass, and extends down through the deck to the keel-son, into which it is built. The port anchor chain leading straight from the port hawse pipe to the port wildcat passes within about 12 inches of the port side of the bitt. The appellee took the new rope, and with the assistance of the crew made it fast to the chain near the forward end of the bitt, then passed it around the bitt to the chain near the after end of the bitt, where the rope was passed around the chain and returned around the bitt to the forward end. Here the rope was again passed around the chain, and back around the bitt, and so on, the rope being passed backward and forward around the chain at the two points forward and aft and around the bitt, drawing the chain to within about 6 inches of the bitt. While this work of lashing the chain to the bitt was going on, the appellee was standing on the port side of the chain near the after end of the bitt, directing the work and assisting in making the end of the rope fast to the chain at that point. The rope had been passed around the bitt a number of times when the chain, under a heavy towing strain, suddenly jumped and slipped over the wildcat just as the appellee was connecting the end of the rope with the chain at the after end of the bitt. The jumping and slipping of the chain carried appellee’s right arm between the chain and the bitt, where it was jammed and crushed. Members of the crew undertook to release appellee’s arm by prying the chain away from the bitt with the capstan bar without effect. The lashing was then cut away and appellee’s arm released. The appellee was removed to the cabin. It was afterwards discovered that the injuries to appellee’s right arm consisted in breaking the two bones of his forearm about the middle of the lower third and dislocating the bones of the wrist.

The appellee requested the master to return to Port Harford for medical assistance, stating that he had a very bad arm. The master said he knew, but he could not return; he could not cut loose from his tow. The steward was called, who washed the injured arm, and under the direction of the master it was' placed in splints. On ar[5]*5riving at Kihei nine days later, the appellee was removed from the vessel and taken to Mahululani Hospital at Wailuku, where, on January 6th, his arm was amputated. The surgeon performing the operation, designated the point oí amputation as at the middle of the upper third of the arm proper. In about a month the appellee was removed to the Queen’s Hospital, and on April 9, 1907, he was discharged from that hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 F. 1, 92 C.C.A. 463, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-fullerton-ca9-1908.