The Indien

71 F.2d 752
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1934
Docket7359
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 71 F.2d 752 (The Indien) 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 Indien, 71 F.2d 752 (9th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

71 F.2d 752 (1934)

THE INDIEN.
ORIENT S. S. CO.
v.
MITSUBISHI SHOJI KAISHA, Limited.

No. 7359.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.

June 15, 1934.

*753 Ira S. Lillick, John C. McHose, J. Arthur Olson, H. R. Kelly, and Young, Lillick, Olson, Graham & Kelly, all of Los Angeles, Cal., for appellant.

Alfred T. Cluff and Sawyer & Cluff, all of Los Angeles, Cal., and Hill & Rivkins, of New York City, for appellee.

Before WILBUR, SAWTELLE, and GARRECHT, Circuit Judges.

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

Based principally upon the alleged error of the court below in finding that the appellant's motorship was unseaworthy and that due diligence had not been exercised in that regard, this is an appeal in an admiralty cargo damage suit from an interlocutory decree in favor of the libelant appellee.

The appellee was the purchaser and consignee of a shipment of ammophos fertilizer, part of which was damaged by sea water while on board the appellant's motorship Indien in transportation from New York to Japan.

There was no trial or oral argument in the lower court. The entire case was submitted on the pleadings, briefs, and depositions, consisting of the testimony of ten fact witnesses and six expert witnesses for the appellant and four expert witnesses for the appellee. Because of this fact, we are here called upon to consider the case de novo.

During a severe storm in the North Pacific Ocean, while the Indien's decks were repeatedly swept by large waves, a brass screw cap came out of the top of a bilge sounding pipe on the after deck. Sea water ran down the pipe, overflowing the bilge and wetting a number of sacks of ammophos in No. 3 lower hold. The damage was caused when the sea water came into contact with the soluble ammophos.

The libel also alleges damage to some ammophos in No. 4 hold. During the storm, an oil tank sounding pipe, running into this hold, broke at the junction with the tank top. It was alleged that some oil splashed out of the tank and upon the fertilizer bags. *754 Since the rendition of the interlocutory decree, however, counsel for the appellee have declared that no damage was done by the oil and that no further claim will be made in that regard. The lower court found that there was not sufficient inspection of the oil tank sounding pipe, and that therefore due diligence had not been exercised in connection therewith. In its brief before this court, the appellee argues the point slightly, presumably because of its bearing on the general and ultimate question of the Indien's seaworthiness. In our view of the case, however, it is unnecessary to consider this allegation.

We are therefore concerned only with the damage in No. 3 hold, and with the question of whether the motorship should be held liable for that damage.

The Indien is a modern steel motorship of 5,702 gross tons, 390 feet in length and 53 feet in beam, and classified as "+ 100 A 1," the highest rating in its class. It was nine years old at the time of the voyage in question, on which occasion it was under time charter by the Canadian Transport Company, from the appellant.

Sounding pipes are used to ascertain the height of water in a ship's bilges. Each bilge has at least one such pipe running from the particular compartment up to the deck. On the Indien, the sounding pipes were located, as is usual, a few inches from the side of the ship. Their tops projected above the deck about two inches. By removing caps at the top of these pipes, a scaled sounding rod may be lowered to the bottom of the bilge, and the height of the water in the compartment determined.

The Indien loaded the ammophos at Warrens, N. J., in New York Harbor, and started on the voyage in question on January 5, 1929. Passing through the Panama Canal, she stopped at San Pedro, Cal., for fuel, and proceeded to Nanoose, British Columbia, where she completed her cargo by taking lumber in the 'tween-deck and on deck.

The motorship then called at Victoria, British Columbia, for fresh water, and sailed for Japan on February 2.

On February 7, the ship ran into a North Pacific winter storm. The weather increased in severity on February 8 and 9. Moller, the first officer of the Indien, testified that on the latter date the velocity of the wind "was along sixty miles [an hour] generally, and up to ninety miles in the gusts." Capt. Moloney, a marine surveyor, with a third of a century of maritime experience, declared that on a North Pacific voyage in the winter months, a "vessel is continually shipping heavy seas * * * on her deck," that February is considered one of the three worst months in those waters, that "there is nothing else to be expected except heavy gales," and that it is "a very stormy passage."

It was necessary in order to take the daily soundings on the morning of February 8 to haul the Indien off her course and run before the wind. On the following day, no soundings could be made at all.

The sounding pipe involved in this case was located on the starboard side of the after deck. The cap that was in the pipe at the time is in evidence. There are two holes in the top, into which the prongs of a spanner wrench are inserted to facilitate removal. The carpenter loosens the cap with the spanner, unscrews and removes it with his fingers, takes the sounding, replaces the cap, screws it in partly by hand and then retightens it with the spanner. On the Indien the carpenter would take soundings every morning. The process required about an hour and a half, since there were twenty-two sounding pipes on the ship.

Although no soundings could be made on February 9, Chief Officer Moller was on deck that morning and testifies that he saw the cap in place. He made his observation from above, since the deck cargo was at least 5 feet above the cap.

Some time between the hour of that observation and Sunday, February 10, the sounding pipe cap came out, and sea water flooded the bottom of No. 3 lower hold. As soon as the damage was discovered, on Sunday morning, the hold was pumped dry, and the cap, found lying on deck, about two and a half feet from the pipe, was replaced. The Indien continued her voyage, and at Kobe, Japan, the discharge of the ammophos revealed that the fertilizer had been damaged.

The parties are in sharp disagreement as to how the cap happened to come out. Lober, the ship's carpenter, was emphatic in his testimony that, after taking his sounding Friday morning, he tightened the cap with the spanner, just as he did with the other caps. There was no doubt in his mind about it.

The Indien's log thus explains the occurrence:

"It is supposed that it has been loosened by a piece of dunnage wood lying close to the sounding pipe, so that the seas continually must have been carrying it against the pipe ends in a socket about 2 inches above the *755 deck * * * with its circumference in line with the outside of the sounding pipe — without having the possibility to float away — sticking so far underneath the deck cargo — but without that the deck cargo rested on it — that it could not escape over the ship's side, the latter being about nine inches high, and neither forward nor abaft, there sticking against an airpipe and a stay and here against a fair leader.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.2d 752, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-indien-ca9-1934.