The Lapwing

56 F. Supp. 859, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2055
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 22, 1944
DocketNo. 457
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 F. Supp. 859 (The Lapwing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Lapwing, 56 F. Supp. 859, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2055 (E.D. La. 1944).

Opinion

CAILLOUET, District Judge.

Libelant seeks recovery for damages sustained by its quarters boat “Santee” while tied up for the night at Carrabelle, Florida, on November 22, 1939, as part of the tow of the libeled tug, the “Lapwing.”

The arrangements made for such towing are reflected by libelant’s letter addressed to Shell Producers Company and its answer thereto by its President, F. M. Hendry, who appears as record claimant of the tug; although such arrangements were subsequently slightly modified in presently unimportant details by telephone conversations between Hendry and the representative of libelant, while actual performance of the towing was in progress.

The parties contemplated that there should be towed from Slidell, I.a., to Charleston, S. C., libelant’s fully described dredging equipment, to which was to be added on the way, at Pascagoula, Miss., libelant’s said quarters boat “Santee”; and that file dredge “Illinois” and the “Santee” were, each, to be towed separately, in the outside waters, or the Gulf of Mexico proper, from Carrabelle to Fort Meyers, Florida, from which point to Charleston, S. C., the towing of libelant’s equipment was to be continued no longer by the “Lapwing” but by the “General Pershing”, and the “Falcon”, assisting, if required.

Accordingly, the “Lapwing” took the “Santee” in tow at Pascagoula. The quarters boat was last in line, with the dredge “Illinois” in the lead, and the barge “A.G.T. 146” astern thereof and just ahead of the “Santee”.

The tug and its tow entered Carrabelle Harbor at night and at some time before midnight was completely berthed on the east bank of Carrabelle River in the one then available mooring-place considered safe by the master of the tug.

Carrabelle Harbor is described by F. M. llendry aforesaid, who claims to know it very well, as not a good harbor but one which, because of its geographical location, is made use of at times for lack of a better.

Captain Tindall of the “Lapwing” had been in the harbor before and the berth which he selected for tying up the “Lapwing” and her tow was known to him inasmuch as not only had he theretofore made similar use of said berth but he had seen, as he also testified, other marine equipment moored in the selfsame place. Fie, himself, had never made use of any other mooring-place and while he knew of barges having gone aground there, no damage had ever resulted to any of the equipment of Shell Producers Company, nor to any other [860]*860within his knowledge. In this connection, it may be noted here, that the log book of the “Lapwing” records the fact that the tug pulled a barge off of a Carrabelle Harbor bank on June 16, 1939, and that, upon his being interrogated about the occurrence, Captain Tindall testified that the bank in question was exactly where he berthed his tow on the night of November 22, 1939, and that there was no hanging up of the barge amidst submerged piling but a simple resting on the bottom. Such going aground was to be expected, he further said, unless moored vessels were released from their ties to the bank and were progressively pulled away therefrom in keeping with the falling of the tide.

The engineer on the “Lapwing,” also, was familiar with conditions in Carrabelle Harbor in 1939 and he had seen barges and the dredge “St. Louis” of Shell Producers Company tied up at the same point where the “Lapwing” and its tow were berthed by Captain Tindall on that November night.

Seburn Jackson, a lifelong resident of Carrabelle, 37 years of age, who had engaged in boating “mostly out of Carrabelle” for twenty years and who was harbor master of Carrabelle port from 1937 to 1940, by, official State appointment (although the position, he frankly admitted, was of no great importance), testified that he was well acquainted with the particular berth where accident befell the “Santee”, having seen “tugs of all kinds” tied there during the ten years next immediately preceding that occurrence, and he, himself, having moored both steel and wooden barges there, some loaded with paper-wood, some with lumber, some with oil, and never did ill results follow; nor did he ever know cf any other craft being sunk or getting into trouble because of its having tied up exactly where the “Lapwing” and its tow did on the night of November 22, 1939.

Two other lifelong residents (Kilbourn and Putnal), of approximately the same age -as the Harbor Master Jackson, both testified that they had always known the berth in question to be a safe mooring-place, having seen crafts of all kinds tied there before the “Santee” was damaged; and neither recalled ever having heard of any such craft experiencing trouble in said berth.

The witness Mattair, resident of Carrabelle since 1887, once operated a fish business establishment, until 1936, located at very little distance upstream from the mooring-place of the “Lapwing” and her tow; and had been Pilot Commissioner at Carrabelle for 24 years, Mayor of the town for 14 years, up to about 1916, and Acting Mayor and President of the Council for many years before becoming Mayor. He testified that he was familiar, for years, with the berth in question and knew it to have been uninterruptedly used as such by seagoing barges and flatbottom boats, but the water wasn’t deep enough for use of the berth by deep-draft boats, he added.

The parties stipulated that if one C. W. Gander were testifying (on August 3, 1943) he would swear that for approximately 4% years next immediately preceding said mentioned date, he was employed by the Gulf Oil Company at its bulk plant which was located on the East bank of the Carrabelle River, approximately 300 feet north or upstream from the point where the “Santee” was berthed and sunk on the night of November 22, 1939; that during and before said term of employment, he saw numerous barges and boats, as large as the “Santee”, berthed or tied up where the accident occurred and never saw, or heard of, any one of such other barges or boats having any trouble whatever, although this may have occurred without his knowing it ; and that, because he paid no great deal of attention to the site in question, he knew not whether there remained any pilings from the former discarded railroad dock that once stood there.

The five persons so testifying were disinterested witnesses, undoubtedly.

It is true that subsequent developments during the night of November 22, 1939, convincingly demonstrated that, though unknown to the masters and crews, respectively, of both tug and tow, the “Santee”, with the falling of the tide had become perched upon the tallest one of a hidden nest of submerged old piling stubs of different lengths, which pierced her bottom when the “Lapwing” made an unsuccessful effort to pull the listing vessel from what all believed to be merely the settling on a mud flat.

It is also true that members of the tow’s crew testified that, upon their inspection of the mooring-site at low tide and in the sunlight, they did plainly see the submerged obstructions; and that the marine surveyor who supervised the raising of the “Santee”, and a diver engaged therein, testified to the same effect, whilst two employees of the United States Engineer Corps, thoroughly familiar with the locality bécause of their [861]

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Related

Offshore Company v. G & H Offshore Towing Co.
262 F. Supp. 282 (S.D. Texas, 1966)
Wilbanks & Pierce, Inc. v. Hendry
150 F.2d 214 (Fifth Circuit, 1945)

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Bluebook (online)
56 F. Supp. 859, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-lapwing-laed-1944.