The Messenger

43 F.2d 188, 1930 A.M.C. 1734, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1259
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 1930
DocketNo. 1394
StatusPublished

This text of 43 F.2d 188 (The Messenger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Messenger, 43 F.2d 188, 1930 A.M.C. 1734, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1259 (S.D. Tex. 1930).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, District Judge.

Linde Dredging Company, owner of the dredge Badger, sues Suderman & Young, Inc., and the tug Messenger, to recover damages sustained by the Badger when the tug Messenger backed into her on December 15, 192&.

The collision occurred at 3:30 p. m. in open daylight in clear weather, in the vicinity of No. 9 Bell Buoy near the North jetty entrance to Galveston Harbor, where the steamship Brazos had gone aground hard and fast on a sand bar.

Some short time before the collision, the tug Messenger, with a barge in tow, had come out to the Brazos, put a line over to her, and had taken off some cargo. Just before this operation was completed, and the tug Messenger was ready to cast off and return to Galveston, the dredge Badger* which had been employed .to assist the Brazos off the sand bar, had come up> and taken her position on the port side of the Brazos even with the stern, and about 300 feet due west, had let down her spud, and was making preparations to assist her.

At that time there was a heavy flood tide of five or six miles an hour running from the Brazos toward the dredge, and with the starboard spud down, the bow of the dredge was held in position on account of the current holding it straight.

At the time the Badger anchored, the Messenger and the barge which it had in tow were at about No. 2 hatch on the port side .of the Brazos and about 400 or 500 feet from the stem of the Badger. The Badger’s spud [189]*189was a heavy timber 16 inches square fitted so that it dropped through guides and anchored the dredge to the bottom and held it rigid.

At the time of the collision the tug Leo was on the port quarter of the dredge, and was just going ahead to swing the bow of the dredge across the current and head the cutter toward the port side of the Brazos. The port anchor of the Brazos was out, the chain hanging fairly slack, practically 45 degrees aft from the bow. The anchor was 100 or 150 feet away from the bow.

There was a good deal of controversy as to the exact position of the libelant’s dredge with reference to the Brazos, as to whether it was in or out of the channel, as to the length and location of its pontoon lines, as to the amount of spaee left in view of the position of the dredge, of the Brazos, of its anchor chain, and the pontoon lines.of the dredge, for the tug Messenger to maneuver in, and as to whether it was possible for the tug Messenger to have gotten out in the beginning by going forward over the anchor chain, as it did finally do after the collision.

In the view I take of the ease, it is not necessary to precisely resolve these conflicts. It is sufficient to say that as the Brazos, the Badger, and the Messenger were then located, with a heavy tide running down on the Badger, and the circumscribed spaee within which the’Messenger had to move, the circumstances were such that in order to get away" from the Brazos and out into the channel without a collision, it was incumbent upon the Messenger either to give notice to the Badger that she needed more room for her maneuvers, or if she decided to make them, cramped as she was for room, to make them so carefully as to avoid injury, or if she did not use such care, to abide the consequences.

Whether the collision occurred'because, as claimed by those on the Badger, the tug backed out at high speed, and backed directly down on her, or whether, as claimed by those on the Messenger, the tug took a long time getting out, and finally drifted down on the Badger because overcome by the heavy tide, is wholly immaterial in the placing of the fault in this case, though the statements of the occurrence as given by those on the Badger seem more reasonable than those given by the Messenger are; for situated as she was, more was required of the Messenger than to back down on the Badger and then complain of the position which the Badger had taken, or of the fact that she had let down her spud.

In the pleadings the respondent claimed that the cause of the injury was the Badger’s negligence in failing to co-operate with the Messenger, and by suddenly letting down her spud, fixing the dredge in place, and giving, force and consequence to the collision which it would not otherwise have had.

At the trial the respondent took the further position that the real cause of the trouble was that though the Badger had let her spud down, she had failed to put up the ball signals required by the rules, and asked leave to amend to plead this ground of negligence. Because it plainly appears that the presence or absence of the ball signals has no legal significance in this ease, this leave was denied, and the motion for leave to amend after the dose of the evidence was again denied.

In its brief the libelant elaims that the collision was due to the fault of the Messenger in not taking proper precautions either to obtain more clearance in starting the maneuver, or having started it, in not taking proper precautions to come out, and in that-it negligently and recklessly, with a full flood tide running down on the Badger, backed against her at high speed.

I think the evidence fairly sustains the general theory of the libelant that the injury was due to faulty maneuvering. The captain of the Messenger elaims that the collision occurred because the tide got him. Linde, the owner of the dredge, elaims it occurred because he backed out at full speed. Whether he came out at full speed, or whether he allowed himself to drift down on the Badger,, is immaterial. He had a situation which required skill in maneuvering. He had two moored vessels, one stranded, the other moored in a position to succor the stranded vessel. He knew that the space he had to maneuver in was greatly circumscribed. He knew the tide was running strong and full. Under these circumstances, he east off his lines, popped out of his mooring like a rabbit out of a warren, and either because the tide got him, or because the tide and his own speed got him, he delivered a severe and smashing blow against the Badger.

Not only the witnesses on the Badger, but those on the Messenger, testified to hearing the crack of timber breaking at the time of the collision.

Linde testified that from the force of the blow the dredge took a terrific -sheer and its deck was nearly pulled under the water. The complete breaking of the heavy spud testifies to the power with which the blow was delivered. Linde testified to the quick[190]*190ness of the impact following the hacking out, and that though orders were given in an attempt to raise the spud, it was impossible to do so within the time allowed after the tug commenced to bear down on her, and I find that those on the dredge did everything possible to avoid the collision in the limited time allowed them.

At the close of the evidence it seemed entirely plain to me that the whole causal fault was on tlie Messenger, and that if there was any fault on the part of the dredge in the matter of letting down the spud, or in not displaying the customary signals indicating that the spud was down, this fault was in no sense the proximate cause of the collision, That the fault was altogether that of the Messenger in taking the chance that it did.

Since the briefs have come in, and I have further considered the evidence and the law of the ease, I am the more convinced of the correctness of the trial conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 F.2d 188, 1930 A.M.C. 1734, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-messenger-txsd-1930.