The President Madison

13 F. Supp. 692, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
DocketNos. 13557, 13558, 13577, 13585
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 F. Supp. 692 (The President Madison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The President Madison, 13 F. Supp. 692, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129 (W.D. Wash. 1935).

Opinion

NETERER, District Judge.

On October 21, 1934, the President Madison was moored on the west side of Pier 41, Port of Seattle, stern offshore. The ship was laid up (out of commission) in March, 1933. In August, 1934, she was moved astern to the east side of the pier, bow offshore, 100 feet from the end of the pier. It was moored to the dock by a 1)4 six-stranded wire cable from the port bow chock to the offshore kevel on the face of the wharf 162 feet from the bow chock at an angle of 11 degrees; a 1J4 six-stranded galvanized plough steel wire from the starboard chock to the first kevel on the south end of the wharf 144 feet outside of the chock at an angle of 12 degrees; a 1% galvanized plough steel towing hawser leading from the third chock from the bow to the second kevel embedded in the bull rail tied to the stringer on the dock, 94 feet from chock to kevel at an angle of 19 degrees (all above lines leading forward); a 1%-inch six-stranded galvanized plough steel wire leading from No. 2 chock aft to kevel No. 3 on the wharf (counting from off shore) 106 feet from chock to kevel leading aft at an angle of 17 degrees; an 8-inch manila line leading from the same chock to the same kevel; a durable wire 1% inches in diameter from the port quarter chock to the No. 8 kevel 110 feet from chock at an angle of 11 degrees; a 114-inch six-stranded plough steel wire cable from the starboard quarter chock to No. 8 kevel 95 feet from chock to kevel at an angle of 13 degrees; a 2-inch plough steel wire towing hawser from No. 2 chock from aft to kevel No. 8, 126 feet from chock to kevel at an angle of 10 degrees; a 1'14-inch six-stranded plough steel cable from chock No. 3 to kevel No. 7, 67 feet from chock to kevel, at an angle of 20 degrees; a 1%-inch six-strand plough steel wire cable from chock No. 3 leading forward to kevel No. 6 as head spring 72 feet from chock to kevel at an angle of 19 degrees; an 8-inch manila rope from chock No. 4 leading aft as a stern spring 133 feet from chock to kevel at an incline of 10 degrees —vertical height of chocks above the kevels, 31 feet. The angles, in degrees, were computed January 15, 1935, or 86 days after the storm, by the watchman in charge of the vessel on October 21, 1934, on a basis of half flood tide at 12:40 p. m.

The toggle joints formed by the bow-spring from No. 3 chock to the second kevel 94 feet at a 19-plus degree angle and from chock No. 3 forward to kevel as head spring 67 feet from chock at 20-plus degrees, and from chock No. 3 to kevel No. 6, 72 feet from chock at an angle of 19-plus degrees, were comparatively short, and the metacentric height was at or near the center of gravity, it is stated, which appears confirmed by the disclosed physical facts, and the instability thereby created caused the force of the gale to affect the ship more radically in movement and forced to resist very much more than the wind pressure in the upward lift loosening the dock structure, and horizontal pull or shear on the pier; there being no breast line to stay the horizontal pull.

The vessel out of commission had a fixed status of rest for an indefinite period, its crew was withdrawn, and that required it to he moored with greater care than a vessel in commission under power with full crew, and temporary moorings for taking and releasing cargo.

The spring lines should have been reinforced by a forward breast line, with a long lead, as nearly as possible at right angles at mooring. Another breast line should have been run aft the vessel at right angles in the forenoon of the day of the gale. To run the line would have required six additional seamen. These could have been obtained within half an hour from the Seamen’s Hall, and the line could have been run and fastened in ample time to avoid the drifting.

The office of the respondent American Mail Line was at the shore end of the pier, approximately 2,000 feet distant, in which was a telephone. The port engineer was in the office and came to inspect the President Madison between 10 o’clock and 11:15 a. m., he says, to see whether she was in trim, and, if listing, arrange to pump her out. lie assisted the master in adjusting one after spring head and one after stern spring line.

[694]*694The port engineer' or the watchman could by phone' have called the Seamen’s Hall and immediately secured all necessary seamen.

One or both anchors likewise should have been cast. One man could have cast both anchors within two or three minutes after reaching the anchors. There was ample time, at least an hour, to cast the anchors before lifting and pulling parts of the pier by the spring lines, which caused separating of the bow lines and drifting.

The vessel was 535 feet long, 72 foot beam, drew 14 feet forward and 24 feet aft; tonnage, 14,187 tons; she was light. All double bottoms were full of salt and fresh water, weight 1,610 tons, and 140 tons of fuel oil were on the ship. Her stem was, at 12:40 p. m., 43 feet above water, 31.3 feet above pier. The vessel’s sun deck'was 26.5 feet above the main deck, and the main deck was 26.3 feet above the pier. Total height of the sun deck above the pier was 52.9 feet. At 1 o’clock p. m. she was at least four inches higher, of 53.1 feet.. The break must have occurred at 1 p. m., so entered in the log of the President Madison by the master on the same day, and the collision at 1:2Ó p. m., all of which the master “confirmed afterwards.” This is corroborated by a witness who saw the movement from separation of bow lines and drift to the collision. The master, on the trial, fixed the break at 12:40 p. m., based, he says, on subsequent conversation with others, but he may not impeach his own log, and more especially when the log entry is corroborated by a disinterested person who saw the entire incident.

The tide ranged 8 feet between high and low, and was rising from 9:54 a. m. until 3:17 p. m. She had two stoclcless anchors at her bow, weighing 6% tons and 5% tons, respectively, attached to 135 fathoms of anchor chains weighing 447 pounds per fathom, or weight in excess of 31 tons each.

The first break was at No. 2 kevel and No. 3 kevel, where the dock was lifted up and pulled out, and then two headlines separated, and the bow of the ship swung to Pier 40, followed by two stern lines separating, while the vessel was drifting shoreward between Piers 40 and 41, bow scraping Pier 40, stern bumping against and rebounding from Pier 41. When it had drifted to the end of the respective stern lines, parts of the dock pulled out.

The bottom of the slip was composed of blue clay mud and sand. 'Anchorage for warships allotted to and used by the Navy Department is right off Pier 41. This ground was also used for anchorage of “President” vessels of respondent Mail' Line during 1934 pending longshoremen’s strike. The anchorage in this slip is good. The cast anchors with 60 fathoms of chain would have stopped and held the vessel in 200 to 400 feet or less astern her mooring, her port side against Pier 40 and parallel thereto or nearly so, or stern swinging to starboard and port between Pier 40 and the center line of the slip. The vessel drifted approximately 2,000 feet in twenty minutes, one mile in approximately fifty-two minutes.

At 7 a. m. on this day the weather bureau at Seattle, established and maintained in Seattle since 1890 (forty-five years), displayed a storm signal of two red flags 8 feet square with a black center, one flag above the other, as “whole gale” warning, on the roof of the Exchange building, 349 feet above Elliott Bay. “Whole gale” means 75 miles an hour.

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

Related

Tebbs v. Baker-Whiteley Towing Co.
271 F. Supp. 529 (D. Maryland, 1967)
Tracy Towing Line, Inc. v. City of Jersey City
105 F. Supp. 910 (D. New Jersey, 1952)
The Anaconda
164 F.2d 224 (Fourth Circuit, 1947)
Puget Sound Tug & Barge Co. v. Olympic Forest Products Co.
21 F. Supp. 940 (W.D. Washington, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. Supp. 692, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-president-madison-wawd-1935.