The Rosalie Hull

296 F. 938, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1096
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 26, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 296 F. 938 (The Rosalie Hull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Rosalie Hull, 296 F. 938, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1096 (S.D.N.Y. 1923).

Opinion

KNOX, District Judge.

This libel was filed to recover damages for injury sustained by a cargo of coffee, through contact with seawater, on a voyage of the schooner Rosalie Hull, from Rio de Janeiro to New York. The injury being admitted, exoneration of the vessel is sought by reliance on the Harter Act (Comp. St. §§ 8029-8035), and the bill of lading exception of dangers of the seas.

The vessel is a' four-masted wooden schooner 184 feet in length, 38 feet in width, and has a depth of 14 feet 7 inches. Hter dead weight capacity is 1,250 tons, her gross 826, and the net 711. She was constructed in 1918, by the Georgia Shipbuilding Company, under the supervision and inspection of Lloyd’s Registry. Upon completion, she was rated 12 — Al, the highest mark available to a boat of her class.

Little or no affirmative claim is made by libelant that the ship was not properly constructed, or that she was in fact unseaworthy. It is, however, stoutly contended that there is no adequate proof of seaworthiness by libelant, that the vessel unjustifiably deviated from the usual and ordinary course of a voyage from Rio de Janeiro to New York, and that she was improperly dunnaged.

Prior to embarking upon the venture in question, the vessel had carried a cargo of coal from Savannah to Rio, and, so far as appears, she then acquitted herself creditably. For a return voyage to New York, the instant cargo was booked, and upon November 19, 1918, 16,000 bags of coffee were taken aboard; the master issuing a clean bill of lading. A week later the boat sailed from Rio; but, upon getting to sea, her progress was so impeded by adverse winds, or by no wind at all, that she was forced upon January 13, 1919, to put into Barbadoes to take on some fresh meat.

At most this task consumed but a few hours, and, had it not been that the schooner’s master considered it to be his duty to have her sails restitched, she might at once have resumed her voyage. As it was, the sails were seen to have started, because of their flapping against the rigging on the way up from Rio, and the master, as a precautionary measure, thought it prudent to take advantage of the stop at Barbadoes, [940]*940and restitch them. Accordingly, members of the crew, together with sailmakers from on shore, were occupied with the task from January 15th to January 23d. Two days after the work was completed, the ship weighed anchor and laid her course for this port. All went well until February 7th, at which time the vessel was some 250 miles southeast of Hatteras. Bad weather then made its appearance. This continued throughout the next day, and grew much worse upon the 9th, when, if the evidence of the ship is to be believed, the storm approached a hurricane in its fury. Such evidence is supported by Mr. Scarr of the Weather Bureau. According to him, a wind disturbance that had crossed the continent was passing out to sea off the coast of Georgia and South Carolina upon February 8th. It was not then severe, but upon the next morning it rapidly increased in intensity. At Hatteras the barometer fell twenty-six hundredths of an inch in 12 hours, while at Wilmington, N. C., the fall was more than half an inch. On the 10th a severe storm of cyclonic character came on to the eastward of Bermuda, and on the 11th it made its appearance at about latitude 40° north and longitude 55° east. To quote:

“ * * * The storm * * * which passed across our country and off the Carolina and Georgia coasts on the 8th is the same storm that developed into a severe storm of almost hurricane force upon the 11th. * * * Such a storm would be accompanied by wind of gale force, * * * beginning at least as early as the afternoon of the 9th, and probably sooner. * * * The wind would be southeasterly or easterly at points south of Charleston, shifting easterly during the night of the 9th, between 8 p. m. of the 9th and 6 a. m. of the 10th to west or northwest, and continuing with increasing gale force.”

Upon the 9th the ship took in the spanker, while the mizzen and foresails were reefed. Heavy cross-seas arose, causing the ship to pitch and toss. In the course of this, the forestay of the forward mast broke its fastenings in the knighthead. Then the mizzen and mainsail were taken in, but the jib, meanwhile, was blown to shreds, and the vessel, under bare poles, was put before the wind. To make matters worse, a heavy comber boarded the port quarter, and sprung the rudderhead, and the sheet bail on the fore boom parted, allowing the boom to strike the forerigging and carry away the topmast backstays.

During this period the vessel was swept with huge waves that filled the bulwarks, which were five feet in height, thus subjecting the decks and hatch coamings to an enormous pressure, variously estimated from 250 to 500 tons. For several days there was no particular let-up in the storm, and it was not until February 13th that sail could be set and the vessel put upon a definite course. In the interval, the shattered rudder head was growing weaker, and, while the heavy quartering seas continued, the vessel, for practical purposes,_ was not under control. Ón the last-mentioned date, the weather improved, the sea moderated, and the master having been unable to go towards Bermuda, as was then desired, a course was set for St. Thomas, where, after further vicissitudes, attributable to high winds and seas, the vessel came to anchor on the 23d.

On February 10th it became apparent that the cargo below decks had not escaped damage from the storm, for, upon that day, the working of the vessel’s pumps brought up large quantities of coffee and [941]*941black water. They did so upon succeeding days, and just before reaching St. Thomas it was noticed that the cover to No. 3 hatch was warped from the swelling of the coffee beneath. Three days after the schooner reached St. Thomas, her master made application to the District Court for the appointment of surveyors of the vessel. The court appointed persons who seem to have been competent, and they reported as follows:

“We sounded tlie pumps with an interval of one hour, and found that the vessel during this time had made one-quarter of an inch as she now lies at anchor in this harbor. Found No¡ 3 hatch well-battened, tarpaulined, caulked, soaped, and properly secured; also found same bulged from expansion of the cargo. We opened this hatch and found cargo in the wake all damaged and somewhat beyond. We also found No. 2 and No. 1 hatches battened, tarpaulin-ed, caulked, soaped, and properly secured. We opened these hatches, and found the cargo in the wake steamed and in bad condition, apparently water penetrating through the seams of the hatchway coamings. Two eyebolts of the forestay broke, and stay secured by temporary tackle. Main jib entirely gone, leaving fragments. Port earriebit carried away, foreboom broken, and sheet traveler of same broke, starboard foretopmast backstay ehainplates broken, and turnbuekle on aftershroud of forerigging bent. Foretopmast backstay carried away in the splice. Mizzen sail split across the reefband, and after-leach rope partially gone. Foresail split at reefband and rope started oh after-leach. Butts in the waterways and caulking around the hatch coamings to be looked after. Rudderhead shattered.”

Thereafter cargo surveyors were appointed. They examined bags of coffee beneath and in the rear of the hatches to an extent, where the bags, instead of being rotted and mildewed, were merely stained, and as a result of such examination condemned 789 bags of coffee. These were taken out to sea and dumped.

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Bluebook (online)
296 F. 938, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-rosalie-hull-nysd-1923.