The Satilla

221 F. 949, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1632
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 6, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 221 F. 949 (The Satilla) 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 Satilla, 221 F. 949, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1632 (S.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

HUNT, Circuit Judge.

This is a libel of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company, as owner of the lighter Samson and as bailee of the cargo laden therein, and on behalf of the crew thereof, against the steamer Satilla, her engines, boilers, etc., and all persons lawfully intervening in a cause of damage, civil arid maritime.

It is charged that the lighter was damaged by the fall of certain railroad iron which was being hoisted on board the Satilla by means of the steamship’s winch and tackle, operated by persons in the employ of the Satilla. Negligence is specified as follows: That the steamship was using improper equipment, winches, derrick, and tackle to discharge the rails; that the employes of the steamship, to discharge the rails, used the equipment, winches, derrick, and tackle of the steamship in an improper and' negligent manner; that the persons employed by the steamship to make up the slings of rails on the deck of the lighter were incompetent, and made them up in a dangerous way, of which they were warned by libelant’s crew; and that-the discharge of the lighter was in charge of incompetent persons. A portion of the lighter’s cargo was lost, together with certain equipment.

The claimant, the steamship company, filed its petition in damages under the fifty-ninth rule in admiralty against Chiarello Bros. Company and set up that the Chiarello Bros, were unloading the lighter Samson under a contract with the claimant for the loading of the Satilla, but that the Chiarello Bros, were in no way subject to-the orders or instructions of the claimant; that the Satilla was properly equipped with winches, derrick, and tackle, and that the equipment was in proper working order at the time of the accident; and that any damages that may have occurred were not to be attributed to fault on the part of the steamship Satilla or those in charge of her, .but to the negligence of Chiarello Bros. Company. The specifications as against the Chiarello Bros, are that the employés of the stevedores were incompetent, and made up the slings in an improper and dangerous way, that they used the equipment of the steamship in an improper and negligent way, [951]*951and that they failed properly to guide the sling of steel rails as it was being hoisted from the deck of the Samson.

The Texas City Steamship Company, owner and claimant of the steamship Satilla, answered that the persons engaged in loading the Satilla and the discharge of rails from the Samson to the Satilla were Chiarello Bros. Company, stevedores, and that the cargo was hoisted on board the Satilla by means of the steamship’s winches and tackle operated by persons in the employ of the Satilla. The answer denies fault as against the steamship and those in charge of her, and pleads that the lighter was being unloaded by longshoremen employed by Chiarello Bros. Company, stevedores, with whom the claimant had a contract for the loading of the Satilla, and who were in no way subject to the orders or instructions of the claimant. Claimant alleges that the steamer was properly equipped with winches, derrick, and tackle to discharge the rails from the Samson into the Satilla, and that the equipment was in all respects in proper working order at the time of the accident, and says that, if there were any damages, they were due to the negligence of the Chiarello Bros. Company, in that the employes of the stevedores were incompetent, and made up the slings in an improper and dangerous manner, and they used the equipment of the steamship in the discharge of the rails in an improper and negligent manner.

The Chiarello Bros., answering the petition of the claimant, admit that the rails were hoisted on board the Satilla from the Samson by means of the steamship’s winches and tackle, but deny any and all fault, and set up that the firm of Chiarello Bros, was employed by the claimant to load the cargo of Iron rails, and that the steamship furnished the use of the steam winch and steam for the loading; that the firm was under and subject to the control and order of the claimant in loading the cargo and operating the winch; that they were obliged to use a steam winch which was out of order, and that the attention of the claimant was called to it before the happening of the accident, hut that the company directed Chiarello Bros, to continue the use; and that there was no other way of loading the cargo, except by the use of the steam winch referred to. They set up that the rails were properly fastened, hut that the winch faltered, causing the slings on the rails to jolt and to fall, and that the accident was wholly caused by the defective winch of the Satilla.

Upon the trial these matters were developed: The contract between Chiarello Bros., stevedores and contractors, and the Texas City Steamship Company, contains, among other things, covenants (a) that the contractors, when instructed by the company, would perform all services in loading and unloading cargoes of steamers owned or chartered by the company in New York, for certain stipulated prices; (b) that the contractors at their own cost would supply all the necessary tools and gear to perform such services, with the exception of ship’s winches, booms, falls, and guides, hand trucks, and planks, “all of which are the property of the company and are loaned to the contractors, with the distinct understanding that the same will be kept in proper repair and condition, and when damaged to the extent of being of no further use will be replaced by the contractors”; (c) that the contractors [952]*952should furnish all necessary winchmen, men to assist in docking steamers, etc.; and (d) that they would also be responsible for any damage to the ship’s hull, machinery, tackle, or gear, or to any other property, such as lighters, that might be designated, owned, or used by the company or their shippers or consignees.

On November 27, 1912, the Satilla was lying at Pier 44, North River, New York. On the morning of November 27th the lighter Samson was hauled alongside the ship and made fast to the ship for the purposes of taking the cargo from the Samson and putting, it into-the steamship. Steel rails, the principal freight of the Samson, were hoisted on board the Satilla by a drum-hoisting engine and a winch belonging to the steamship, with tackle operated by the contracting stevedores. The contracting stevedores and their employé, the winchman who operated the winch, found that it was not working perfectly. The defect seems to have been this: The drum, which was forced by an operating mechanism into contact with a gear wheel by means of a. sleeve operated by a hand lever, so as to produce friction, would occasionally stall, and, when the winch lever was moved, the spring which operated and released the drum would not so work as to release the friction contact and throw the drum laterally away from friction contact, and so let the drum run free. The steamship company knew of the .defect; so did the contractors. In the afternoon of the day of the accident, three heavy rails, each about 32 feet long, and each weighing about 500 pounds, were fastened together by employés of the stevedores by means of a chain with a-hook on the end. The chain was wound around the bundle twice, and the hook of the chain was passed under and then put into the eye of a cable which was at the end of a boom, and which, in turn, was swung over toward the hold of the ship and lowered by means of the winch. The rails were tied together at a distance about 10 feet from their ends.

Undoubtedly the rails were tied together in the usual and ordinary way adopted for lifting a bunch of three rails from a lighter to the hold of a ship.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 F. 949, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-satilla-nysd-1915.