The Vestris

60 F.2d 273, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1327
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 273 (The Vestris) 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 Vestris, 60 F.2d 273, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1327 (S.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

GODDARD, District Judge.

This is a petition for limitation of liability filed in, behalf of the owners of the steamship Vestris, which sailed from Hoboken, N. J., on the afternoon of November 10, 1928, on a voyage from New York to South American ports. On the 12th day of November, 1928, she foundered at sea with the loss of 110 lives, the vessel, cargo, and the effects of the passengers and crew. Numerous suits having been brought against them, the petitioners in this proceeding seek to obtain an adjudication as to liability, and to limit it to their interest in the vessel and her pending freight should the court find liability. At the time of her loss, the Vestris was on a voyage from New York to Barbados and South American ports with 325 persons aboard consisting of 128 passengers and a personnel of 197,. including officers and crew; also cargo made up chiefly of motor parts and fruits. The estimates of the total weight of cargo, coal, water, stores, baggage, mails, kentledge, and water in her ballast tanks when she sailed on this voyage from New York varied between 7,370 and 7,665 tons.

I. The Vestris was a British steel passenger steamship of 10',494 tons gross and 6,622 tons net register with twin screws, and was 496 feet long, 60 feet 6 inches beam. Her weight light was 7,914 tons in addition to 1,401.74 tons of refrigerating machinery and refrigerating insulation installed two years after she left her builders. The salt water draft assigned to the Vestris in 1912 (when she left her last British port) by Lloyds for the British Board of Trade was 26 feet 9% inches for summer, and 26 feet 314 inches for winter voyages. Her salt water draft on this — a winter voyage — -I find to have been 26 feet 11% inches. She was built in 1912 at Belfast, Ireland, of the Isherwood type of construction; that is — with the longitudinal framing system. She was built to Lloyd’s specifications and was classed “100 A 1” by Lloyd’s Registry, which classification she retained after surveys made from time to time by its surveyors. Since 1921 the Vestris had been eng'ag’ed in trade between New York and South American ports. Her British passenger certificate expired in 1922. But she was subject to the United States Steamboat Inspection Service which made yearly inspections of her, and she held a United States Passenger Certificate and Certificate of Inspection of boats and life-saving appliances. She carried fourteen clinker built life boats which had a total authorized capacity of 800 persons. All tho boats, with the exception of Nos. 13 and 14, which were extras, were equipped with “Martin” davits and “Mills” releasing gear.

*276 She was a shelter deck vessel, having three complete decks extending from stem to stem, namely, shelter deck, upper deck, and main deck; also a lower deck extending from her stem to the after end of No. 2 cargo hold forward. On the upper deck was a cross alleyway extending the width of the ship. On the starboard side leading forward frota the cross alleyway was the firemen’s passage or alleyway. The forward part of the shelter deck was an open deck generally known as a “well deck.” It is the open space between the forward end of the bridge house bulkhead and the island erection forward. It is 32 feet fore and aft at the sides and there is no bulwark only an open iron rail. In the well deck were two booby hatches (closéd sompanionways) for the use of the crew in going to and from their quarters to the stoke-hold; one on the starboard and one on the port side, each located about 18 feet from the ship’s side and their after-sides being the forward thwartship bulkhead of the bridge house. They are constructed of steel and riveted to the deck. The openings of the booby hatches were 4 feet 6 inehes high and 2 feet wide and faced outboard with 18 inch sills. They had double hinged wooden folding doors 3 to 2% inches thick. The starboard booby hatch led to the firemen’s alleyway. From the firemen’s alleyway and the cross alleyway there were four large openings or doorways leading into the starboard shelter ’tween-deck bunker. These openings were provided with loose plates to prevent coal from falling out, but did not stop water from going through. In the starboard shelter ’tween-deck bunker there were two large and one small openings or hatches. There were covers for these hatches but they were not used, and the hatches wer'e left open so that the coal would run down into the lower bunkers as it was used. If water came through the booby hatch it had access through the firemen’s alleyway and the cross alleyway, and it would overflow into the starboard shelter ’tween-deck bunker if it got above the coamings which were 9 to 12 inehes high. At each end of the cross alleyway is an opening on the side of the ship; these openings are 6 feet high and 4% feet wide, known as “working doors,” and are closed by doors known as “half doors”; these doors are divided into an upper and lower half. Before leaving New York these doors had been closed and white lead and spun yam packed into the spaces between the doors and the sides of the ship. But it appears that the starboard half doors “stays out a little bit”; that also on the port side the upper half door did not meet the lower one so that a space of about % inch was left. The bottoms of these openings were approximately 5% feet above the water line as the Yestris was loaded when she left New York on this voyage. Each degree she listed brought the starboard half doors above 6 inehes nearer to the sea.

At 3:45 o’clock on the afternoon of Saturday, November 10, 1928, the Yestris left the pier at Hoboken for a voyage from New York to South American ports. At the time of her sailing the weather was fine and clear, and according to the credible testimony she had no list. She continued under these conditions until soon after midnight when a slight list to starboard was noticed. By 5 a. m. she had a list of two to four degrees to starboard and two hours later the list had increased to not less than four or five degrees. Around midnight the wind had freshened, and from then until about 7:30 the following morning there was a fresh northeasterly breeze. The wind at 7:30' was about 35 miles an hour. During the latter part of the night water began to come into .the stokehold through the. starboard ash ejector discharge and continued until about noon on Sunday when the leak was stopped. A considerable amount of water came in here and from other sources, for before noon the starboard bilges were full and the water was up to the floor plates of the engine room which were about 3 feet above the tank tops. Water had also come through an open space in the port half doors into the cross alleyway, but these doors' were reeaulked and made tight during the forenoon. Early Sunday morning water began coming in through the ’starboard booby hatch to the firemen’s passage in the shelter deck, and later the water from the firemen’s passage was overflowing into the starboard coal bunkers. During Sunday evening the wooden doors of the starboard booby hatch were carried away and larger quantities of water came in through the opening and overflowed into the starboard bunkers. By noon, with the wind on her port quarter, she had a list of between 6 and 8 degrees and the wind and sea had risen; and at 12:20 p. m. she was hove to and allowed to lie in the trough of the sea with the engines being operated intermittently at slow speed to keep her up to the wind. In the forenoon the packing around the starboard half doors was washed out as the doors did not fit properly,’ and water from here ran down into the lower part of the ship and came out of the after end of. the starboard side of the stokehold.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 273, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-vestris-nysd-1932.