The Vizcaya

63 F. Supp. 898, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1799
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 11, 1945
Docket45 of 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 63 F. Supp. 898 (The Vizcaya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Vizcaya, 63 F. Supp. 898, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1799 (E.D. Pa. 1945).

Opinion

KALODNER, District Judge.

This is an action in admiralty brought by the consignee to recover for cargo damage allegedly sustained during the transatlantic voyage of the steamship Viz-caya. The issues involved are: (1) Whether the cargo was received by the Vizcaya in good order and condition, (2) if so, whether the damage was attributable to perils of the sea or to the unseaworthiness of the vessel, and (3) if the latter, whether due diligence was exercised to make the Vizcaya seaworthy.

The cargo in controversy consists of bags of shelled almonds and filberts marked “B. Co.” and “B.C.L.” which were shipped under six through bills of lading from the ports of Alicante and Tarragona, Spain, on the vessels Darro and Ebro to Cadiz, Spain, where they were transshipped onto the Vizcaya for carriage to Philadelphia.

The through bills of lading were “clean” bills containing the usual notation of receipt for shipment in good order and condition. Also, they limited the responsibility of each carrier to its own line, and subjected the through bills to the conditions contained in the bills of lading issued by the on-carrier, the claimant-respondent here.

The Vizcaya issued six bills of lading, printed in Spanish, covering the shipment from Cadiz to Philadelphia. They did not recite that the goods were received in apparent good order and condition, but contained the printed statement, signed by the Captain, that he did not know the weight, contents, quality and condition of the cargo. On two of these bills, however, were longhand notations in Spanish, which, translated, mean “5 slack bags short contents” (bill No. 11), and “5 bags slack and resewed” (bill No. 46).

The testimony, both in court and by deposition, and the exhibits, disclose the following facts:

The Vizcaya left Cadiz bn January 30, 1944, and stopped at Huelva, Spain, for bunkers. According to the testimony of the first engineer, the. coal was half large pieces and half small; he tested it in the kitchen stove and discovered that the large pieces burned all right, but not the small pieces, whereupon he complained to the supplier who was new to the ship. The result of this inferior coal was to diminish the pressure so that, after leaving Huelva, the ship lost sixty to seventy knots a day in normal weather. The first engineer also stated that at Huelva he inspected the Vizcaya’s machinery and found it in good order.

*900 On February 10th, the Vizcaya left Huelva for Philadelphia, and on February 20th it began to encounter heavy seas and head winds of force six on the Beaufort Scale, 1 toward the twenty-first hour. On the 21st of February, the wind force decreased, but, after the twentieth hour rose from force 5 to force 8, in the twenty-fourth hour. On February 22nd the wind force went from 7 in the first hour to 10 in the sixteenth hour, which continued through February 23rd to the fourth hour, when it decreased to 9. On that day the wind diminished to force 6 in the twenty-fourth hour. The range of wind and-sea forces on February 24th was 7 diminishing to 5.

At about midnight on February 21st (the twenty-fourth hour), the Vizcaya’s engines were stopped because the bottom of the centrifugal pump became loose and fell. Repairs were completed at about 6 P.M. on February 24th, and during this time the Vizcaya was adrift.

On February 25th, the range of the wind was force 5 increasing to force 7, and the same for the sea. On February 26th, the wind and sea varied between force 5 and force 6, but at about 8 P.M. the engines were stopped because of damage in the transmission of the steering gear, which was not repaired until 6 A.M. on February 27th. For these ten hours the Vizcaya was adrift a second time. The inability to steer the ship resulted, according to the engineer, in exposing the stern of the ship causing the propeller to race, which in turn caused '‘too much” vibration of the ship. Although the hand steering gear was available, the attempt to use it was not successful because of the weather.

Following the repair of the steering gear, the Captain considered the weather good, the highest wind and sea force being force 7, until March 2nd, when the wind reached force 8 for several hours. The weather for the remainder of the trip was good. However, the Captain found it necessary to make an unscheduled stop at Bermuda for coal. There he filed a protest with the Spanish Consulate on account of the bad weather. A similar protest was filed in Philadelphia.

This protest discloses that on February 22nd, the engines were stopped for three hours to clean the pipes in the boilers; that at about 12:30 A.M., February 23rd, the engines were stopped because of the break in the centrifugal pump and were not started until 4:24 P.M. February 25th, when the cement on the centrifugal pump became sufficiently hard; that on February 24th, at about 6 A.M. the ship’s rail, center, port, was carried away; that on February 26th, at about 8 P.M. the steering gear broke and was not repaired until 6 A.M. on February 27th; on February 29th, the ship could not be kept on her course because of lack of pressure because of inferior coal and this continued on the 29th, the ship pitching and rolling heavily; control was not regained until about noon that day when the weather improved. On March 3rd at about 5 A.M. control was being lost because of lack of pressure, the engine was stopped and the ship remained adrift; at 6 A.M. springs in the “guarne” were broken. The day’s run of March 4th was begun with stopped engines, but the translation does not disclose when they were started up.

There is no question that the cargo of almonds and filberts were discharged in a damaged condition. The surveyors for the libellants and claimant-respondent agreed that two kinds of damage were apparent, and separated the sacks of nuts accordingly. In one group were placed torn sacks marked with paint and rust; this damage was attributed to chafing of the sacks against the skin and frames of the ship. In the other group were placed sacks characterized by a lengthwise cut on the flat side of the sack; the surveyors could not determine the cause of this damage, but compared the cut to one made by a sharp instrument.

At Cadiz, the sacks of nuts which are involved here were stowed, with other sacks of nuts, in the Vizcaya’s holds No. 3 and No. 4. In the hold No. 3 they were laid on a platform of dunnage over cases of wine, *901 and in the No. 4 hold, on dunnage over butts of wine. The sacks were laid one layer fore-and-aft and one layer crosswise in alternate tiers from one wing of the hold to the other. In each hold there was approximately one foot of space between the sacks and the skin of the ship, and about six inches between the sacks and the ship’s frames. The sacks were three tiers high in hold No. 3 and five tiers high in hold No. 4. There was no dunnage or any other kind of protection between the sacks and the skin and frames of the ship, although there was dunnage between the butts and the hull. In hold No. 3, there was about nine feet of clearance between the top of the stow of nuts and the deck, but in No. 4 hold, there clearance was about three feet in the forward part of the hold sloping to about 10 feet of clearance at the center of the stow, so that the forward part was about seven feet higher than the after part.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 F. Supp. 898, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-vizcaya-paed-1945.