The Wichita Falls

15 F. Supp. 612, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2068
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1936
DocketNo. 333
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 F. Supp. 612 (The Wichita Falls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Wichita Falls, 15 F. Supp. 612, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2068 (S.D. Tex. 1936).

Opinion

KENNERLY, District Judge.

-Willie Black, Arthur Chappell, Bishop' Coleman, O. P. Starkey, E. L. Gibson, Andrew Salter, Julius Taylor, L. W. Connacher, ■ A. Duncan, and Henry Gibson (called respondents for convenience) were on, and prior to, March 15, 1935, and are now, asserting claims for personal injuries against the Southern Steamship Company (for convenience called petitioner), owner of the steamship Wichita Falls, and on that date, such owner filed this action, seeking to limit its liability under sections 181 to 195, c. 8, title 46 U.S.C.A.

The claim of respondents was and is that guards or other persons, armed with guns, etc., placed on such steamship by petitioner, fired on them and other persons congregated on the unloading docks used by petitioner at the Port of Houston, Tex., during a longshoreman strike on or about May 14, 1934, causing such injuries.

Some or all of respondents have brought commondaw actions for damages for such claimed injuries against petitioner and others in the state court, the prosecution of which actions against petitioner has been suspended.

The facts fairly deducible from the evidence are as follows:

(a) Petitioner (Southern Steamship Company), prior to and on May 14, 1934, was, and has since been, engaged in operating some seven ships in the coastwise trade or shipping between the ports of Houston, Tex., Philadelphia, Pa., and Norfolk, Va., and was and is the owner of the steamship Wichita Falls, engaged in such coastwise trade or shipping, principally between the port of Houston and the port'of Philadelphia.

(b) Petitioner, about 1920, for pay, acquired from the city of Houston, and/or the Port Commission of the city, the right to use certain municipal docks, particularly dock No. 4, located on the Houston Ship Channel, a short distance from the center [613]*613of Houston, but within its corporate limits, for the purpose of loading and unloading its steamships, and, under the right so acquired, continued tip to and including May 14, 1934, and since, to load and unload its ships at such docks. Petitioner at all times paid to the city of Houston or the Port Commission compensation for the use of such docks at the prices and in accordance with the tariff promulgated by them.

(c) On and prior to May 14, 1934, there existed at the Port of Houston and elsewhere an organization known as the International Longshoremen Association (for brevity called the T. L. A.), composed of longshoremen employed in the loading and unloading at the Port of Houston, and elsewhere, of ships of persons and companies other than petitioner. Petitioner had and employed its own longshoremen to load and unload its ships; they being men who had been in its employ for many years, none of whom were members of or were affiliated with the I. L. A. Petitioner never at any time had employment contracts with the I. L. A. or its members, nor did petitioner have any negotiations with them, except one request from it that petitioner make a contract with it, which petitioner declined.

(d) On or about May 1, 1934, the members of the I. L. A. at the Port of Houston left the service of their employees, and went out on strike, and began picketing the docks of their employers. Although there was no controversy between the I. L. A. and petitioner, and no controversy between petitioner and its own longshoremen, the I. L. A., on or about that date, began picketing the docks used by petitioner as well. At that time, petitioner had a ship in port ready to be loaded on May 2, 1934. On May 2, 1934, all, or substantially all, of petitioner’s employees came to work, ready and willing to load such ship, but were prevented by the pickets of the I. L. A., aided by a crowd of sympathizers who had congregated about the docks used by petitioner, and such ship, on May 3d, left the Port of Houston without cargo.

(e) The same or similar conditions prevailed on, up to, and after May 14, 1934. On May 8, 1934, someone in a congregated crowd of members of the I. L. A. and their sympathizers threw a club through the windshield of the automobile in which a representative of petitioner was riding near the docks used by petitioner. Although petitioner’s representatives repeatedly requested it, petitioner was not given or afforded, during such period, protection against the I. L. A., its members, pickets, and sympathizers, by either the city, county, or state authorities, and matters at am around the docks used by petitioner were practically in the hands of and controlled by the I. L. A., its members, pickets, and sympathizers. A number of the employees of petitioner were assaulted and injured, and all were prevented from reaching the docks used by petitioner, and were prevented from loading and unloading petitioner’s ships.

(f) During that period (May 1 to May 14, 1934), although petitioner had five ships available, it could not load or unload them. During such period, petitioner had on hand at its Houston docks between 21 and 22 million pounds of freight destined to points in Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, and other slates, which it could not, because of such interference of the I. L. A., its members, pickets, and sympathizers, forward to destination.

In fact, the evidence shows a virtual paralysis of petitioner’s business during that period, and that it sustained heavy losses.

All the matters and things set forth in the foregoing paragraphs (c), (d), (e) and in this paragraph, and the succeeding paragraphs (g), (h), and (i) were, on and prior to May 14, 1936, well known to the petitioner, and to its officers who had active charge of its affairs, and to its Houston agents, and to the master and other officers of the steamship Wichita Falls.

(g) On May 14, 1934, such steamship, Wichita Falls, belonging to petitioner, was due to arrive at dock No. 4, Port of Houston, and petitioner desired and sought to arrange for its unloading. Not being able, because of conditions hereinbefore set forth, to have its own men or longshoremen unload it, petitioner, through its Houston agents, employed or caused to be employed in the city of Houston about 200 longshoremen belonging to the Lone Star Longshoremen Association to do so. (These for convenience are called “new men”). The new men so employed entered trucks furnished by petitioner for the purpose of riding through the streets of Houston to dock No. 4. In the trucks there were also a number of armed guards employed by petitioner and placed therein by petitioner to protect the new men from bodily injury. Apparently, learning of petitioner’s purpose to bring the new men [614]*614to dock No. 4, a large number of persons, estimated at 500, including the I. L. A., its members, pickets, and sympathizers, congregated on and about the dock and in the streets, alleys, and on the property adjacent to the dock, many of whom were armed with firearms, clubs, and other similar weapons, for the purpose of using, and with the intent to use, force, and all the force necessary, to prevent the carrying of the new men in such trucks to the dock, and prevent them from unloading petitioner’s ships. The trucks proceeded to a point about a block or more from the dock, and were there stopped by such armed persons. Thereupon, .police officers of the city of Houston, several of whom were present, advised and directed petitioner not to undertake to carry the new men to the dock and unload them from the trucks, claiming that bloodshed would result, and that many persons would be killed and/or suffer serious bodily injuries.

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Related

In Re Follett's Petition
172 F. Supp. 304 (S.D. Texas, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Supp. 612, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-wichita-falls-txsd-1936.