Thibeault v. Boston Towboat Co.

28 F. Supp. 152, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2521
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 20, 1939
DocketNo. 771
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 F. Supp. 152 (Thibeault v. Boston Towboat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thibeault v. Boston Towboat Co., 28 F. Supp. 152, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2521 (D. Mass. 1939).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

This is a suit in admiralty brought by the libellant against the above named respondents, in which he seeks to recover for personal injuries received while employed as a member of the crew of the tugboat “Confidence,” by its owner, the Boston Towboat Company, hereinafter called the “Towboat Company.” Maintenance and cure is also sought against the Towboat Company.

The special findings of fact demanded under Rule 46%, Title 28 U.S.C.A. following Section 723, are as follows:

On October 11, 1937, the Towboat Company contracted orally with the Mystic Terminal Company, hereinafter called the “Terminal Company,” to tow a car float to a vessel owned by the United Fruit Company which was docked alongside a wharf on Atlantic Avenue, in Boston. The tow-age services were secured in accordance with an arrangement that existed for many years between the Terminal Company and the United Fruit Company. A representative of the United Fruit Company notified the Towboat Company by telephone to take the car float from Pier 47, Mystic Docks and place it alongside oí a certain United Fruit Company steamer which lay in its berth at Long Wharf. There was no written contract existing between the parties in this connection.

The float upon which the accident occurred was of the usual rectangular shape, 196 feet long and 34 feet in width. The car float was owned by the Trustees of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company and had been leased to the Boston and Maine Railroad April 1, 1935, and was being used on the day of the accident by the respondent Terminal Company with the consent and permission of the Boston and Maine Railroad. There was a contract existing between the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company and the Boston and Maine Railroad by the terms of which the latter agreed to keep the float in repair, reasonable wear and tear excepted. There were three other floats of similar type being used in Boston harbor. It had a crew of two, employed by the Terminal Company, consist[154]*154ing.of a barge or car float captain and a deck hand. There were tracks with a capacity for eight freight cars on either side of a loading platform about seven feet wide which ran down between the tracks in the middle of the float practically its whole length. Over the entire length of the loading platform was a roof with a slight pitch, obviously constructed for weather protection for the platform. The roof was so constructed that it was on a level with the freight cars when the latter were in place on the tracks. The roof was about twelve feet above the loading platform, of the same width as the latter, and it was constructed of seven-eighths-inch matched boards with cleats upon it for its entire length. When the freight cars were in place there was a space of about six inches between the edge of the freight cars and the edges pf the roof. The freight cars were always placed on the float so that there was a space of about six feet between the cars on the side of the float nearer the ship from which the cargo was being discharged in order to make room for gangways, but there was no space left between the cars on the side away from the ship except the usual space left when cars of this sort are coupled together. There was a space of about eighteen inches or two feet between the sides of the freight cars and the bollards which were constructed inside a heavy twelve-inch rail which ran lengthwise along both sides of the float. A person of sizeable proportions, because of this narrow space, had some difficulty in passing from the stern to the bow of the float along its sides when the freight cars were in place. There were no ladders of any sort leading to the aforementioned roof from the loading platform, nor was there any runway on it such as' is ordinarily seen on the roof of a freight car.

Abundant evidence was introduced by the libellant, and I find it to be a fact, that a well defined custom of usage had existed in reference to the manner of towing car floats of the type in question here, at least for a period of twenty-fivé years prior to the date of the accident.

It was customary to make the tug fast to the float on its port-quarter by three lines, bow, tow, and stern, in such a manner that the bow of the tug would ordinarily be about eighty feet distant from the bow of the float. It was customary to send a man, usually a captain or a mate, up on the top of the float to pass signals to the operator in the wheelhouse of the tugboat. It was the first duty of this man to walk the length of the float and see that the chains that held her to the slip were properly released. The man assigned would go up the ladder of the freight car, cross over the roof above the loading platform from the port to the starboard side and then go forward along the roof to the forward end of the float. At the forward end he would stand upon the freight cars nearer the towboat on the port side of the float. Here he would give the signal that all was clear and he would move from the top of freight cars on the port side to the top of freight cars on the starboard side across the roof to see that the float, and tug fouled nothing in going out from the slip. When the float was out of the slip the man assigned would take his position upon the freight cars or the roof in question so that he could see all navigation. To do this it was convenient for him to cross and recross the roof from one side to the other. The number of times he would cross the structure would depend upon the state of navigation in the harbor and the number of signals necessary to be given to the pilot in the wheelhouse who relied upon him for knowledge as to the state of the navigation on both port and starboard sides of the float. When the time came for the float to make a swing into the wharf alongside the ship to be unloaded it was necessary for this man, stationed as a lookout, to pass to the starboard side of the float, if he were not already there, and take up his position on the freight cars on the starboard side. There he would proceed as far forward as he could to watch the starboard corner of the float going in at an angle. The maneuvering of the float at this point was done in rather a restricted area and the forward part of the float would just skin the ship in coming in. It was the duty of the lookout at this point to make calculations in order that the starboard corner of the float would come as near as possible to the ship without coming in collision with it. This necessitated his giving signals quickly to the operator in the pilothouse to go to the right or the left, to slow down, go ahead, or reverse engines. The number and speed necessary in giving signals depended to considerable extent on the wind and tide. It was also his duty here to see to it that the freight cars’ roofs would not foul the ship as the float came in. To give the necessary signals he crossed and recrossed the roof from starboard to port as many as twenty-five times in this opera[155]*155tion. He was compelled lo do this because a tugboat of the “Confidence” type, which was the type usually used in a towage job of this sort, sat low in the water and when tied up to the float on the port side its pilothouse was below the roofs of the freight cars on the float and the man at the wheel could not see a lookout giving signals on the starboard side of the float. The “Confidence” was about sixty-five feet long and the distance from its deck to the water was about seven feet, and from the window of the pilothouse to the water was about iwelve feet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. Supp. 152, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibeault-v-boston-towboat-co-mad-1939.