Trawler Jeanne D'Arc, Inc. v. Casco Trawlers, Inc.

260 F. Supp. 124, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7300
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 30, 1966
DocketNos. 239, 240
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 260 F. Supp. 124 (Trawler Jeanne D'Arc, Inc. v. Casco Trawlers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trawler Jeanne D'Arc, Inc. v. Casco Trawlers, Inc., 260 F. Supp. 124, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7300 (D. Me. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER OF THE COURT

GIGNOUX, District Judge.

On the morning of November 30, 1963, the F/Y JOHN J. NAGLE, the Schooner ADVENTURE and the F/V DOR-CHESTER were moored at the outfitting pier of the boat yard of respondent Sample & Son, Inc., located at Mill Cove, Boothbay Harbor, Maine. During a violent windstorm, the ADVENTURE and the DORCHESTER broke adrift from their moorings shortly after 10:00 a. m., finally coming to rest on the flats at the head of the cove, and the NAGLE sank at her berth. Libel-lant, the owner of the NAGLE, has brought these two libels in admiralty for damages resulting from the sinking of its vessel against respondent Casco Trawlers, Inc., as owner of the DOR-CHESTER, and against respondent Sample & Son, Inc., as bailee of the ADVENTURE and the NAGLE, charging each with negligence causing the sinking of its vessel. Libellant’s claim is that the sinking of the. NAGLE occurred when the ADVENTURE, which was moored at the head of the pier, broke loose from her moorings and drifted down on the DORCHESTER, severing the lines with which the DORCHESTER was moored and causing the DOR-CHESTER to break loose and to be blown down on the NAGLE, striking the NAGLE’s transom and sinking her. Li-bellant contends that the sinking was the fault of Sample because the ADVENTURE and the NAGLE were not moored in a seamanlike manner in view of the weather conditions which had been forecast. It also claims that the sinking was the fault of Casco Trawlers because the DORCHESTER was improperly secured and inadequately manned, and her captain had failed to take adequate precautions for her safety in light of the storm warnings he had received. Both respondents deny negli[126]*126gence, and assert that the accident was caused by “inevitable accident,” or vis major, without fault on their part. Sample also denies that the ADVENTURE drifted down on the DORCHESTER or the NAGLE, and Casco Trawlers denies that the DORCHESTER struck the NAGLE.

The two actions have come to trial as a consolidated case. By agreement of the parties, the Court has heard the evidence and considered the written and oral arguments of counsel, on the issues of liability, and now makes its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and directs entry of its judgment, as follows:

FINDINGS OF FACT

Mill Cove and the Sample Pier

The Sample pier is situated on the easterly shore of Mill Cove, a sheltered inlet at the extreme northerly limit of Boothbay Harbor, approximately five miles due north of The Cockolds Light Station off the coast of Southern Maine. Mill Cove is one of the safest harbors on the Maine coast, and is known as a “storm haven.” The only direction from which wind and sea constitute a hazard to vessels moored within the cove is due south.1

The Sample pier is wooden and T-shaped. The main pier, to which the ves-seis involved in this action, were moored, is 425 feet long and lies on a north-south axis. The pier’s deck is five feet above mean high water and 13 feet above mean low water. Fender piles approximately one foot in diameter extend to a height of eight to ten feet above the pier. At mean low water there is between 15 and 20 feet of water at the southerly, or seaward, end of the pier, and approximately eight feet of water at the northerly, or inshore, end.

The Storm of November SO, 1965

On November 30, 1963, a storm of unprecedented violence struck the coast of Southern Maine. At 8:00 a. m. the U. S. Coast Guard Cuckolds Light Station officially reported Force 11, or whole gale winds from the south at 64-72 miles per hour, and 30 foot seas. At 12:00 p. m. it reported Force 12, or hurricane winds from the south at 73 or more miles per hour, and 35 foot seas.2 According to John W. Hambleton, a professional meteorologist called by Sample, the storm was a true tropical hurricane from either the Gulf of Mexico or the South Atlantic Ocean, accompanied by unusually low barometric pressure readings and unusually high temperatures, indicative of the storm’s character and intensity.3

[127]*127While there is no official record of the precise wind velocities at Boothbay Harbor during the morning of November 30, Peter R. Woodbury, a professional meteorologist called by libellant, testified without contradiction that the contours of the land masses at the approaches to Boothbay Harbor would have the effect of constricting a southerly wind field toward the head of the harbor, thereby increasing the outside wind velocity by 10 to 20 knots. Based upon the wind velocities recorded at The Cuckolds on the morning of November 30, Woodbury’s computations indicate the force of the wind in Mill Cove was at least 85-95 miles per hour at the height of the storm.

The severity of the storm at Boothbay Harbor is confirmed by a number of witnesses who were present at the Sample yard that morning. Mason C. Carter, an experienced local marine contractor, who testified for libellant, estimated the wind at Mill Cove was southerly at 40 knots at 7:00 a. m., and increased to 50 to 60 knots by 9:00 a. m., with peak gusts up to 100 miles per hour out in the harbor shortly thereafter. Sample’s president, Frank L. Sample, Jr., estimated that at approximately 10:00 a. m. the sustained wind force reached a peak of about 75 miles per hour with gusts up to 90 miles per hour. Various witnesses also testified to extensive storm damage. In addition to causing the ADVENTURE and the DORCHESTER to break adrift, the storm washed away the access pier leading to the “T” area of Sample’s wharf, taking with it four cradled boats and a 70' x 24' wooden machine shop on the wharf; did extensive damage elsewhere in the Sample yard; blew down a cottage on a nearby island; blew down chimneys; demolished a porch; blew down trees; and washed ashore a number of smaller boats moored in Mill Cove.4

The tide, which was at one of the highest levels of the year, was officially reported at 10.9 feet above mean low water at Portland at approximately 10:00 a. m. According to Carter’s testimony, the strong southerly wind and sea would have had the effect of raising the water level one to two feet above normal at Boothbay Harbor, indicating a tide almost level with the deck of the Sample wharf.

That the storm was ■ unprecedented is shown by the meteorological records and the testimony of all the witnesses who were present in Mill Cove that morning. Official records show that the highest wind gusts recorded at the U. S. Weather Bureau Station at Portland during the previous 12 years were 78 miles per hour on August 31, 1954; 74 miles per hour on September 11, 1954; and 76 miles per hour on June 19, 1957, December 26, 1957 and September 12, 1960. Carter, Sample and other local residents testified that they had never seen anything like it before in Mill Cove. Although Carter and Sample had experienced several previous hurricanes, they stated that there had never before been any damage to the Sample pier or to any boats moored in the cove. All the evidence confirms that the violent impact of the storm in Mill Cove was caused by the unusually high wind velocity, coupled with the exceptionally high seas and tide, and the fact that the wind held directly from the south for an unprecedented length of time.

The Weather Forecasts During the Evening of November 29 and the Morning of November 30

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 F. Supp. 124, 1966 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trawler-jeanne-darc-inc-v-casco-trawlers-inc-med-1966.