United States v. 1500 Cords, More or Less, Jackpine Pulpwood

108 F. Supp. 224, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2235
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 24, 1952
DocketNo. 301
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 F. Supp. 224 (United States v. 1500 Cords, More or Less, Jackpine Pulpwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. 1500 Cords, More or Less, Jackpine Pulpwood, 108 F. Supp. 224, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2235 (W.D. Wis. 1952).

Opinion

STONE, District Judge.

This proceeding was commenced by filing of a libel of information, and seizure by the Marshal, pursuant to warrant, of a quantity of jackpine pulpwood in the har[225]*225bor at Ashland, Wisconsin, within this District. Thereafter, Consolidated Water Power & Paper Company, owner and claimant, paid to the Clerk of this Court the sum of $25,500 and promised that in the event the Court decrees a forfeiture and determines that the amount and value of said pulpwood in its then location in the harbor at Ash-land, Wisconsin, was in excess of the sum deposited, claimant would pay into Court the amopnt of the excess so determined. Claim and answer were filed by claimant. On April 16, 1952, at Wausau, the issues came on for trial before the Court. A stipulation of facts was filed and additional testimony heard.

Findings of Fact

Upon the stipulation of facts and the evidence duly offered and received upon this trial, the Court finds:

1. That the claimant, Consolidated Water Power & Paper Company, is a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Wisconsin with its principal office at the City of Wisconsin Rapids, Wood County, Wisconsin, and that said company is engaged in the business of manufacturing paper and paper products.

2. That said company uses in the manufacture of paper a large amount of spruce, jackpine and other soft woods which are purchased in the Dominion of Canada and the State of Minnesota among other places and transported to Ashland, Wisconsin, across Lake Superior in rafts held together for such .transporation by booms fastened to a vessel drawing such booms.

3. The Newaygo Timber Company, Ltd., is a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the province of Ontario, and Dominion of Canada with its principal office and place of business at the City of Port Arthur, Canada, and its capital stock or shares are wholly owned by said Consolidated Water Power & Paper Company.

4. That Consolidated Water Power & Paper Company owns a steamship known as the Butterfield located on Lake Superior, 750 IHP coal burner Class A-l Great Lakes towing service with a steel hull built at Elizabeth, New Jersey, in 1919, number 218,244, purchased by Consolidated Water Power & Paper Company from United States Shipping Board having 429 gross tonnage, 203 net tonnage, 142 feet in length, 27.7 feet wide, with a registered depth of 14.8 feet equipped with radio, telephone and radar unit, which vessel is used to draw across Lake Superior said rafts of pulpwood from both Canadian ports and points in the State of Minnesota to Ash-land, Wisconsin, where said pulpwood is taken out of the water, loaded onto railroad cars and transported to the mills of said company.

5. That Newaygo Timber Company, Ltd., owns a tug Rocket which is Canadian registered and is not documented under the laws of the United States, built in 1901 at Buffalo, New York, with steel hull and diesel-engine No. 613B6 of .180 horse power, purchased from.T. J. McCarthy Steamship Company of Detroit, Michigan, in 1939 with a 39 gross tonnage, 27 net tonnage, registered length 62.4 -feet, registered breadth 15 feet, registered depth 7 feet with no shore to shore radio.

6. That at the time involved in this proceeding there were attached to the Steamship Butterfield two booms made up of sticks or logs about 22 feet in length and 44 inches average in diameter fastened together by 1% inch boom chains, the end of each log being fastened to the end of adjoining logs by such chains, the total length of each boom being approximately 3473 feet, the said booms being attached by single 1% inch chain varying in length from a few feet to 1800 feet fastened to a winch on the Butterfield and a head block between the actual fastening of the booms and said chain extending to the Butter-field; that half the length of each boom is a double set of logs parallel and fastened in like manner.

7. That Sugar Loaf Landing is a cove or bay of water off Lake Superior extending into the shores of the State of Minnesota with the mouth of such cove or bay running north and south and about 1300 feet from the southerly and easterly end of the ' land bordering said cove to the northerly and easterly end of said cove, in [226]*226other words, the mouth of said cove 'being about 1300 feet in width; that said cove and the shores adjoining the same for some distance into the lake are shallow and such as to prevent the tug Butterfield coming into said cove.

8. That logs produced in Minnesota are hauled to said landing and dumped into the water where they are formed into rafts of logs to be transported to Ashland, Wisconsin ; that there extend across the mouth of said cove what are known as storage booms consisting of lo^s or timbers fastened together with chains in the same manner as the towing booms fastened to the steamship Butterfield; that there are two sets of booms across the mouth of said cove anchored to the bottom of the water in the center with a float between the two sets of booms; that in the middle of each of said booms there is what is known as a gate which may be opened as desired in the operation of transferring the logs stored inside of said booms between the booms fastened to the steamship Butterfield; that logs intended for shipping are located inside of the storage booms until ready for transportation. That fastened to the southerly shore line point of said cove is a boom made up similar to the other booms but of lighter logs and extending westerly along the southerly shore of said cove a considerable distance, which boom is known as the “sweep boom”, approximately 1300 feet in length, and is used for sweeping the logs out of the cove between the log booms attached to the Butterfield; that there is located within said cove a small gas work boat not of a size to be used on the lake for transportation purposes and which is used in gathering together the logs inside of said boom and pushing them toward the booms attached to the Butter-field.

9. That on September 15th or 16th, 1951, U. S. Steamer Butterfield was made ready .to transport the pulpwood logs to the harbor at Ashland in the State of Wisconsin, and at dawn on September 16th the Butterfield was anchored about one half to three quarters of a mile from the Minnesota shore which was the nearest point to the shore line it could safely go. One of the ends of each of the so-called towing booms as above described was attached to the Butterfield. The' shoreward ends of the towing booms were attached to the storage booms and the storage booms were opened between the points at which the towing -booms were attached. The tug Rocket and the gas work boat were inside the enclosure formed by the towing booms and parts of the storage booms.

10. That about 7:00 o’clock A. M. operations began for the removal of the wood inside the cove toward the towing booms attached to the Butterfield. The sweep boom had previously been fastened around one mass of the wood; that such wood was too heavy for movement by the small gas boat and the Rocket fastened to the same and .pulled it approximately one quarter of a mile into the space between the towing booms fastened to the Butterfield, which operation is shown in the picture marked No. 1 of the Government attached to the stipulation.

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108 F. Supp. 224, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-1500-cords-more-or-less-jackpine-pulpwood-wiwd-1952.