United States v. Horton

77 F. Supp. 701, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3089
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 19, 1947
DocketNo. 43 C 617
StatusPublished

This text of 77 F. Supp. 701 (United States v. Horton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Horton, 77 F. Supp. 701, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3089 (N.D. Ill. 1947).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

On February 15, 1943, LST-5, a Navy vessel 337 feet long, was moving south in the Mississippi River, from 200 to 500 feet off- the Tennessee shore. In preparing to anchor about 7:00 P.M., the ship made a '90° turn to the right, went about 300 feet west, made another 90° turn to the right, and anchored by the bow facing upstream. Although the ship was also equipped with a stern anchor, it was not used. The place of -anchorage was in the vicinity of Lee Light, located at mile 100 below Cairo, Illinois. (All map references herein are to Map No. 6, Maps of the Mississippi River, Cairo, Illinois to the Gulf of' Mexico, Mississippi River Commission, edition of January, 1941, introduced herein as Respondents’ Exhibit A.)

At about 12:30 A.M. on February 16, 1943, the towboat Horace E. Horton, pushing a -tow of four barges, arranged two wide and two deep, was moving downstream in the Mississippi River on the Tennessee side in the vicinity of Lee Light. The Horton was 104 feet long and 24 feet wide; each barge was 180 feet long; three were 42 feet wide, one was 35 feet wide. The entire tow thus had an over-all length of 464 feet and a width of 84 feet.

The pilot of The Horton first noticed the lights of the LST when The Horton was passing Bass Light, mile 98.8. The night was cold; visibility was fair; the river current was estimated at 4 to 5 miles an hour; the wind was brisk from 25 to 30 miles an 'hour. The pilot of The Horton intended to pass the LST on the Tennessee side, but at the last moment changed his course and attempted to pass on the Missouri side. One of the barges collided with the bow of the LST, damaging it; the side of the barge was stove in, causing her gasoline cargo to spill into the river. All the barges broke adrift. The Horton and the' barges passed on the LST’s port side. The Horton then picked up the drifting barges, and proceeded on without further damage.

The Government brought this suit as libelant on the theory that the towboat, colliding with an anchored vessel of which it was aware was solely responsible. The respondent has denied liability and brought a cross-libel on the theory that the LST was anchored in -the channel without just-cause and was improperly anchored in being anchored only by the bow, and thereby solely caused the collision.

1. The LST Anchorage

The testimony concerning the place of anchorage and the location and width of the channel at that point is not without contradiction. Chief Warrant Officer Homer C. Morrow, the pilot on the LST who selected the anchorage, testified by deposition that he took the LST as far out of the channel as it was safe to go, toward the Missouri shore; that he had been proceeding downstream 200 to 250 feet off the Tennessee shore; that he anchored under ■the foot of Island 14 bar, 700 to 800 feet off the Tennessee shore; that it was a safe anchorage because of the bar formation over which nobody runs. Lt. Gerry W. Cox, who commanded the ferry crew which was taking the LST down the Mississippi, testified by deposition that the LST had been going downstream 500 feet from the Tennessee shore, that it pulled out of the channel and went 300 feet west to drop anchor; agreed that the LST was anchored 700 to 800 feet off the Tennessee shore; contended that -the anchorage was at one of the widest sections of the river in that area, 'that the river seemed to be a mile wide, that the channel was about 200 feet wide at that point; stated that the ship’s log is in error when it placed the anchorage at mile 100.8, abreast of Reel-foot Light, and that the anchorage was abreast of Lee Light, mile 100.

Contrary to the testimony of these Government witnesses that the LST was anchored to the west of the channel is that of Harold L. Bruce, the pilot of The Horton, who testified that the LST was anchored abreast of Lee Light, 150 yards offshore, right on the edge of the channel. Since Bruce estimated the width of the channel to have been 600 feet, it is apparent that his testimony means that the LST was anchored on the east, not the west, edge of the channel.

[703]*703The other testimony reveals similar variance. Clark W. Thomas, a seaman second class on watch on the LST on the night of the collision, and Lt. Arthur J. Schletker, another pilot on the LST but on duty only as an observer 'below Cairo, both testified by deposition that the LST was anchored from 600 to 800 feet off the Tennessee shore. Lt. W. L. Jones, Executive Officer of LST-5, testified by deposition that the middle of the channel was 150 yards off the Tennessee shore, that the channel was 325 yards wide, and that the LST was anchored 275 yards off the Tennessee shore. These estimates of Lt. Jones are open to some doubt, since they place the eastern edge of the channel on dry land. Nevertheless it is interesting to note that Lt. Jones is a Government witness who places the anchorage of the LST, 275 yards off the Tennessee shore, well within the western limits of the channel, which his testimony places about 312j£ yards off the Tennessee shore (150 yards, the middle of the channel, plus 162i/á yards, half the width of the channel). That the LST was anchored in the channel is corroborated by Lt. Jones’ testimony concerning the depth of the river at the LST anchorage, which his soundings showed to be 16 fathoms, or 96 feet, deep. It is therefore difficult to understand how the LST could have been anchored on a bar, as Chief Warrant Officer Morrow, her pilot, testified.

Charley Barnes, the master of The Horton, testified that the LST was anchored close to the middle of the channel, which was 400 to 500 feet wide at that point. He further stated that in his opinion the anchorage was in a very unsafe place, because it was narrow and because the sand bar, confining the current, made it especially swift at Lee Light; and that a safer anchorage would be about a mile and a half below that point. Since Chief Warrant Officer Morrow, the LST pilot, believed that he was anchored abreast of Reelfoot Light, which is almost a mile below Lee Light) it is possible that he believed the anchorage was safe for that reason. The Government’s witness Lt. Schletker admitted that the channel narrowed somewhat at the point of anchorage and thus increased the current, but stated that it was a safe anchorage because it was at the edge of the bar and the channel was from 600 to 800 feet wide. The record is unfortunately bare, however, of any expert testimony by experienced river pilots not connected with either party to the suit, giving their opinion as to the safe or unsafe nature of an anchorage in the bend of the river off Lee Light under 'the conditions prevailing at the time;

Despite all the conflicts in testimony and the varying estimates of distances involved, I think the significant fact is that The Horton and her tow did in fact collide with the LST, and that it is nowhere suggested that The Horton was not in the channel.

The Government contends that anchorage in a navigable channel is not a violation of 33 U.S.C.A. § 409 if there is sufficient room for other vessels to pass without danger of collision. The respondent argues that the holding of the Supreme Court in Atlantic Refining Company v. Moller, 1943, 320 U.S. 462, 64 S.Ct. 225, 88 L.Ed. 168, is that an exception to the statutory duty not to anchor in a navigable channel is recognized only when there is some necessity to anchor, such that the danger to navigation created by anchoring in the channel is less than the danger created by an attempt to continue moving.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 F. Supp. 701, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-horton-ilnd-1947.