White Stack Towing Corporation v. Hewitt Oil Co.

216 F.2d 776, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3039
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1954
Docket6853
StatusPublished

This text of 216 F.2d 776 (White Stack Towing Corporation v. Hewitt Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White Stack Towing Corporation v. Hewitt Oil Co., 216 F.2d 776, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3039 (4th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

216 F.2d 776

WHITE STACK TOWING CORPORATION, a corporation, as owner and
operator of the Tugs Tunker and F. L. Jenkins, Appellant,
v.
HEWITT OIL CO., a corporation, as owner of Hewitt Oil
Terminals, in Charleston County, South Carolina, United
States of America, as owner and operator of the USNS Mission
Capistrano, and Tankers Company, Inc., a corporation,
operating USNS Capistrano, as Agent for the United States of
America, Appellees.

No. 6853.

United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

Argued Oct. 18, 1954.
Decided Nov. 10, 1954.

Charles H. Gibbs, Charleston, S.C. (Huger Sinkler and Sinkler, Gibbs & Simons, Charleston, S.C., on the brief), for appellant.

G. L. B. Rivers, Charleston, S.C. (Hagood, Rivers & Young and A. Baron Holmes, III, Charleston, S.C., on the brief), for appellee Hewitt Oil Co.

Harold A. Mouzon, Charleston, S.C. (Moore & Mouzon and B. Allston Moore, Charleston, S.C., on the brief), for appellee Tankers Co., Inc.

Before PARKER, Chief Judge, and SOPER and DOBIE, Circuit Judges.

DOBIE, Circuit Judge.

Hewitt Oil Company (hereinafter called Hewitt) brought an action in admiralty in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of South Carolina against White Stack Towing Company (hereinafter called White Stack) and Tankers Company, Inc., (hereinafter called Tankers) for damages to Hewitt's oil dock installations, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of White Stack and Tankers in connection with the docking of the USNS Mission Capistrano (hereinafter called Capistrano).

The District Judge found that 'the dolphins in question were properly constructed and the damages were caused solely because of the negligent operation of the ship and the tugs' by White Stack, in charge of the docking operation. A decree was entered accordingly in favor of Hewitt against White Stack for $9,386.63.

About September 15, 1951, Hewitt had completed at its property on the West bank of the Cooper River, above the Navy Yard, at Charleston, South Carolina, an oil dock installation. This installation consisted of a comparatively small T-Head dock, four breasting dolphins and four mooring dolphins. The purpose of the dock was to carry the oil line or lines connecting the discharge equipment of the ship with Hewitt's storage tanks on shore, and to afford a means of access to and handling of the comparatively simple equipment used in connecting the pipe lines to a discharging oil tanker. The dock itself was not designed for and was not capable of mooring or docking a ship.

These eight dolphins were erected in order that the tankers, while docking, might moor and maintain correct positions at the Hewitt terminal. The four breasting dolphins were erected on a line approximately three feet out from the line of the T-Head extended roughly parallel with the river, two upstream and two downstream from the T-Head, located fifty feet apart. The end of the T-Head dock facing the channel is fifty feet long. Further inshore from the face of the dock and the line of the breasting dolphins were four mooring dolphins, two for breast lines and one each for bow and stern lines. There was no equipment whatsoever such as bits, chocks or cleats on the dock itself for tying up ships.

The District Judge, we think upon proper evidence, thus described the four breasting dolphins:

'These four dolphins were placed at the head of the wharf in a straight line to enable a ship to lay against them and were substantially new. Each pile was approximately 9 1/2 inches on the tip and approximately 12 inches on the top. The breasting dolphins consisted of a core of one pile that was driven perpendicular and six piles driven around the center pile at a small batter or angle. These first seven piles were wrapped with 3/4 inch cable and securely tied together. Twelve additional piles were driven around the center seven piles at a batter or angle to support the center seven piles against pressure that would be exerted on the four dolphins when the ship rested against the four dolphins. The batter of the outside twelve piles was on a ratio of two to twelve, that is, 12 feet down from the top of the dolphins each of the twelve piles would be 2 feet distant from the inside pile. All nineteen piles were driven in a distance of 15 feet and were rigid below the surface of the marl as if set in concrete. Twelve piles were driven around the center piles and were secured around the dolphins to make the dolphins act as a unit. * * * Two of the breasting dolphins were located 50 feet and 100 feet north of the head of the wharf and other two were located 50 feet and 100 feet south of the wharf.'

In the early morning of November 11, 1951, the Capistrano had been brought up the Cooper River. The docking of the ship at the Hewitt installation had been taken over by White Stack. For that purpose, White Stack furnished Captain Futch as Docking Master and two tugs to assist in the docking operation.

When the Capistrano was a short distance downstream from the Hewitt Dock, the Docking Master took over the ship and commenced maneuvering to get the ship alongside the docks, using both the ship engines and rudder and the two tugs of White Stack. The ship's Master remained on the bridge of the Capistrano with the Docking Master. The Docking Master actually gave the orders to both the ship and tugs, but the ship's Captain remained always in charge of his ship and retained the right throughout to countermand, in case anything occurred which in his judgment endangered his ship.

When the ship had its midship point approximately opposite the center of the T-Head of the dock and about thirty feet out in the river therefrom, the Docking Master commenced to breast her in sideways with the tugs. The bow of the ship was headed upstream. The tide was flooding about five feet above low water, velocity about two and one-half knots, in a direction somewhat diagonally across the ship and tending to push her shoreward and upstream. The wind was negligible, the weather fine, visibility good and no mechanical failures involving ship or tugs occurred. About fifteen minutes passed before the ship touched any shore installation. The uncontradicted testimony shows that the sideways speed of the ship was one-forty-fourth (1/44th) of one mile per hour while she was approaching the dolphins.

The Capistrano was what is known as a T-2 tanker, 523.5 feet long, 60 foot beam and loaded draft of 31 feet, 11 inches aft. The weight of such a ship, when loaded, is 25,000 tons. The sides of the ship are straight up and down in a vertical line for a distance of some 35 feet down from the main deck; at that point the sides turn rather sharply to form a somewhat flat bottom. This straight-sided condition does not exist, of course, near the bow or stern, where there is a more pronounced shear of the sides inward towards the ship's bottom.

During the docking operation, the Capistrano came against breasting dolphin No. 7, which cracked and fell over in the water away from the ship. This put the ship harder against breasting dolphin No. 6, which also fell over. The port side of the ship scraped the corner of the T-Head of the dock.

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White Stack Towing Corp. v. Hewitt Oil Co.
216 F.2d 776 (Fourth Circuit, 1954)

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216 F.2d 776, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 3039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-stack-towing-corporation-v-hewitt-oil-co-ca4-1954.