Wilson Line, Inc. v. United States

78 F. Supp. 821, 111 Ct. Cl. 764, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 76
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 28, 1948
DocketNo. 46484
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 78 F. Supp. 821 (Wilson Line, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson Line, Inc. v. United States, 78 F. Supp. 821, 111 Ct. Cl. 764, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 76 (cc 1948).

Opinion

Howell, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff sues to recover the balance due it as just compensation for the vessel, the State of Delaware, which the War Shipping Administration requisitioned on March 25, 1943. The commissioner of the court reported a value of $385,136.19, including all consumable stores and expendable equipment on board. Plaintiff claims a value of $555,534.57.

The facts as to the vessel’s construction, ownership, operation, and condition are in the main undisputed. The State of Delaware was built simultaneously with a sister ship, the State of Pennsylvania, in June 1923 by the Pusey and Jones Corporation of Wilmington, Delaware, for use primarily as a passenger excursion steamer. The two vessels were built from the same plans and were substantially identical on March 25, 1943, and at all times prior thereto. Pusey and Jones as low bidder was awarded the contract in 1922 to build the State of Delaware and the State of Pennsylvania for the Wilmington Steamboat Company at a price of $529,-000 for both. The actual cost of constructing the State of Delaware in 1923 was $387,344, as Pusey and Jones Corporation made no profit, but sustained a loss of $117,944.

The State of Delaware embodied the latest developments in the field of naval architecture and employed a new and advanced method of construction of the superstructure. Ample seating capacity and comfortable deck space was provided and the lifeboat capacity was considerably in excess of the [775]*775requirements. Wood was eliminated as far as practicable as a building material and new modern and efficient means of fire-fighting were installed to meet any emergency.

The State of Delaware was a steam driven day passenger ■excursion vessel and had a steel hull with four watertight bulkheads. The superstructure consisted of the main deck, dance deck, lower deck, and boat deck. . The main deck was steel and the other decks wood. Each deck was strengthened with trussed lattice framing and reinforced with steel stanchions and iron girders. The vessel had approximately 40,000 square feet of deck space and carried approximately 3,400 passengers. She had an indicated horsepower of 2,900 and a speed of 18 statute miles per hour.

There was little change in the basic design of day passenger excursion vessels between the time the State of Delaware was built and 1943 when she was requisitioned by the Government. At the time of the requisitioning the design was efficient and would have been difficult to improve.

Plaintiff is an established concern with long experience in operating excursion steamers and ferry boats on the Delaware River, in New York harbor, and elsewhere in inland waters along the Eastern Seaboard. Among the vessels which the plaintiff owned and regularly used in its business was the State of Delawme which it acquired in 1929 in the purchase of all the. assets of the Wilmington Steamboat Company for a lump sum.

. The State of Delaware was used exclusively as an excursion vessel. As such, her entire annual operations were in inland waters for only about 100 days during the summer season beginning on Decoration Day and ending on Labor Day. For the remainder of each year she was laid up in fresh water at the plaintiff’s yard on Christiana Creek about 2 miles up the Delaware River. Since the State of Delaware was in service only in calm inland waters during the summer months and was laid up in fresh water during the rest of the year she was not exposed to the corrosion and deterioration which severe weather conditions, waves and salt water inflict on vessels engaged in year-round service on the high seas. And because the State of Delaware was actually used only about .a quarter of. each year, the wear and tear of [776]*776operation was' necessarily far less than that of passenger ■steamers in service 12 months of the year. Since its vessels were operated only 100 days of the year, it was essential for the Wilson Line to maintain them in such a condition that they could operate them throughout the summer season -without a single day’s interruption. The Wilson Line kept the State of Delaware in first-class condition. The long lay-up period was used to wire-brush, paint, and clean the ■vessel, and to put the entire ship in first-class operating condition. Most of this work was done in plaintiff’s own repair yard where it could be done at considerably less expense than in outside yards, and in addition to the repair work performed by plaintiff, the State of Delaware was put in drydock at intervals of not less than 2 years in order to keep the propeller, rudder, and bottom of the ship in seaworthy condition.

The State of Delaware had the highest classification that could be granted for that type of vessel by the American ■Bureau of Shipping. Immediately after it was delivered to the Wilmington Steamboat Company by the builder, the owner expended $33,937.13 for new capital improvements, and between 1924 and 1941 the Wilmington Steamboat •Company and plaintiff spent an additional $12,252.65 for hétterments, which included decorations, a bar, entertainment equipment, and cooking facilities.

On March 25, 1943, the date of the requisition, the Maritime Commission had a condition survey made of the State of Delaware. The survey covered the entire ship except the exterior portion of the hull lying under the water. Except for three minor items, it was found the vessel was clean, well painted, and in good condition throughout.

On June 10,1943, a representative of the American Bureau of Shipping made a survey of the State of Delawa/re while she was in drydock, in order to ascertain the condition of the rudder, sea valves, tail shaft, and bottom of the vessel. The surveyor found that she was in good and seaworthy condition and fit to retain her classification in the American Bureau of Shipping.

• The State of Delawa/re was requisitioned by the defendant for use by the Rubber Development Corporation in pro[777]*777curing rubber in South America. After obtaining the vessel,the Rubber Development Corporation had certain additions, alterations, and repairs made to the vessel at a total cost of $79,259.06, of which $60,787.08 was expended for additions and alterations necessary to enable the vessel to make the voyage to Brazil and to adapt her for special use in the rubber procurement program. The remaining $18,-472.03 was spent for repairs of the type that plaintiff would normally have been required to make, but the majority of such expenditures would not have been made by plaintiff before September 1943, at which time the vessel was due for drydocking.

Immediately after requisitioning the vessel, the defendant had the insurance increased to $500,000. This coverage was for 30 days when the State of Delaware was in shipyards in preparation for the prospective overseas operation. The $500,000 coverage did not include any war-risk insurance or insurance for the voyage to Brazil. For that voyage the Rubber Development Corporation, an agency of the defendant, originally procured insurance on the State of Delaware in the amount of $350,000, but while the ship was en route to Brazil increased the insurance to $782,000.

Since the State of Delaware and the State of Pennsylvania

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 F. Supp. 821, 111 Ct. Cl. 764, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-line-inc-v-united-states-cc-1948.