Wood Towing Corp. v. Paco Tankers, Inc.

152 F.2d 258, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3448, 1945 A.M.C. 1422
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 5417
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 258 (Wood Towing Corp. v. Paco Tankers, Inc.) 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
Wood Towing Corp. v. Paco Tankers, Inc., 152 F.2d 258, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3448, 1945 A.M.C. 1422 (4th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judge.

This is a libel filed in September 1942, in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Norfolk, by the appellee and cross-appellant, Paco Tankers, Incorporated, owners of the tanker Chilbar against Wood Towing Corporation, appellant and cross-appel-lee, owners of the tug E. V. McCaulley. The libel claimed damages alleged to have been suffered by the grounding of the tanker Chilbar in the James River charged to have been caused by the fault of the tug McCaulley.

An answer was filed by Wood Towing Corporation in October 1942. A hearing was begun before the judge below in June 1944, evidence was taken and depositions filed, and, the judge handed down a written opinion, made his findings of fact and stated his conclusions of law, holding both the tanker and the tug at fault for the grounding of the tanker and dividing the damages between the libelant and the respondent. An interlocutory decree was entered to this effect. From this action of the court below the respondent appealed and the libellant filed a cross appeal.

As found by the trial judge the facts are as follows. In the early afternoon of April 4, 1941, the Chilbar, a tanker 405 feet long, 51 feet beam and 28.8 feet deep, was proceeding downstream, in the James River, from Drewry’s Bluff, Virginia, approaching a bend of approximately 80 degrees, at half speed. She slowed down and blew a one whistle blast when she [260]*260passed a dredge in Kingsland Reach more than half a mile from the river bend. After passing the dredge, she resumed half speed, which was about five or six miles an hour, and blew no more signals until she entered the curve of the bend between Kingsland Reach and Aikens Swamp Dutch Gap cut-off. The tug McCaulley was proceeding upstream bound for a gravel pit above the bend. The tug is a vessel 96 feet 5 inches long, 20 feet 5 inches beam and 20 feet 8 inches deep. Her tow consisted of seven empty barges in three tiers of two barges each with the seventh at the tail end of the starboard row. The dimensions of these barges varied in length from 95.2 feet to 118 feet; in beam, from 31.2 feet to 35 feet; and in depth, from 8.1 feet to 10 feet. Their draft was from six inches to one foot and their freeboard was about seven feet. The stern of each barge was about three feet from the bow of the barge following it, and the tow line from the tug to the first barges behind it was at least 35 feet long, with some estimates of its length as high as 360 feet. The channel at the point of the occurrence was 200 feet wide, or perhaps slightly more. The wind was blowing from the southeast at about thirteen miles an hour, but the weather was good. The tide was at the last of ebb and the velocity of the current was six-tenths of a mile per hour.

When the tug rounded the bend at a speed of four or five miles an hour and sighted the tanker coming downstream, the tug blew a one-blast signal for a port to port passage. The vessels were then about 2,000 feet apart, and the tanker, seeing the tug but unaware of the barges, which had not come into sight around the bend, assented to the port to port passage with a one-blast signal. Shortly thereafter the barges came into sight, and the tanker,' maintaining half speed, attempted to pass between the barges on her port side and the channel bank on her starboard side. She put her engines at full speed for better steerage when she was about opposite the end of the tow, but nevertheless came into contact with the channel bank and damaged her hull. The tug and tow suffered no damage and proceeded upstream without knowing ' the tanker had been damaged. Neither vessel sounded any warning signal during the time here involved. So much of the facts is relatively . free from dispute, but there is a great conflict in the testimony as to the actual position of the vessels before and during the passage. According to the tanker’s witnesses, the tug’s tow was tailing across the channel in front of the tanker, with the last barge close to the tanker’s starboard side of the channel. The tug’s witnesses testified that the tanker was on the wrong side of the channel and that the barges were trailing straight behind the tug and were close to their proper side of the river. The court below found as a fact that after making her sharp turn to starboard to go around the bend the tug, “because of the sharp turn, or the effect of the wind from the southeast which would strike the exposed starboard free-board of her barges, or improper navigation, or a combination of those causes, allowed her barges to tail across the channel and in the path of the approaching Chilbar.” The court concluded that each vessel was at fault in two respects, the tanker in failing to blow a bend whistle and in maintaining half speed as she approached the bend, the tug in failing to control her barges and keep them on her starboard side of the narrow channel and in failing to notify the tanker of the condition of her tow and inviting a port to port passage. The damages to the tanker were ordered divided on the ground that all of these faults contributed to the accident.

It is clear that the barges were tailing across the channel, despite the testimony of the tug’s master and mate to the effect that the barges were following straight behind the tug close to their -starboard side of the channel and did not tail out in front of the tanker. An exchange of shouts between the two vessels as they approached is testified to by witnesses from both. The pilot of the tanker shouted to the tug to .“Haul her over”, and understood the tug to answer that she did not have enough power. The tug’s mate testified that his answer was that the tanker should hold her own starboard bank, and he further testified that the barges were following the tug perfectly and were alongside the trees on the tug’s starboard side of the river bank.

It is urged that the tanker’s sighting the tug before the tow came into sight proves the barges were on their starboard side of the channel, but an examination of the charts submitted shows that this contention is not sound. The testimony of the [261]*261tug’s master and mate cannot be correct in toto, because they further said the tanker passed safely and did not run aground. This is obviously untrue. It seems immaterial whether the length of the tug’s hawser was 35 feet or 360 feet. The court below .based its conclusions on the assumption that the hawser was 35 feet long, but even if it were no longer than this, the tug and tow had an overall length of over 575 feet.

We come first to consider the question whether the tug was at fault. While rounding a sharp bend in a narrow channel with a tow of the length admitted here, knowing that she was liable to meet an oncoming vessel at any time, it was the duty of the master of the tug to use great care. As found by the judge below, it is in accord with the probabilities, as well as the weight of the evidence, that the barges, constituting the tow of the tug, tailed across the 200-foot channel when the tug turned sharply to the right around the bend with a wind of thirteen miles an hour blowing against the freeboard of the barges in tow, driving them across the channel. As to whether the tow of the tug was actually across the channel blocking it is a subject of conflict in the evidence. We find no reason to disturb the findings of the trial judge on this point.

On sighting the approaching tanker, the master of the tug who knew or should have known the position of his tow, gave no warning to the Chilbar as to the critical situation.

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152 F.2d 258, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3448, 1945 A.M.C. 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-towing-corp-v-paco-tankers-inc-ca4-1945.