bennybenny

Skibets navn: BENNY SKOU
Hjemsted: København
IMO:
Kendingsbogstav: OYBZ
Rederi: Ove Skou
Værft: Burmeister & Wain
Byggeår: 1951
Byggenummer: 707
Fremdrift: Diesel
Skibstype: Fragtskib
Indkøbt:
Ex-navn:
Solgt: 1972
Nyt navn: ELSE SKOU, SYNERGASIA
Ophugget: 1980 i Spanien
Forlist:
Motor: Burmeister & Wain 8-cyl. 2SA 17 kn.
IHK: 8720
BRT: 4248
TDW: 6950
NET: 2404

Navn / Name

Bygget/Søsat

Built/Launched

Motor

Engine

BRT./TDW

Ex navne

Ex names

Nye navne

New names

Noter/hændelser

Notes/Events

Ophugget / Forlist

Broken up /Loss

Benny Skou

 

 

 

 

Se billeder

1951 aug.

B&W

Fragtskib med passager aptering

Burmeister & Wain 874-VTF-140

8 cyl.

8720 IHK

17,0 kt.

4248/6950   1966 Else Skou, 

1972 Synergasia.

10 pass. Besætning 34

Elektrisk ventilerede lastrum (transport af frugt og bomuld)

1951 Leveret til " Ove Skou" [Flag of Skou International A/S]

1951 Efter jomfru rejsen til Australien på vej mod Europa i Det Røde Hav, endte en fredelig brydekamp mellem tømmermanden og donkeymanden med at tømmermanden får åbent kraniebrud og dør. Under begravelsen næste dag, lykkedes det donkeymanden, at flygte fra arresten (lodskammeret) og iført håndjern, at springe overbord. Al eftersøgning var forgæves.

1955 22 sep.  Brand ombord i lastrum 1. Skibet er i Malakka-strædet, kursen bliver sat mod Port Swettenham for at få hjælp til slukningen, lasten udbrændt.

1955 I hårdt vejr i Atlanten Blev der slået hul i tank 1. Reparationen i Kiel varede 3 uger.

1956 1/4 Grundstødt i Malakka-strædet.

1966 Overført til "Skou Navigation"    (Kaj Ove Skou)

1972 Solgt til Grækere (Athanasios & Petros Callitsis)

1980 jan

Ophugget Burriana Spanien

 

 

Billedet stammer fra bogen "Skoubådene"

 

M/S BENNY SKOU af København, 4248 B. R. T. Bygget 1951 af stål. På rejse fra Bombay til Singapore med bomuld. Brand om bord i dagene 22/9—24/9 55 i Malakkastrædet. Søforklaring i Singapore d. 28/9 55. D. 22/9 kl. ca. 1620, da B. S. befandt sig på pladsen 3°10'N. 100°15'Ø., opdagedes brand i lastrum nr. 1. Ilden brændte hurtigt gennem lugedæksler og presenninger, og røg og flammer slog op. Der sprøjtedes skum gennem hullet, og brandspjæld til samtlige lastrum lukkedes. Lugen tildækkedes med nye presenninger, hvorefter der åbnedes for kulsyreslukningsanlægget til lastrummet, samtidig med at der sprøjtedes vand på presenningerne. Da branden syntes at udvikle sig, tilkaldtes assistance over radioen, og kursen sattes mod Port Swettenham, hvor skibet ville blive mødt af et brandslukningsfartoj. Der boredes huller gennem lugekarmene, hvorigennem kulsyre blæstes ind i lastrummet, og temperaturen, der havde været stigende over dæk og luger, aftog noget. D. 23/9 kl. 0030 ankom B. S. til indsejlingen til Port Swettenham havn, men da brandslukningsfartøj og lods udeblev, fortsattes sejladsen med forceret fart mod Singapore, hvortil skibet ankom kl. 1725 og ankrede på reden. Kl. 1800 kom brandslukningsfartøj med kulsyre langs siden og assisterede med slukning i lastrummet. D. 24/9 kl. 1330, da temperaturen var aftaget noget ved 1-lugen, åbnedes denne, hvorefter branden bekæmpedes med vand. Kl. 1800 var ilden tilsyneladende slukket, og oplosning af den beskadigede ladning påbegyndtes. Anm. Ministeriet må antage, at branden skyldes selvantændelse i ladningen.

M/S BENNY SKOU af København, 4248 B. R. T. Bygget 1951 af stål. På rejse fra Belawan til Singapore i ballast. Grundstødt d. 1/4 56 i Malaccastrædet. Søforklaring i Helsingør d. 11/6 56. Kl. 1501 passerede B.S. med langsom fart båke nr. 1 i Salat Sinki, afstand 0,5 sm. Der styredes rv. 80°. Noget senere sås en bøje, der holdtes om bb. Kl. 1518 tog skibet grunden på Cyrene Reef og blev stående. D. 2/4 kl. 043 kom B.S. flot ved egen hjælp, tilsyneladende uden at have taget skade og fortsatte rejsen. Det viste sig senere, at 2 af skruebladene var blevet bøjet. Anm. Ministeriet må antage, at grundstødningen skyldes forveksling af farvandsafmærkningen. 

Startluft system


Doesn't have the 'S' on her funnel as in Scorcher's posting of June 08.
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346 F2d 993 Pisano v. SS Benny Skou

346 F.2d 993

Benjamin PISANO, Libellant-Appellant,
v.
The S.S. BENNY SKOU, her engines, boiler, tackle, etc., in
rem, and Ove Skou, D/S Ove Skou, A/S & D/S af 1937
A/S, Respondent-Petitioner-Appellee, v.
JOHN T.CLARK & SON,
Respondent-Impleaded-Appellee.


No. 318, Docket 29112.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued March 2, 1965.
Decided June 7, 1965.

Harvey Goldstein, New York City (Alvin I. Apfelberg, New York City, of counsel; Goldstein & Sterenfeld, New York City, on the brief), for libellant-appellant.

David P. H. Watson, New York City (Haight, Gardner, Poor & Havens, Robert K. Marzik, New York City, of counsel), for respondent-petitioner-appellee.

Joseph Arthur Cohen, New York City (Alexander, Ash & Schwartz, Sidney A. Schwartz, New York City, of counsel), for respondent-impleaded-appellee.

Before MOORE, KAUFMAN and HAYS, Circuit Judges.

MOORE, Circuit Judge:

1

Libellant, Benjamin Pisano, appeals from a decree dismissing his action for personal injuries against the S.S. Benny Skou, in rem and Ove Skou, the shipowner.

2

Pisano was employed by Clark, a stevedoring firm engaged by Ove Skou, the owner of the 'Benny Skou,' which was berthed at Pier 51, North River. On July 22, 1960, Pisano was on board the Benny Skou in charge of a gang of three longshoremen loading cargo at #5 hatch. In the course of his duties, Pisano himself rigged the port or inshore cargo boom which was being used as the horizontal or burton boom. At about 10:00 A.M. Pisano properly stationed himself by the hatch to supervise the loading of two tons of ingots. As the load was lifted aboard, the burton boom swung sharply inboard out of control. The ingots carried by the boom were dumped to the deck, knocking a stack of hatchboards onto Pisano and causing him to suffer substantial injuries.

3

The District Court dismissed Pisano's libel and the indemnification claims, which depended on the disposition of the libel, on the ground that Pisano's injury was due entirely to his own carelessness in failing to take a half-hitch as a safety device in a preventer wire used as the main anchor for the burton boom.

4

Pisano argues that he presented sufficient evidence to show that the accident was caused by some other fault in the rigging of the boom or at least that the absence of a half-hitch in the preventer wire was not the cause of the accident. The record reveals that Pisano presented no concrete proof of the cause of the accident. Pisano himself testified on examination before trial that he had, in fact, carried out his duty to rig the burton boom but had not taken a half-hitch in the preventer. An investigation after the accident established that the preventer had run free and there was ample expert testimony to establish that the preventer would not have come loose under the strain of a two-ton load if a half-hitch had been taken. In this context, the trial court's conclusion that Pisano was 'guilty of 100% Contributory negligence,' 220 F.Supp. at 905, was reasonable and must be affirmed because not shown to be clearly erroneous. Gruja v. United States Lines Co., 337 F.2d 375 (2d Cir. 1964).

5

Pisano also argues that the trial court erred in denying him any recovery since the shipowner had a duty to provide safe working conditions aboard ship. However, the court's conclusion that 'the unseaworthiness (of the 'Benny Skou'), resulting from the manner in which the preventer was rigged, was the sole proximate cause of the injuries to libelant,' 220 F.Supp. at 905, indicates that the court considered the shipowner's possible liability and resolved the issues against Pisano. The District Court would have had to strain to find negligence in this case since the shipowner or his employees had no duty to inspect every knot in the rigging of every cargo boom aboard ship. At most a general inspection of conditions on board rather than minute, continuous supervision of every detail entrusted to a responsible stevedoring firm was all that was needed to satisfy the duty of reasonable care under the circumstances. And, even if the shipowner must share in the abstract any liability for breach of the seaworthiness warranty with the impleaded respondent Clark, Seas Shipping Co. v. Sieracki, 328 U.S. 85, 89-100, 66 S.Ct. 872, 90 L.Ed. 1099 (1946), it is clear that compliance with the warranty does not require an accident-free vessel. Mitchell v. Trawler Racer, Inc., 362 U.S. 539, 80 S.Ct. 926, 4 L.Ed.2d 941 (1960).

6

Affirmed.