250 F. 935 | 2d Cir. | 1918
Lead Opinion
The libel, containing a clause of foreign attachment, alleged that the libelant, for brevity herein called the Korn-og Company, a Danish corporation, chartered the steamer Atlanten of the respondent, for brevity called herein the Atlanten Company, a corporation of Sweden, to proceed to Key West for orders and load a full cargo of oil cake at'Galveston, New Orleans, or Pensacola for a Danish port or ports. The charter party was executed at Copenhagen September 30, 1914. While the steamer was on her way to the United States, the respondent wrote from Helsingborg, Sweden, to the libelant at Copenhagen, Denmark, notifying the libelant that it canceled the charter, but was willing to' carry on the same voyage at a much higher rate of freight, there having been a very considerable rise in the market. It stated at the same time that it was willing to .pay damages, not exceeding the estimated amount of freight under clause 21 of the charter party, which necessarily included clause 24. The libelant replied that it would hold the respondent under the charter liable for all losses incurred by the breách. The claim was for $44,000.
The answer set up two clauses of the charter party in defense and averred its readiness to comply with them:
“21. If any dispute arises tbe same to be settled by two referees, one appointed by tbe captain and one by charterers or their agents, and if necessary, the arbitrators to appoint an umpire. The decision of the arbitrators or umpire, as the case may be, shall be final, and any party attempting to revolte this submission to arbitration without leave of a court, shall be liable to pay to the other, or others, as liquidated damages, the estimated amount of chartered freight.
********
“24. Penalty for nonperformance of this agreement to be proven damages, not exceeding estimated amount of freight.”
“Tlioro remains the third point. It is contended that, having regard to clause 13 of the charter party, the general damages recoverable are limited to 13,500, the estimated amount ot freight. This clause is a little different from the clause which used formerly to be inserted in charter parties. The old form was ‘Penalty for nonperformance of this agreement estimated amount of freight.’ There is no doubt that in such a case the estimated amount of the freight was a penalty. On proof of the breach, judgment could*938 have been, recovered for the amount of the penalty, hut only as a penalty, and execution would have been limited to the damages which were proved, the judgment only standing as security for such damages. That was the position if the action was brought in respect of the penalty. At the same time the plaintiff would have been entitled to sue for general damages, and he would have recovered whatever damages were proved to have resulted in the ordinary course. In the present charter party the clause runs thus: ‘Penalty for nonperformance of this agreement proved damages, not exceeding the estimated amount of freight.’ It is a form which seems to have been in use for a considerable time, because in Scrutton on Charter Parties (4th Ed.) p. 322, published in 1899, the form given is in substantially the same language — ‘penalty for nonperformance of this agreement to be proved damages, not exceeding estimated amount of freight due under this charter.’ There is a footnote: ‘This clause is worthless and unenforceable.’ Bailhache, J., was of opinion that the parties here only intended to express in an extended form the effect of the ordinary penalty clause. He thought that the clause was nothing more than the old common form writ large. That is not quite accurate. Under the old form, as I have pointed out, judgment could be recovered for the penalty as such. Under the amended form, the plaintiff could not'recover judgment for the entire estimated amount of freight as a penalty, because it is not a penalty. The dause says that the penalty is to be the ‘proved damages, not exceeding the estimated amount of freight.’ The proved damages as such cannot be a penalty, because that is the sum which the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The learned judge, has, however, given the true explanation of the clause, namely, that the frameris of the clause endeavored to state the effect of the old form- and they endeavored to improve it. At any rate the dause comes within that head of the charter party which purports to provide a penalty for nonperformance of the charter, and it has no reference to a claim for general damages. 'Whether or not the dause be meaningless as a penalty clause, it does not limit the amount which can b,e recovered under the charter party as general damages. Suppose, for instance, an action were brought on the charter party against the shipowner for breach of the implied condition to supply a seaworthy ship, it might be that the loss would be very great. The action could be brought on the charter party, although it is usually brought on the bills of lading, and if it were brought effectively on the charter party it could not be contended that in such a case the damages were so limited. In Elderslie Steamship Co. v. Borthwick, Lord Macnaghton said: ‘It is a wholesome rule that a shipowner who wishes to escape the liability which might attach to him for sending an unseaworthy vessel to sea must say so in plain words.’ In my opinion, having regard to the construction of the charter party as a whole, this clause has no reference to the general damages; it has only reference to the penalty, and it may be that, owing to the language in which it is expressed, where the clause is in this form there is in strictness no penalty. It cannot, however, be held to limit the general damages recoverable for breach of contract.”
It is of the utmost importance that commercial documents of familiar form going into all parts of the world should as far as possible be understood everywhere in the same way, which makes us the more content to follow the English decisions. If the clause be a penalty, ‘the injured party has the right either to sue under it for his damages, not exceeding the estimated amount of freight, or to sue for his actual damages under the covenants of the charter party as the libelant has done in this case.
The decree is affirmed, with interest and costs.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I entirely agree with the disposition made of clause 24. As to clause 21, it is undeniable that American authority is at present a.s stated in the court’s opinion; whether the rule as given can long survive historical and logical criticism, I venture to< doubt. Concurrence as to clause 21 I rest on the plain fact that respondents repudiated their agreement in tota, and thereby debarred themselves from insisting upon any single subordinate part thereof, Jureidini v. National, etc., Co., [1915] A. C. 499.