64 F. 871 | S.D.N.Y. | 1894
The above libel was filed to recover a, sum due for general average on account of the jettison of 100 cases of turpentine from the steamship Allianca during her voyage from this port to Bio de Janeiro in June, 1889. The cause has been submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that the libelant insurance company, as insurers, had paid Grossman & Co., the shippers and owners of the goods, for the loss of the turpentine; that the turpentine was shipped under a bill of lading which < \- eepted losses arising from perils of the seas or jettison; that the j<>;-tison was a proper one, under the circumstances of the voyage; that an adjustment of the general average against ship and cargo was made after (he arrival of the ship at, Rio, first, by Johnson & Higgins, adjusters at this port, which, with certain corrections, was afterwards adopted and adjusted at Rio, and completed there on May 16, 3891; that the whole average amount payable on account of the jettisoned turpentine was $533.69; that the United Hi a tes & Brazil Mail Steamship Company, the owner of the Allianca, upon the arrival of the vessel at Rio, took an average bond from the cargo owners for the payment of their shares when adjusted, and subsequently collected
Although the Allianca and the steamship company, her owner, were not liable for the act of jettison itself, (Lawrence v. Minturn, 17 IIow. 100,) the ship remained bound to contribute its proper share of average, as the same should be afterwards properly and legally adjusted,so as to indemnify the owner for the property that had been lawfully jettisoned for the common benefit of ship and cargo. The pro rata share thus legally charged against the ship in general average, became also a maritime lien upon her, in favor of the owner of the turpentine, and of the .libelant, by subrogation. Dupont v. Vance, 19 How. 162, 168-172. It has also been adjudged that had the master upon the arrival of the ship at the foreign port neglected to take a proper average bond from the cargo owners in the interest of the property jettisoned, whereby the remedy of the owner of the property jettisoned might be lost or imperiled, such an omission would be a breach of a maritime duty owed by the master to the property jettisoned, which would make the ship responsible for the shares payable by the cargo. See Heye v. The North German Lloyds, 33 Fed. 60, and cases there cited. Strang v. Scott, 14 App. Cas. 606; Crooks v. Allan, 5 Q. B. Div. 38, 42.
There was no such-neglect, however, in the present case. The average bond was taken, and the shares payable by the cargo were some time afterwards collected by (he carrier company for the benefit of those interested. As respects this part of the claim, plainly there was not originally any lien upon the ship. Each was chargeable only for its pro rata share (Strang v. Scott, supra); and there,was no breach of duty by the master in the delivery of the goods saved, since a proper bond was taken, and the ship’s duty was thereby wholly performed as respects the cargo delivered. I do not think the long-subsequent collection of average by the ship owners from the consignees created
A.s respects the ship’s share of the general average charge, viz., the sum of 8264.80, it is contended by the cotinsel for the trust company that the lien of the libelant has been lost by laches. But 1 do not think the circumstances are sufficient to sustain this contention. Although the jettison that gave rise to the lien happened before the mortgage was executed, the average was not adjusted, nor was any claim upon the ship callable of enforcement, until nearly a year and a half after the mortgage was given. Up to that time the lien was inchoate only, and there were no laches.
!n (he several cases cited on behalf of ¡he mortgagee, the lien was perfected and capable of enforcement before the mortgage was given, which was not the case here. See The Bristol, 11 Fed. 156, and cases there cited; The C. N. Johnson, 19 Fed. 782; The Theodore Perry, Fed. Cas. No. 13,879. From the time the average adjustment was perfected until the failure of the company in February, 1893, was a year and about nine months. As regards this delay it is to be observed, that the final adjustment was in a distant port; that there had been great delay by the steamship company, first in preparing the adjustment in ¡New York:, and afterwards in Brazil in changing and completing it; that the libelant’s claim had originally been forwarded to Brazil and presented with great promptness, and the bill of lading, as the proper voucher, sent there to substantiate the libel-ant's right;; and the loss of the bill of lading seems ascribable in part to the great lapse of time before the average adjustment was completed; that there is no evidence of any notice to the libelant, that the average adjustment had been completed until about May, 1892; and that the subsequent delay of nine months only, after the matter was resumed, is reasonably accounted for by the difficulty of dealing through agents at a distant point, and by ihe search for missing papers. There was not, in truth, any real delay, but rather a slow progress in the procurement of necessary vouchers.
Besides this, however, it does not appear that the trust company, mortgagee, can have been in the least prejudiced by the lapse of time. The general rule is that mere delay in the enforcement of a claim by a creditor gives no equity as respects other claimants, arising from subsequent insolvency or bankruptcy, provided the creditor has not himself done anything to mislead others. Davison v. Donaldson, 9 Q. B. Div. 623; Irvine v. Watson, 5 Q. B. Div. 414, 420; and see The Suliote, 23 Fed. 924, affirmed on appeal. There is no suggestion here that the mortgagee or bondholders have ever been misled; much less, that the’ libelant or the assured had done anything to mislead them. The defense here is that of mere delay in prosecution of a lien which could not be enforced until long after the mortgage was given. The
Decree for the libelant for $264.80, with interest and costs.