Plaintiff’s action against the defendants, Messrs. De Montcourt and O’Hara, relates to a shipment of lumber by water from certain points on the Mississippi river to Cairo, Illinois.
The petition is in two counts. The first count sets, forth a claim by plaintiff as owner of the steamboat Nellie Speer and barge William Toll, for freight earned in carrying 298,202 feet of lumber, at the instance of defendants, from Tyler, Missouri, and Barfield, Arkansas, to Cairo, in July, 1891, at the rate of $2.50 per thousand feet, which rate defendants are said to have promised to pay.
The second count is for part of the expenses incurred by plaintiff “in the salvage of the freight and cargo on board said barge,” by reason of which (it is alleged) defendants “at Cairo, Illinois, promised to pay to plaintiff the loss and damage aforesaid, and the incidental éxpenses thereon, as should be made to appear to be due from said defendants, according to their part or shares in the said cargo of lumber,” “provided that such losses and expenses be stated and apportioned by G-. W. Dougherty, average adjuster, in accordance with the established usage in that vicinity in similar cases.” The count then proceeds to allege that said losses and expenses were apportioned and adjusted, in accordance with the law of general average and the said established usage, by said adjuster, by a “writing
The answer denies the facts of the petition, and sets up a counterclaim, the basis of which is that plaintiff undertook to carry for defendants 314,078 feet of lumber to Cairo for $2.50 per thousand, and received the same in good order and condition. The concluding part of the answer is as follows:
‘‘Defendants say that the plaintiff violated the said contract and failed to deliver any of said lumber in good order or condition, but on the contrary, lost or destroyed 18,134 feet thereof, and delivered the balance thereof, to wit: 295,944 feet, and no more, to defendants at Cairo in a greatly damaged condition. Defendants say that the lumber, so lost or destroyed by the plaintiff and not delivered to defendants, was worth twenty-two and a half dollars ($22.50) per thousand feet, amounting to $408, and that the said 295,944 feet of said lumber delivered to defendants were by reason of water, sand and mud negligently put and left thereon by the plaintiff, and by reason of the negligence and carelessness of the plaintiff, damaged to the extent of ten dollars per thousand feet, amounting to $2,959.44; and that by reason of the premises defendants have been damaged in the sum of thirty-three hundred and sixty-seven and UV dollars ($3,367.44), for which sum with their costs defendants pray judgment against the plaintiff.”
The plaintiff’s reply alleges (in substance) that the contract of shipment was evidenced by bills of lading (filed) and that his liability as carrier was thereby so limited as not to include loss or damage to the lumber by reason of the dangers of navigation or of known and unknown obstructions in the river. The reply then
The cause was tried with the aid of a jury.
The facts were not as fully developed at the trial as the defendants desired, owing to the exclusion of testimony which they offered. That ruling forms the most important subject for treatment on this appeal.
■It appears that defendants shipped a large amount of lumber to Cairo under an agreement with plaintiff. The lumber was loaded on plaintiff’s barge, which was being towed up the river by his steamer, the Nellie Speer, when the barge came into contact with something beneath the surface of the river, and sprung a serious leak. Being in danger of sinking, the barge was guided to shoal water, where a temporary lodgement was found for it. The barge, partly submerged, was made fast to the shore and watchmen left there, while the steamer Speer (which, at the time of the mishap, was in the personal charge of plaintiff) hastened off to Cairo for aid. On arriving there, plaintiff entered a marine protest, and engaged two barges to rescue defendants’ lumber. He then returned with the steamer and these barges to the wreck and took off the lumber, loading the latter on the hired barges. The first barge, the Toll, was abandoned where it lay. But, according to plaintiff’s account, all of the defendants’ lumber was saved, brought safely to Cairo, anddelivered to them on their giving to plaintiff an average bond. These steps taken by plaintiff involved most of the items of expense mentioned in the adjustment.
There is no serious dispute as to these facts. But the trouble at the trial arose in determining the effect to be given to the average bond.
On the cross-examination of plaintiff’s witnesses, defendants opened up a line of inquiry intended to imply that the wreck of the barge and the resulting
The court later instructed the jury that defendants were not entitled to recover on their counterclaim; and the law was further declared to be that “in signing said bond to and with plaintiff, defendants agreed that said steamboat and barge, while in due prosecution of her voyage, met with a disaster by which said barge and cargo were sunk in the said river, by which means certain losses and expenses had been incurred, and other expenses might thereafter be incurred in consequence thereof, and that such expenses, according to the usage of said port, constituted a general average, and that they, the defendants, would pay their share of said expenses, as should be stated and apportioned by Gr. W. Dougherty, average adjuster, in accordance with the established usage and laws of the state of Illinois in similar cases.”
Defendants saved exceptions to those rulings and instructions, and kept the points alive by a motion for new trial, after the verdict for plaintiff, which naturally resulted in the circumstances. Defendants appealed in due course.
1. The defendants’ counterclaim (on which they were defeated by a peremptory instruction) demands damages in a sum large enough to give the Supreme
2. The controversy presented by the demand for an average contribution is maritime in nature. (Dike v. The St. Joseph (1855) 6 McLean, 573); but it is not on that account exclusively within the federal jurisdiction. By the judiciary act of 1789, there is a “saving to suitors in all cases the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it,” in civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction (R. S. U. S. 1874, sec. 563).
The action at bar is a personal one based upon the contracts already described. The damages claimed for breaches of those contracts are recoverable in an action at law, although (as will presently be seen) the reciprocal rights of the parties are to a large extent determined by principles of the maritime law. Those principles, however, are regarded as part of the general common law of England. Leon v. Galceran (1870) 11 Wall. 185; Strang v. Scott (1889) 14 App. Cas. 601. The people of Missouri adopted and incorporated in their system of jurisprudence that common law at an early day (1 Terr. Laws, p. 436, ch. 154, sec. 1; R. S. 1889, see. 6561). Congress, even at an earlier date, had sanctioned common law proceedings in the territory. 1 Terr. Laws, p. 12, sec. 14. The Supreme Court of this State has treated such maritime subjects as properly within the State jurisdiction. Dilworth v. McKelvy (1860) 30 Mo. 149.
3. The learned trial judge considered and held that the average bond was conclusive upon the defendants as to their liability for the freight, as well as for a share of the extraordinary expenses incurred by plaintiff in saving the cargo of lumber. That view we
An average bond (properly drawn, in accordance with the principles which at this day should shape such an instrument) does not absolutely conclude the signer, when owner of the cargo, as to his liability to an average charge. It does, however, generally bind him to the adjustment of the expenses by the adjuster, nominated in the bond, except as against fraud or mistake in the adjustment. Fowler v. Rathbones (1870) 12 Wall. 102; Belt v. Gumbel (1884) 24 Fed. 383.
Notwithstanding the bond, the cargo owner ordinarily may show negligence in the handling of the vessel, and that the damage resulted therefrom. On that showing he is not liable to contribute toward repairing a loss sustained by the interest chargeable with the negligence, where the average bond conforms to any of the models sanctioned by the maritime usages of England. Lowndes, Q-en. Average [4 Ed. 1888], p. 30. And the same rule prevails in this country. The Niagara (1858) 21 How. 7; The Alpin (1884) 23 Fed. 815; The Nicanor (1889) 40 Fed. 361; Forace v. Salinas
It certainly is a recognized general proposition of maritime law that if a loss to the cargo occurs by a peril of navigation, which might have been avoided by ordinary care on the part of the carrier, the latter can not justly call upon the owner of the cargo to help him bear any part of the loss so occasioned. Grill v. Iron Screw Collier Co. (1866) L. R. 1 C. P. 599; The L’Amerique (1888) 35 Fed. 835; The Ontario (1889) 37 Fed. 220; Snow v. Perkins (1889) 39 Fed. 334.
The average bond before us does not by its terms preclude all examination into the question of defendants’ liability to contribute toward making good the loss. íf it did, it might then be necessary to consider how far such stipulations would be held binding on defendants in dealing with a claim against them for an average contribution, based on principles of the maritime law.
The preamble of the bond, standing alone, might, perhaps, be construed to close the question of defendants’ liability to contribute; but the more definite language of the substantial part of the instrument clears away the possibility of such a construction. The intent expressed in the bond is the controlling factor in reaching its proper interpretation; and in getting at that intent all parts of the instrument should be considered. The bond declares that the obligors shall pay suchi loss, damage and expenses “as shall be made to appear to be due from us,” provided the said losses and expenses “be stated and apportioned by” the adjuster named.
The adjuster’s duty is thus defined to be the statement (and apportionment in average) of the loss and expenses. He was not appointed as an arbitrator to
4. The answer directly charges that plaintiff as carrier lost or destroyed part of defendants’ lumber, specifying it. That furnished a foundation for a claim for damages, if true and unexplained. And then it is further alleged that the lumber actually delivered to defendant was, “by reason of water, sand and mud negligently put and left thereon by plaintiff, and by reason of the negligence and carelessness of the plaintiff, damaged to the extent of ten dollars per thousand feet,” etc.
A general charge of negligence is good as a basis .for proof unless objected to at a proper time, before trial. Schneider v. Railroad (1882) 75 Mo. 295; LeMay v. Railroad (1891) 105 Mo. 361 (16 S. W. Rep. 1049).
Moreover, the plaintiff obviously understood fully the extent and object of the charge of- negligence, for his reply thereto is full of statements denying that charge in various forms. So that the issue of plaintiff’s negligence was plainly raised by the pleadings and should have been fully investigated at the trial. If the charges preferred by defendants on that score were substantiated by. proof their counterclaim would be valid, and plaintiff would not then be entitled to maintain any claim whatever for an average contribution.
It is evident that there must be another trial of the cause, and to that end the judgment is reversed.