1 Cliff. 135 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1858
Three grounds are assumed by the counsel of the libellants in support of the claim set up in the libel. In the first place, he insists that the charter-party in this case is a letting of the vessel, and not a contract of affreightment. He contends, in the second place, that if the contract is a letting of the vessel, her loss only exempts the charterers from their obligation to return her, but not from the payment of the freight. Thirdly, it is insisted that, if the contract is one of affreightment, still the libellants can recover a proportion of the charter money for the outward voyage, on the ground that the contract is divisible both at common law and in the admiralty. All of these propositions, or certainly the first and third, are denied by the counsel of the respondents, and they present the principal matters to be determined at the present time.
Whether the charter-party in this case is a letting of the ship or a contract of affreightment must depend upon its terms and conditions. Upon that subject the rule is, as established by the supreme court, that a person may be the owner for the voyage, who, by a contract with the general owner, hires the ship for the voyage, and has the exclusive possession, command, and navigation of the ship. But where the general owner . retains the possession and navigation of the ship, and contracts to carry a cargo on freight for the voyage, the charter-party is considered as a mere affreightment sounding in covenant, and the freighter is not clothed with the character or legal responsibility of ownership. In the first case the general freighter is.responsible for the conduct of the master and mariners during the voyage, while in the latter case that responsibility rests on the general owner. Marcardier v. The Chespeake Ins. Co., 8 Cranch [12 U. S.] 39; Hooe v. Groverman, 1 Cranch [5 U. S.] 214. There are two kinds of contracts, says Judge Ware, passing under the general name of “charter-party,” differing from each other very widely in their natures, their provisions; and in their legal effect. In one the owner lets the use of the ship to freight, he himself retaining the legal possession, and being liaable to all the responsibilities of owner. Under such a letting of the ship the master is the agent of the owner, and the mariners are in his employment, and he is answerable for their conduct By such a contract the charterer obtains no right of control over the vessel, but the owner is, in contemplation of law and in fact, the carrier of whatever goods are conveyed in the ship, for the reason that the charter-party is a mere covenant for the conveyance of the merchandise, or the performance of the service which is stipulated in it. In the other class of cases the vessel herself is let to hire, and. the owner parts with the possession, command, and management of the vessel, the hirer thereby becoming Ihe owner during the term of the contract, aitd, if need be, he appoints the master and .mariners, and becomes responsible for their acts. Drinkwater v. The Spartan [Case No. 4,085] 1 Conk. Adm. 178. When goods and merchandise are carried by sea from one place to another, they are .usually shipped on board a vessel under a charter-party or bill of lading. A charter-party is a contract whereby the ship-owner or master covenants or agrees for the use of the ship by the charterer for a particular voyage or adventure, or for some specified period of time. Although the shipowner expressly grants the vessel to be used by the charterer, the contract will nevertheless not amount, in general, to a demise or bailment of the vessel, but simply to a contract for the use of the ship, together with the services of the master and crew, unless from the construction of the whole instrument it appears that the owner has surrendered the possession, command, and navigation of the vessel. If the end sought to be accomplished by the charter-party can conveniently be accomplished without the transfer of the vessel to the charterer, courts of justice are not inclined to regard the contract as a demise of the ship, although there may be express words of grant in the formal parts of the instrument. Christie v. Lewis, 2 Brod. & B. 410; Saville v. Campion, 2 Barn. § Ald. 510; Certain Logs
Such being the fact, it becomes unnecessary to consider the second proposition assumed by the libellants. To prevent misconstruction, however, it may not be amiss to remark, that, when a charter-party of af-freightment operates as a demise or bailment -of the ship to the charterer, he becomes the •carrier of the goods shipped on board, and, in case the vessel is employed by him as a general ship for the conveyance of merchandise, the master is his servant while procuring freight and contracting with third par- ■ ties for the carriage of merchandise, and not the agent of the owners of the vessel; and the latter consequently cannot be made responsible for the loss of the goods shipped on board, or for any injury to the same under such contracts. But when the charter-party •operates merely as a contract between the ■ charterer and the ship-owner for the conveyance by the latter, of goods and merchandise ■ to be shipped on board by the charterer, the • owners of the vessel are the carriers of the goods, and will in genera! be responsible to the charterer for the non-conveyance of them according to their contract.
More reliance is placed upon the third proposition assumed by the counsel for the libel-lants, and it deserves to be more carefully considered. It is predicated upon the fact that the passage of the vessel out was com- ' pleted, and that she was lost on her return, and affirms that by the true construction of the contract the service stipulated to be performed is divisible. Assuming that the service in the outward passage was precisely •equal to what the service would have been on the return passage if the vessel had not been lost, the counsel of the libellants insist that they are entitled to recover a moiety of the round sum which the charterers stipulated to pay for the voyage from Boston to Port au Prince and back to Boston. That view of the contract was sustained in "the court below, and it was solely upon that ground that the decree was made. Decisions by that learned judge are entitled to very great respect, but in this instance I have not been able to concur in the conclusion to which he came in passing the decree. Whether the contract is entire* or divisible must depend upon the terms and conditions set forth in the charter-party. Parties have a right to make their own contracts, and when they are fairly made and do not contravene any positive law or rule of public policy, they must be carried into effect according to' the intention of the parties, to be derived from the language employed, the surrounding circumstances, and the subject-matter. Certain rules have been established for the interpretation of contracts, which a. learned commentator says are the conclusions of good sense and sound logic applied to the agreement of the parties. Their object is to ascertain with precision the mutual understanding of the contract in the given case, and, like other deductions of right reason, they have been quite uniform in every age of cultivated jurisprudence. Those rules for the construction of contracts are the same in the courts of law and of equity, and it is a great mistake to suppose that they are not equally applicable in the admiralty. Eaton v. Lyon, 3 Ves. 692; 2 Kent, Comm. (9th Ed.) 756; Seddon v. Senate, 13 East, 74. Charter-parties are frequently informal instruments, sometimes having inaccurate clauses, and on that account must have a liberal construction, such as mercantile contracts usually receive in furtherance of the real intention of the parties and the usages of trade. In the construction of such instruments, as well as other mercantile contracts, the general rule is, that the construction should be liberal, -agreeable to the real Intention of the parties,