This proceeding arose out of the same accident on which the libel in rem considered in The Bjomefjord (C. C. A.)
After that decision the present libel was filed to recover these same damages from respondent. Negligence and the resulting 14 days’ delay are conceded; liability is, however, denied — in contract, because respondent was a stranger to the charter party, and libel-ants strangers to the contract for repairs; in tort, because the steamship was at no time in the possession of or being used by libelants during the two weeks’ delay. Respondent further alleges that the master of the steamship made claim against it for-$3,271.21, “the. amount of the alleged damages accruing to said master’s principals by reason of the delay of said steamship,” entailed by defendant’s negligence, which sum respondent paid December 7, 1917, at which date the master executed a general release, “by which release said steamship, her owners, etc., and said master discharged respondent from all actions, damages, claims, and demands whatsoever, and especially o-f and from all claims and demands arising- out of towage and/or detention of said steamship in any way due to the breaking of said spare propeller on said vessel on or about July 31, 1917.” Respondent further alleges that at the time of payment it had “no knowledge nor any information as to the exact ownership of said steamship Bjornef jord, or as to her relations by charter party or otherwise to the libelants in this ease, and in making said payment to said master and in taking the release executed by said master this respondent procured said master to execute said release, as above stated, in full settlement of all the claims of said master, as master or otherwise, and all claims of the owners, etc., of said steamship Bjomefjord, to wit, all parties having any property interest in said steamship.”
It appears from the evidence that the damages claimed, $33,068.98, represented the difference between the market value of the steamer for the 14-day loss of use, and $2,-517.76, or thereabouts, the charter hire for that period; further, that on or about August 10, 1917, nearly 4 months prior to the execution of the release by the master, respondent was notified by appellants of their claim as “time-chartered owners” at the rate of approximately $75,000 per month for the period of detention. In the notification libel-ants stated: “We must accordingly advise you that we shall hold you liable and responsible for our damages either direct to us or through the owners. We will submit a statement of the damages and claims so soon as the amount is definitely known.”
At the trial it was agreed that the master, if called, would testify that he was acting for the owners and made a settlement of their claim with respondent, and that in making such settlement he "did not put forward the claim of the time charterers, and did not pretend to be settling that claim.
The matter is now before us on an appeal from a decree in favor of libelants for the principal sum of $32,550.57, with interest thereon from August 1,1917, and costs.
1. There is clearly no direct liability in contract. Libelants were not parties to the repair contract, and inasmuch as they were not, and were not intended to be, the sole beneficiaries thereof, or, indeed, in any respect beneficiaries, they did not become privies thereto or entitled to sue for breach thereof, even under the most liberal rules that permit third parties to sue on a contract made for their benefit.
Neither Pennsylvania Cement Co v. Bradley Contracting Co. (C. C. A.) 7 F(2d) 823, nor Town of Readsboro v. Hoosac Tunnel & W. R. Co. (C. C. A.)
2. As to a liability in tort, we are met at the threshold with an objection to the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty, based on the contention that the tort, if any, having been committed while the ship was in dry dock, was not “committed and effective on navigable waters.” Gonsalves v. Morse Drydock & Repair Co.,
3. Judge Mayer, sitting in the District Court, held in' The Aquitania,
In Hines, Agent, v. Sangstad S. S. Co. et al. (C. C. A. 1)
In The S. S. Binghampton Case, decided by Judge Mayer and discussed by him in his opinion in The Aquitania, the time charterer recovered the difference between .the market value of the use of the damaged vessel for the period of the delay, less the very much smaller charter hire for the same period. And in The Beaver,
Without adopting Judge Mayer’s language that “the ship, * * s in so far as its capacity to earn freight is concerned, * * * is the charterer’s,” but, on the contrary, adhering to the views expressed by ns in Booth-American Shipping Co. v. Importers’ & Exporters’ Insurance Co. (C. C. A.)
The difference in the facts furnishes no test of respondent’s liability or of the measure of damages, even though it may result in a different apportionment of damages; if the vessel be temporarily off hire, the total damage would be divisible, the owner receiving an amount equivalent to the lost charter hire, the charterer the difference between the market value of the use and the charter hire; if not off hire, the entire damages for the delay would go to the charterer; the measure of damages, however, in both cases would he the market value of the use of the vessel for the period of the delay.
Clearly, the result reached involves no injustice to respondent. Its liability for its tortious act is for the actual damage done to the combined interests in the ship. The measure of the total recovery is the market value of the loss of the use. If there had been no charter, the entire loss would have been sustained by the owner; therefore he could have recovered that amount for himself. The wrongdoer has no interest in and should not benefit because of the contractual obligations of the shipowner to the charterer, or the absence of any liability of the owner to the charterer for respondent’s negligence. This nonliability of the owner is neither a test nor a measure of the wrongdoer’s liability, for, though the owner bo not directly liable to the charterer, ho may nevertheless be liable over to him as a trustee for so much of the recovery from the wrongdoer as exceeds his own personal loss. In The Winkfield, [1902] Probate, 42, despite the fact that the Postmaster General, because of his official immunity, was free from liability to the owners of mail matter destroyed by the negligence of a ship that collided with the vessel on which it was being carried, the Court of Appeal held that he was nevertheless entitled to the full value of the material destroyed. And in Rodocanachi v. Milburn, 18 Q. B. Div. 67, the owner of goods lost throug’h negligence was held entitled to recover the full market value from the wrongdoer, although he was bound *6 under a contract to sell them below that value, if they had arrived safely at the port of destination. See, too, 39 Harv. Law Rev. p. 760.
In the very interesting opinion of Collins, M. R., in'The Winkfield, supra, the history of the relative rights of bailor and bailee against wrongdoers is pointed out. Originally only the bailee could sue; in the later development either bailor or bailee could bring the action. . If the bailee sued, he would recover the entire value of the property. But, though he be not directly liable to his bailor for the negligence of the third person, he, like the Postmaster General in The Winkfield, held the excess of recovery over his own personal loss in trust for the bailor or owner of the mail matter respectively.
It is unnecessary to determine in the instant case whether the charterer’s right to recover for his loss is direct against the wrongdoer, enforceable by a libel independent of that which the shipowner, but for the release, could have brought for his damages, or whether it is indirect, based upon the equitable obligation of the shipowner to the charterer, in analogy to the bailment and the Winkfield cases; for no error is assigned because of the failure to join the shipowner as libelant pursuant to the practice adopted in the Sangstad Case, supra. Even if the right be derivative and equitable in its nature, the settlement made and the release accepted, as it was in this ease, with full knowledge of libelants’ claim, could afford no defense in admiralty, the more, so when, as here, neither party intended it to operate as a release of more than the owner’s own personal damages.
It is urged, however, that the loss suffered by libelants cannot be deemed the proximate result of respondent’s negligence. It is indeed true that ordinarily the damage suffered by one whose interest in the party or thing directly injured is due to some contractual relation is deemed too remote to permit recovery against the wrongdoer, unless the wrongful act be done with intent to affeet the contractual relation. Typical eases are Conn. M. L. Ins. Co. v.
N.
Y. & N. H. R. R. Co.,
The conceptions of remote result and proximate cause are, however, not fixed and permanent; in the development of legal principles and their adjustment to social needs, the boundary lines have been and will continue to be extended. In our day the damages suffered by one who, eats diseased food intended by the manufacturer to be marketed as pure food are deemed to be the proximate result of the manufacturer’s negligence, and therefore recoverable from the manufacturer, even though the injured person had direct relations only with an intermediate and independently contracting dealer. Ketterer v. Armour
&
Co.,
Furthermore, unlike the insurance, towing, and analogous cases, reeognition.of libel-ants’ right of action involves no extension of responsibility for results beyond those reasonably to be anticipated. The damages which respondent must meet are limited to reimbursement for the proximate results of its negligence. As this, however, has directly affected several parties, each is entitled to his just share of the total amount.
Through illness Judge ROGERS was prevented from participating in this decision.
Decree affirmed.
