113 F. 672 | S.D.N.Y. | 1902
This is an action brought to recover $7,493.85, the hire of the steamship Ventnor for the month commencing June 18, 1901, alleged to be due under a charter party
“(5) That should the steamer he on her voyage towards the port of return delivery at the time a payment oí hire becomes due, said payment shall be made for such a length of time as the owners or other agents and charterers or their agents may agree as the estimated time necessary to complete the voyage, and when the steamer is delivez'ed to owners’ agents any difference shall be refunded by steamer or paid by charterers, as the case may require.”
The parties were unable to reach an agreement under this clause, and the action was brought on the theory that another month’s hue became due. Tonnelier v. Smith, 2 Com. Cas. 258. The steamer subsequently arrived at Philadelphia, and completed the delivery of her inward cargo there in the afternoon of July 4, 1901, but was immediately arrested under process issued upon a libel filed on the 3d day of July by the charterer in the United States district court for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania, alleging that the vessel had failed to comply with the terms of the chai’ter party. The eighth clause provided:
“That the whole reach of the vessel’s holds, deni;;!, mid usual places of loading, and accommodation of the ship (not more than she can reasonably stow and carry), shall be at the charterers’ disposal, reserving only xwopor and sufficient space for ship’s officers, crew, tackle, apparel, furniture, provisions, stores, and fuel.”
The charterer claimed damages under the clause to the extent of $966.24. The libel also contained another claim against the ship for delay at the port of Hamburg owing to sufficient steam not being furnished to run the winches, in conformity. with the twenty-fourth clause of the contract, and asking damage in such respect in the sum of $512.40. The vessel remained in custody under the seizure until the next day, when she was voluntarily released. These same matters set up m the Philadelphia libel are alleged by the charterer in its answer in the case at bar, excepting that the damages claimed for the ship’s failure to furnish cargo space are $971:84, instead of $966.24. Additional offsets are also claimed in the answer for coal remaining iiz the bunkers of the steamer at the time of redeliverv, which the owners were to pay for under the contract, amounting to $458.20; for sundry disbursements made at the return port upon the request of the master of the vessel, amounting to $14,55; for disbursements made on behalf of the vessel at Ham
1. It does not appear that there was any actual notice of a redelivery of the steamer on the 4th of July. Nor were there any steps taken by the respondent to indicate an intention on its part to terminate its relations to the steamer. Doubtless a redelivery would have been effected by operation of the provisions of the charter party when the inward cargo was discharged, and the hiring would have been in fact then terminated, in the absence of any act by the respondent to prevent it; but, instead of permitting the owners to resume possession, the respondent invoked the process of the court to prevent it, and by such means actually detained the vessel 25 hours beyond the time when the owners would otherwise have taken her back. At this time the respondent admittedly owed the libel-ants $4,163.25, less a deduction of 2}i per cent, address commission, amounting to $104.08, or $4,059.17. The respondent’s claims against the steamer or the steamer’s owners then were the sums mentioned in the Philadelphia libel, $966.24 and $512.40. The only other claims which it has at any time pretended to have were, respectively, $458.20, $14.55, and $699.92, as hereinbefore described, and the additional $5.60 on the cargo space claimed, aggregating, with the libel claims, $2,656.91. The respondent, therefore, when it caused process to be issued and the vessel arrested, was, according to any possible computation, actually in debt to the libelants some $1,402.26. Under the circumstances it is claimed by the libelants that the hire should continue during the 25 hours the vessel was under seizure. While the ordinary arrest of a vessel in a cause of damage; security for costs having been given by the libelant, is an inconvenience to .which the owner is required to submit without a remedy, upon his success in the action, beyond the costs, yet where the libelant proceeds without an honest belief that he is using a rightful remedy, and his action is in the nature of a malicious prosecution, he should be held in any damages suffered by the shipowner through his wrongful act. The Walter D. Wallet [1893] Prob. Div. 202; The Adolph (D. C.) 5 Fed. 114; Kemp v. Brown (D. C.) 43 Fed. 391;
2. The claim of the respondent in this respect is stated in the answer as follows:
“Seventh. That at the time of the making of the charter party the said steamship Ventnor was in the United Kingdom, and was unknown to the respondent, except by name. That the libelants, by their duly-authorized agent, warranted and represented to this respondent that the space to be occupied by cargo in the said steamship and as shown on her plans in the peaks, lazaretto, and poop was 10,563 cubic feet, all of which, reserving only proper and sufficient spaee for the ship’s officers, crew, tncklo, apparel, furniture, provisions, stores, and fuel, should have been at the disposal of the charterers; that a proper and sufficient space for these purposes would be '',666 cubic feet; that said plans showed the upper forepcak of said vessel war. of the cargo carrying capacity of 2,023 cubic feet, that the intermediate forepeak and lower forepeak was of the cargo carrying capacity of -1,421 cubic feet, that the afterpeak was of the cargo carrying capacity of 2,372 cubic feet, and that her poop was of the cargo capacity of 7,310 cubic feet, — in all 16,565 cubic feet And relying upon such warranty and representation, and believing the same to be true, entered into the charter party marked ‘Exhibit A,’ annexed to the libel herein.”
It was assumed that the terms of the clause 8, covering the contention, opened the door for proof as to the quantity of space the charterer was entitled to, exclusive of that which belonged to the ship for stores, etc.., and full opportunity was given the respondent to prove all the circumstances relating to the ¡natter, including representations orior to the contract; but nothing was elicited tending to show the
3. The claim of the libelants for $18.18 alleged to have been improperly deducted from the hire by the respondent, I do not allow. It was not made a subject of contention by the pleadings, and, in any event, is not sufficiently established. It arose out of charges made for advances to the steamer on her first entry to the port of Philadelphia. The testimony shows that the advances were actually made by the charterer for the steamer’s disbursements, but it is contended that the ship then had coal in her bunkers, which the charterer was bound to pay for when the ship arrived, and that it was therefore in funds to pay the claim out of the owners’ money. There is some plausibility in the claim, but the difficulty is that the disbursements seem to have been made before any adjustment could be made of the amount due for the coal. The money was paid out by
Decree for the libelants for the sum of $3,846.62, with interest and costs.