266 F. 58 | 2d Cir. | 1920
A libel was filed by this libelant, trading under the name of C. D. Jackson & Co., against 36 blocks of marble and 663 bags of mosaic cubes, a part of the cargo on the steamship Ada. The Universal Transportation Company, Incorporated, intervened and filed a claim to the freight money. The Ada was owned by the Rederiaktiebolaget Amie Company, a Swedish corporation, and on the 10th of December, 1915, was chartered by a written agreement to the appellant, the Universal Transportation Company, Incorporated. The charterer agreed to pay for hire $165,000 in installments, and the agreement provided for an option of purchase. The Ada, under this charter, became engaged in the charterer's employ, and the cargo in question was received on February 19, 1916, for transportation from Leghorn, Italy, to New York, at the agreed freight of $1,520. While the cargo was on hoard, and the Ada was on her voyage to New York, the Rederiaktiebolaget Amie Company gave notice to the Universal Transportation Company, Incorporated, that the Ada was withdrawn from the service of the Universal Transportation Company, Incorporated. It appears that previous to this the Universal
By the terms of the contract of sale and pending the payment for her, the Universal Company was the conditional vendee. It could exercise the rights of the owner. The Amie Company occupied the position of the original vendor out of possession. It was only after the Amie Company, making the claim that the Universal Company had defaulted in the payment of the purchase'price, gave notice of the contract of sale, that the rights of the Universal Company thereunder were ended. The parties then treated the contract as ended. The freight was unearned until unloaded from the vessel or the voyage completed. Miston v. Ford, 17 Fed. Cas. 490, No. 9,655. The parties then pro
The appellant has succeeded in its action against the Amie Company, and in that action it could have recovered all the damages which it has sustained, including loss of freight.- But, apart from this, we think that the charter party was terminated when the contract,was breached, and, indeed, the freight money did not accrue until the voyage was ended. This interpretation is justified by the actions of the parties, both in their conduct in the management of the ship and the legal proceedings instituted thereafter for breach of the contract.
The judgment is affirmed.