88 F. 526 | S.D.N.Y. | 1898
The questions at issue are whether the consignees of the sugar should pay freight according to the weight as determined by the custom-house weighers, or as indicated upon a long subsequent weight, as well as pay damages for the nondelivery of 31 baskets of sugar.
I have examined the evidence and the briefs with care. It will be sufficient to state my conclusions without a discussion of the very numerous and complicated details involved, or a specific reference to the arguments of counsel.
Doubtless a reasonable account must be given for the failure to deliver the requisite number of baskets in specie. Kerruish v. Refining Co., 42 Fed. 511, and 49 Fed. 280. But 1 think this is sufficiently done. The bark encountered heavy weather. In one gale nearly half her sails were blown away, and she rolled heavily for about 30 days. The baskets were from different districts and of different degrees of strength. When affected by dry rot they become brittle. The whole number of baskets was 14,263. The evidence shows that the principal loss of baskets was in the second, third and fourth tiers from the bottom, in the forward part of the hold. This indicates the probability that that portion of the shipment might have been in baskets of inferior quality; and when once some vacant spaces were made by the bursting of some baskets, others next to them of quality similar would be likely to be broken, and afterwards in the continuous working of the cargo during long-continued heavy rolling the broken baskets would naturally be more or less ground up into fragments incapable of being pieced together. The small number of only 25 that became indistinguishable except as fragments in a cargo of upwards of 14,000, seems to me in no way incredible or improbable under the circumstances proved, and not indicative of any appropriation of the baskets on the part of the ship or her crew. I think, therefore, that the broken unidentified baskets are sufficiently accounted for by the circumstances of the voyage and included In the excepted sea perils. See The Warren Adams, 20 C. C. A. 487, 74 Fed. 415, 416; The Sandfield, 79 Fed. 375; The Mauna Loa, 76 Fed. 837.
The libelant is, I think, entitled to the amount claimed, less the value of the basket lost overboard.