12 Ga. App. 399 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Stripped of the many collateral questions which have been presented in the exhaustive briefs of the very learned counsel for both parties, the solution of the question as to whether the defend-» ant is liable to the plaintiffs depends at last upon the construction of the contract by which they are bound, and which we think the lower court properly construed. The case is not affected by rulings, almost without number, which we have examined, where the charter-party differed from the' one involved in this case. A charter-party, after all, is nothing more than a contract of affreightment, and though the contract be unusual, or even unnaturally favorable to one of the contracting parties rather than to the other, this affords no reason why the contract as written should not be enforced. Briefly stated, and putting the case most favorably for the plaintiffs, they seek to recover money which “they paid in Europe, to consignees, for a portion of the cargo which they were unable to deliver, because, upon the ship’s arrival, that portion of the cargo could not be found in the ship. The defendant contends that it is not liable, and that the plaintiffs have no right of action over against it, because the plaintiffs were not compelled to pay the consignees, and also because, if they, were liable to the consignees in Europe, this liability was due to some other cause than a breach of the defendant’s contract as embodied in the charter-party; in other words, that even if the plaintiffs were liable to pay the consignees, it was not due to any fault of the defendant.
The merit of these respective contentions is to be determined by the nature of the agreement between the parties and the relations
It is not necessary to determine the question of the plaintiffs’ liability if the bills of lading had been assigned and had passed into
The plaintiffs rely upon the proposition that McIntyre Brothers & Company were liable to the consignees because they could not dispute the statement of the bills of lading in the hands of the consignees that they had received the shipment, including the portion which they (the owners of the vessel) were unable to deliver. There is no stipulation that the bills of lading are to be binding upon master and owners as proof of quantity delivered to the ship (as there was in the Tongoy case, 55 Fed. 329); and so we need not consider whether the plaintiffs would have been estopped to deny the acknowledgments of their bills of lading, if the present contract had contained such a stipulation. The question turns upon whether the master had the authority to sign bills of lading
In Sears v. Wingate, 3 Allen (Mass.), 103, Judge Hoar, delivering the opinion of the court, held it to be a general principle, amply-supported by authority (which he cites), that “It is not within the scope of the master’s authority from the owners to sign bills of lading for any property but such as is put on board” Counsel for the plaintiffs concede the general principle, but insist that in the present case, under the provision of the contract that “the captain shall sign bills of lading as 'and when presented on press receipts or railroad guarantees, as customary,” the captain not only had the authority to sign the bills of lading, but it was his duty to do so without question. This view is supported with marked ability in the learned 'and ingenious argument of counsel, and many authorities are cited. We think, however, counsel loses sight of the fact that the provision m reference to the captain signing the bills of lading “as and when presented” is qualified by the stipulation that they must be signed “without prejudice to this charter-party,” and also that the entire authority of the captain in signing the bills of lading is restricted to the matter of freight-rates. Since the charterers were responsible only for the cargo, in placing it alongside the ship and in loading what there might be to load, and their responsibility ceased (under paragraph 11) when the cargo was shipped (or loaded), authority of the captain to acknowledge receipt of cargo which in fact he did not receive
The petition in the case at bar is based upon the alleged violation of the. charter-party. “Petitioners attach hereto an itemized statement marked exhibit B, which is made a part hereof, showing that said defendant is indebted to them in the sum of 196 pounds sterling, 9 shillings, and 11 pence, foe which amount in terms of money of the United States of America, to wit, the sum of nine hundred and fifty-one 11/100 dollars, petitioners, who are the owners of said ship Reliance, and who have paid out the sums heretofore set forth, because of defendant’s breaches of contract as aforesaid, ask judgment.” But in the allegations there is nothing to show that the charter-party was violated in any respect, nor is there any reference to a particular part of it which has been violated. The case proceeds upon the theory that the master signed the bills of lading upon the defendant’s representation that the cargo described in the bills of lading had been loaded, when, as a matter of fact, it had not been loaded; but there is no allegation of any fraud on the part of the defendant. It is not stated that the defendant knew, at the time the bills of lading were presented for signature, that the missing cotton and other articles had not been loaded, nor is it alleged that there was any fraudulent collusion ' between the defendant and the master with intent to defraud the plaintiffs. It is to be noted, too, that while the charterers were to pay the stevedores for loading the cargo, the loading was to be under the captain’s direction. He was to say in what portion of the ship the various articles of freight were to be stowed, and there is no reason given why he could not, or did not, check the articles as delivered upon and stowed in the ship, except the fact that the charterers loaded the ship in great haste in order to make the despatch money. This statement itself would contradict the idea
Counsel for the plaintiffs strenuously insist that the ruling in Elder-Dempster & Co. v. Dunn & Co., supra, is conclusive upon the point that McIntyre Brothers & Company could not dispute the statements of the bills of lading, and therefore were liable to the consignees. As we have previously said, we see no reason why McIntyre Brothers & Company could be held to be estopped from denying the authority of the captain to sign the bills of lading for cargo not received; but even if the liability for payment of the consignees properly rested upon the South Atlantic Steamship Company, McIntyre Brothers & Company would not have a right to recover for the payment made by them in behalf of the South Atlantic Steamship Company, unless they had been requested by the steamship company to pay its debt. The fact that I, without Smith’s request, pay Smith’s debt, does not authorize me to recover from Smith the amount which I paid in behalf of Smith without his procurement or knowledge. Smith may justly owe the debt; non constat that he is ready and willing to pay it. It may be it would have been tedious and expensive to the plaintiffs to have resisted a libel if the consignees had proceeded against the ship, but if the plaintiffs were not liable, and these expenses had been caused by the defendant, they could have recovered from the defendant the damages which the defendant’s breach of the contract had occasioned.
It appears that the provisions of the charter-party in the ElderDempster case are so dissimilar to the charter here involved that the ruling is not in point. The charter in that case was what is called the “net form,” under which the charterer and his. servants put the goods right on board, whereas in the charter before us the shipper gave the goods to the ship “alongside;” the owners were responsible for them while they remained' there, and, though the charterers furnished the stevedores and paid for the loading, the loading was done under the supervision of the captain. We think that when the parties inserted in the present contract the stipulation that the owners were to be responsible for the cargo after it was delivered alongside, and signed for by the mate or other person
The liability of the defendant, if any, depends upon the authority of the captain to issue bills of lading for a cargo, which he did not receive. It must be conceded that a captain has, generally, no such authority, and there is nothing stated in the petition which would have given the consignee the right to assume that he did have such authority. Consequently the consignees took the bills of lading with knowledge of the fact that the captain had no such authority, and they could not have held McIntyre Brothers & Company liable for the portion of the cargo which was missing, without first proving that McIntyre Brothers & Company did in fact receive the entire cargo. As McIntyre Brothers & Company would not have been responsible in the first instance, they were not authorized to pay the consignees’ claim against the South Atlantic Steamship Company; and, having paid it without direction or request on the part of the South Atlantic Steamship Company, they can not recover.
It may be that the bills of lading themselves would show that the South Atlantic Steamship Company was liable. But we can not assume this. We would have preferred that the bills of lading had been in the record. The defendant demurred upon the ground that they should be set forth, but does not except to the judgment overruling this demurrer, and, so far as this case is concerned, it must be held that the court ruled correctly in overruling the demurrer. We incline to the opinion that the ruling was right, and that there was no ground to except; but certainly the plaintiffs can not complain of the ruling, and, from their failure to amend by setting out the bills of lading (although they were not required to do so), it may be presumed that there is nothing in the bills of lading which would disclose anything to their benefit or take the case out of the general rule. It may be that the bills of lading did not disclose that the thirty-six bales of cotton were actually included therein, and the same may be said as to the
The fact that it is alleged in an amendment, which the plaintiffs proposed to make the seventh count of their petition, but which the trial judge refused to allow as an amendment, that the defendant failed to place the portion of the cargo for which the plaintiffs had to pay alongside the ship, as it was bound to do by the provisions of the charter-party, has been the subject of our most serious consideration, and the question presented has not been determined without great difficulty. "We were at first of the opinion that this raised such an issue of fact, as to a very apparent breach of one of the conditions of the contract, that it should have been submitted to the jury, and that the trial judge erred in sustaining the objection to the 'amendment and in refusing to allow it. However, after an exhaustive examination of the authorities, we are compelled to the conclusion that this breach of the contract can not afford a 'basis for the plaintiffs’ recovery of the sum of money which they allege they paid to the consignees upon their bills of lading, procured, as the plaintiffs allege, by false representations of the defendant to the captain that the goods had been placed alongside the ship. Even though the plaintiffs might be entitled to recover in a direct action brought upon the breach of the contract in this particular, and without regard to the bills of lading or the representations by which their issuance was induced, if the rule is as we think it is, and as stated by Justice Hoar in the case of Sears v. Wingate, supra, that the master never has authority to acknowledge receipt of goods which he does not actually receive; and if it is further true, as held in Swift v. Tatner, 89 Ga. 660 (15 S. E. 842), that the master, under this charter-party, was the servant of the owner rather than the charterer, then the shortage in the cargo was the fault of the plaintiffs’ own agent; and, of course, the plaintiffs could not recover from the defendant for a loss which had been
Even if it is not clear that the plaintiffs could have avoided paying the consignees in Europe, it is perfectly plain, in the absence of any allegation of fraud or collusion between the captain and the defendant charterers, that the failure of the captain (the plaintiffs’ agent) to ascertain for himself and for the protection of his masters that the articles receipted for in the bills of lading had been actually delivered by the charterers was the real cause of the shortage for which the plaintiffs had to pay, and that the plaintiffs can not recover of the defendant for the negligence of their own agent.
Judgment affirmed.