Milburn v. Thirty-Five Thousand Boxes of Oranges & Lemons

57 F. 236 | 2d Cir. | 1893

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge,

(after stating the facts.) There is no question of fact in this case. The existence of the custom set up in defense is conceded, and the only point to be decided is whether it is imported into the contract between the parties by the language they have used. The learned district judge did not discuss this point in the brief memorandum he filed with his decision. He had precisely the same custom before him, however, in the case of Steam Co v. Suitter, 17 Fed. Rep. 698, and there held that the existence of such usage of trade did not affect the right of the shipowner to insist upon reasonable promptness in discharging; that it was “unreasonable, and contrary to public policy, to permit the time of discharging a ship of her cargo to depend upon the ability of a single auction house, in the accumulation of business and of other engagements, to effect a sale of such cargo for the owners thereof.” The question whether a clause in the charter party providing for “discharge with customary dispatch” was affected by a substantially similar custom at the' port of New Orleans, where it was the practice of fruit dealers to receive their fruit from the vessels no faster than they could sell it at the wharves, was also carefully considered by the district and circuit courts in the eastern district of Louisiana. Lindsay v. Cusimano, 10 Fed. Rep. 302, 12 Fed. Rep. 503, 505. It was therein held as follows:

“The obligations of the owners and charterers, where the charter party is silent as to time to be occupied in discharging, are reciprocal; each shall *239ase ‘reasonable dispatch.’ This obligation is hero qualified by changing ‘reasonable' into •customary’ dispatch. This enlarges the source of delay, and makes it include all those usages at the port of delivery which the carrier cannot control, — such as the working hours, the order in which vessels must come it]) to the wharf, the observance of holidays, the allowance of three days to obtain a berth, provided one cannot be sootier obtained; hut here their force stops. They cannot be held to include any delay which is purely voluntary on the part of the charterers, although such delay is customary in the fruit trade. The phrase must be confined in its meaning to excuse the parties for want of opportunity by reason of the custom prevailing at the port. This is the substance of the decision in Kearon v. Pearson, 7 Hurl. & N. 386. There the question was as to the meaning of the words ‘usual dispatch’ as applied io loading. Martin, B., before whom (he case was tried, whose ruling was affirmed by all the judges, says, page 387: ‘They meant that the vessel should be loaded with the usual dispatch of persons who have a cargo ready at Divbrpool for loading.’ Here these words ‘customary dispatch’ meant the usual dispatch of persons who are ready to receive a cargo, and exclude all customs in accordance with which these charterers might claim the right to decline to receive, simply because it was more advantageous to posipone. * * * Delivery should take place with dispatch, limited or qualified by the customs prevailing at the port of delivery, which created barriers not under the control of the party who here urges them.” 10 Fed. Rep. 303.

The distinction thus pointed out is a sound one. The custom here set up to sell only one fruit cargo a day, and none on Saturdays, is not an outgrowth of the business of discharging ships, but rather of the business of selling their cargoes. It; is manifestly intended to pi-event a glut in the market, to keep up prices by holding bark newly-arrived fruit till the earlier arrivals .have been absorbed by the consumer. It does not iiiterfere with a discharge of the ship, as did the customs as to hours and times of labor, as to routine of access to a single elevator, as to a second change of berth,— which have been held applicable in the cases cited by the appellant. The consignee could have discharged this cargo in seasonable weather on January 2d and 3d, removed it from the dock and warehoused it; and, when the only excuse he gives for not doing so is that, by the custom of his trade, he could not sell it in the ordinary way to consumers until other fruit had been first so sold, he may not turn (he ship into a temporary warehouse to hold his goods until he finds a market for them. We do not determine whether the custom of selling fruit by a single firm of auctioneers, and In restricted quantities, which seems to have existed many years, is or is not reasonable, but do hold it is not the kind of custom which the use of the phrase “customary dispatch in discharging” imports into the contract of affreightment between the parties, being concerned. not with the business of discharging, but wi U). the business of selling, and not creating any impediment to a discharge with dispatch, which the charterer would not have overcome by the use of mere ordinary diligence.

Inasmuch as the charter party contains an express agreement to pay demurrage at the rate above named “'in case the steamer is detained over the said time, as above stated,” and the steamer was detained nine days over the time agreed upon for unloading, viz. such time as would be required for discharge with customary dis-. *240patch, the district court correctly awarded demurrage to the libelant.

Such award, however, was without interest, and the refusal to allow it is assigned as error by the libelant. Upon this point the decisions of the eastern and of the southern districts of New York are not harmonious. The Alexandria, 10 Ben. 101; Johanssen v. The Eloina; 4 Fed. Rep. 573; The J. A. Dumont, 34 Fed. Rep. 428. It is unnecessary to add anything to the discussion of the subject contained in those opinions. The amount of the demurrage is liquidated by the contract. Claimants stipulated to pay it day by day, in case they detained the vessel beyond the stipulated time. It was their duty to pay it when they so detained her, and to pay it day by day for each day of such detention, as they contracted to do. The master of the Tiverton demanded daily the amount due. In similar cases interest follows recovery, and there is no adequate reason why demurrage should be subject to any different rule.

The decree of the district court is reversed, and cause remanded, with instructions to decree in favor of the libelant for demurrage, as found by said court, with interest thereon from date of demand, 'and costs of the district court and of this court.