235 F. 64 | 2d Cir. | 1916
The libelant was charterer of the British steamer Denaby under a time charter. While the cargo was being discharged April 19, 1907, by the consignee, the American Sugar Refining Company, the stevedores undertook to lift one of the cross-beams of No. 2 hatch, weighing about a ton and a half, into place, which fell and injured one of them, named Michael Callahan. He brought suit against the Munson Line, the charterers, and the American Sugar Refining Company, the consignee of the cargo, in the Supreme Court of the state of New York for Kings county, and on April 25, 1911, the court dismissed the complaint as to the American Sugar Refining Company and submitted the case to the jury as to the Munson Line, against which they rendered a verdict for $11,586.09. This was affirmed December 18, 1911, by the Appellate Division (Callahan v. Munson S. S. Line, 147 App. Div. 934, 132 N. Y. Supp. 1123), and October 24, 1913, by the Court of Appeals (209 N. Y. 546, 103 N. E. 1122).
November 20, 1911, the libelant filed this libel against the owner of the steamer to recover anything it might ultimately have to pay on account of the judgment rendered against it in the state court, from which it was appealing. May 19, 1913, upon the respondent’s exceptions, the libel was dismissed on the ground that the suit was premature. November 10 the libelant appealed, and January 12, 1914, within 15 days after filing the apostles, applied under our rules in admiralty 7 to 10 (150 Fed. lvii, lviii, 79 C. C. A. lvii, lviii) for leave to make
Thereupon a supplemental libel was filed, setting up the payment by the Munson Line of Callahan’s judgment. The respondent answered, alleging that the accident occurred because of the negligence of a winchman, who had been found by the state court to have been the servant of the charterer, libelant, which finding was binding on it and could not be contradicted in this court.
“No injustice can result to tlie claimant from this course. The practice pursued, if not strictly regular, has in this case wronged no one, but, on the contrary, tended to save trouble and expense.” 841 Tons of Ore (D. O.) 25 Fed. 864.
So, a libel .having been filed to recover the price of setting up a boiler in a tug before payment was due, Green, J., said:
“But I think it is clear from the evidence that neither the claimants, nor Townsend & Co., nor any one on behalf of either of them, have ever tendered to the libelants, in fulfillment of their part of the contract, the note their contract called for, and that the right to libel has since the 19th day of December, 1891, been vested in the libelants. 'Had it been filed not until then, it would have been properly filed, as far as time is concerned. But the premature filing of a libel, if the right to libel accrues afterwards, and before the determination of the issue, affects the question of costs only. It is not necessary, nor is it the practice in admiralty, to dismiss such libel, if when the matter is-presented to the court for final determination, it appears that the right to libel exists.” The Pioneer (D. C.) 53 Fed. 279.
And in The Laselle (D. C.) 193 Fed. 539, a suit in rem was sustained to recover for lightering, refloating, and reloading a stranded vessel, although the reloading had not been completed. The circumstance that a suit is prematurely brought will only affect the question of costs.
(1) As to the plaintiff’s right to recover against the defendant.
(2) As to the amount of the plaintiff’s recovery.
But the liability of the owner over to- the charterer, if any, would have to he settled in a subsequent suit to be brought by it against the owner, such as the present.
“1. That the owner shall provide and pay for all the provisions, wages and consular shipping and discharging fees of the captain, officers, engineers, firemen and crew; shall pay for the insurance of the vessel, also for all the cabin, deck, engine room and other necessary stores, and maintain her in a thoroughly efficient state in hull and machinery for and during the service.
“2. That the charterers shall provide and pay for all the coals, port charges, pilotages, agencies, commissions, consular charges (except those pertaining to
*68 the captain, officers or crew), and all other charges whatsoever, except those before stated.
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“24. Steamer to work night and day if required by charterers, and all steam winches to be at charterers’ disposal during loading and discharging, and steamer to provide men to work same both day and night as required, charterers agreeing to pay extra expense if any incurred by reason of night work, at the current local rate.”
It is quite plain from the foregoing provisions that the charterer is 'to pay the expense of the loading and unloading except for the winches and winchmen, who are to be provided by the owner, though any extra payment for night work is to be defrayed by the charterer. This obligation to pay for the unloading does not make the unloading the duty of the charterer, but leaves the legal duty of loading and discharging upon the owner, just as the duty, of navigation remained upon the owner, although it was being performed by a supercargo appointed and paid by the charterer. The Volund, 181 Fed. 643, 104 C. C. A. 373.
This duty is often varied by special provisions, such as that the ship shall employ the charterer’s stevedore, or a stevedore to be approved by the charterer, or that the charterer or shipper or consignee shall load or unload. In the case of The Elton, 142 Fed. 367, 73 C. C. A. 467, which we infer was a voyage charter, it was provided that the consignee should unload, the ship furnishing winches and winch-men, and the master stevedore’s contract was with him. In The Slingsby, 120 Fed. 748, 57 C. C. A. 52, which we understand to have been a voyage charter, the vessel did the unloading under a contract with the master stevedore, the ship to furnish winches and winchmen. In The Centurion (D. C.) 57 Fed. 412, the time charterer had charge of the loading. Cargo being damaged by bad stowage, Brown, J., held the time charterer primarily and the ship secondarily liable to the cargo owners. In Bull v. N. Y. & Porto Rico S. S. Co., 167 Fed. 792, 93 C. C. A. 182, the time charterers had the duty of unloading and had also agreed that there should be no claim against the owners for loss of cargo, for which reason they had to bear the cargo damage.
Cases of personal injury to a stevedore resulting from negligence of a winchman supplied by the ship, in which the question was whether the stevedore and the winchmen were fellow servants, discussed in the briefs, do not throw much light on the question here involved. The view of this court in The Slingsby that they were not fellow servants was affirmed in Standard Oil Co. v. Anderson, 212 U. S. 215, 29 Sup. Ct. 252, 53 L. Ed. 480; but the liability of the shipowner and charterer inter sese for such an injury was not raised. In that case and in Johnson v. N. A. S. N. Co., 132 N. Y. 576, 30 N. E. 505, the owners were unloading their own vessels. It may be conceded that the jury found that Callahan was injured as the result of the negligence of the winch-man, and that the court held that the winchman was the servant of the charterer, and not of the stevedore, and therefore, not being fellow servants, the defendant was liable. This would be true if the stevedore was doing, the charterer’s work, but not if he was doing the ship’s. We hold that he was doing the ship’s work.
But, assuming that the state court, as matter of law, erroneously found the charterer liable for the negligence of the winchman, that should not prevent the charterer from claiming indemnity from the shipowner, if, as we have found, the discharging of the cargo was the shipowner’s duty, and this accident was caused by the negligence of the winchman as the shipowner’s servant.
The decree is reversed.