Appellant shipped a cargo of grain in good order and condition from Milwaukee, Wis., to Buffalo, N. Y., on appellee’s steamer. In consideration of the freight paid, it was to be transported and delivered in as good condition as when shipped. The bills of lading provided for carriage and for “winter storage.” The steamer sailed on November 5, 1927, and arrived at Buffalo on November 9,1927, and anchored in the outer harbor under the breakwater, there to store her cargo of wheat for the winter months. The consignees were notified on November 9, 1927, that there was no report of damage to the cargo. The steamer was still in the Buf *440 falo outer harbor April 7, 1928, and was towed to' the elevator at Buffalo, and the cargo discharged in a damaged condition. Below it was held the suit was ex contractu in sustaining the exceptions filed to the libel . and that the admiralty court was without jurisdiction.
The libel relies upon appellee’s breach of contract to carry, store, and deliver the wheat in like good order and condition as when received. It charges a breach of a maritime contract. Dittmar v. Fred. Starr Contracting Co. (C. C. A.)
The appellant argues that the contract is maritime and the subject of admiralty jurisdiction. A contract to be “ ‘wholly maritime,’ means that the principal subject-matter of agreement gives character to the whole.” The Ada (C. C. A.)
“Evidently the whole controversy could have been disposed of in an action at law, but the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty is confined to maritime subjects. It cannot, having obtained jurisdiction, dispose of non- ' maritime subjects, for the purpose of doing complete justice, after the manner of courts of equity, nor can it distribute funds in its possession, as do courts of equity and bankruptcy, among all creditors, preferred and general. Its power to- dispose of the proceeds of a vessel, though it extends to the payment of nonmaritime liens, after maritime liens have been satisfied, does not extend to claims in personam or of general-creditors, except so far as to pay over any surplus to the owner.”
In The Richard Winslow (C. C. A.)
“Unquestionably there was here a contract for carriage by sea, and that contract was maritime in its nature. But there was joined with it a contract with respect to the cargo after the completion of the voyage that was in no respect maritime in its nature. If as Judge, now Mr. Justice, Brown observes in The Pulaski [D. C.]33 F. 383 , the storage were a mere incident to the transportation, the entire contract would be held to be maritime, and within the admiralty jurisdiction. But here the contract for holding the com in storage did not concern navigation. It could not take effect until after completion of the voyage, and had no relation to further, transportation .of the cargo by the vessel. It was to be performed at a time when the vessel was not engaged in commerce or navigation, or in preparation therefor. It was merely a contract for winter storage, and was no more maritime in its nature than the nonmaritime contracts for winter wharfage. * * * The reason is that such service does not pertain to the navigation of a ship, nor assist a vessel in the discharge of a maritime obligation.”
These bills of lading embody a dual contract, one for transportation and the other
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for storage, and a breach of that contractual obligation which is nonmaritime may not be the subject of a suit in admiralty. The Pulaski (D. C.)
When the cargo was moved in the spring for unloading, the relationship of that of warehouseman was not changed so as to constitute a maritime undertaking. The contract, being partly maritime and partly non-maritime, did not confer the right to invoke maritime jurisdiction under the circumstances here existing. The Ada, supra. The Jungshoved (C. C. A.)
“It is true that the mere fact of this agreement being embraced in the charter party would not of itself give it the character of a maritime contract; but its relation to the other stipulations of the charter party may be such (and, we think, appears to be such) as to connect it with the contract into which the parties were entering,- — a contract of an undisputed maritime character, — and in such a manner as to authorize the parties to apply to a court of admiralty to inquire into any alleged breaches of this stipulation.”
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See New Bedford Co. v. Purdy,
The principle of the eases of The Pulaski, supra, and The Richard Winslow, supra, has long settled the rule of obligation under a contract involving both carriage and storage during the winter months on the Great Lakes. No authoritative decision has been called to our attention which requires our refusing to follow these authorities. The facts before us for consideration do not differ materially from those considered in these cases.
The decree is affirmed.
