2 F. 401 | E.D. Mich. | 1880
Upon the argument of this case I was satisfied, from the correspondence of the parties, that a legal contract of affreightment had been made, but that nothing had ever been done by the propeller toward its execution. The boiler was never laden upon the propeller, nor delivered to any one having authority to receive it on her behalf. The question of jurisdiction was reserved.
There is an abundance of dicta to the effect that the obligation of the cargo to the ship, and of the ship to the cargo, does not arise until the cargo or some portion of it has been laden on board, or at least legally delivered to the vessel, but no case directly in point has yet been decided by the court of last resort.
Whatever be the rule with regard to contracts of affreightment, which are purely executory, it must now be considered as settled that if the ship enters upon the performance of its work, or any step has been taken towards such performance, the ship becomes pledged to the complete execution of the
Prior to the decisions of the supreme court in the case of The Freeman, 18 How. 182, and The Yankee Blade, (in Vanderwater v. Mills,) 19 How. 82, the question of jurisdiction in the cases of executory agreements was unsettled, and even those cases cannot be said to have definitely fixed the measure of liability. They seem rather to have announced in general terms a doctrine from which the supreme court has not as yet shown any disposition to recede.
The question does not seem to have been settled in England, although in the case of The City of London, 1 Wm. Robinson, 88, Dr. Lushington was disposed to concede that “if a seaman is engaged on board a vessel, and the owners think fit to abandon the voyage for which the seaman has been engaged, he would not be entitled to sue in admiralty for his redress, but must seek his remedy at common law, by an action on the case.” This is the only intimation I have found upon the subject in the English admiralty, probably owing to the fact that it had no jurisdiction over contracts of affreightment until recently. The case of The Schooner Tribune, 3 Sumner, 144, decided by Mr. Justice Story,
The case of The Flash, Abbott’s Adm. 67, was very similar. The master of a New York vessel contracted at the port of New York to transport a cargo across the East river to Brooklyn. He took a part of the cargo on board, but afterwards refused to take on the residue or to deliver that already laden. It was held that an action in rem would lie, both for the refusal to receive on board and the refusal to deliver. While a portion of the cargo was actually laden on board, the court apparently sustained the jurisdiction (page 70) upon the authority of the master to contract for the employment of the vessel, and upon the general doctrine of the maritime law that the vessel is bodily answerable for such contracts of the master made for her benefit. In the ease of The Pacific, 1 Blafceh. 569, the libellant had contracted for a passage to California; had prepared for the voyage at considerable expense, went to New York at the time appointed for sailing, and found that the accommodations were not such as he had bargained for,
All of these cases were prior to those of the Freeman and Yankee Blade. In the case of The Freeman, 18 How. 182, the question arose as to the liability of the ship for contracts made upon the faith of fraudulent bills of lading given by the captain for property purporting to have been shipped on board. In delivering the opinion Mr. Justice Curtis observed: “The law creates no lien on a vessel as security for the performance of a contract to transport cargo until some lawful contract of affreightment is made, and a cargo is shipped under it.” The case did not call for this opinion, and it must be considered as a dictum. At the same time it has been repeated so often in the same court, and has been so often acted upon as the doctrine of that court by courts of inferior jurisdiction, that it is difficult to say that it must not now be
Since these eases were decided I have found none in which the courts have sustained a libel upon a purely executory contract except that of Oakes v. Richardson, 2 Lowell, 178, which was in personam. In Rich v. Parrott, 1 Cliff. 55, Mr. Justice Clifford, in alluding to these cases, intimated the opinion that if the master or owner refuses to perform his contract, or for any other reason the ship does not receive the cargo, tho charterer has no privilege or lien on the ship for such a breach of contract by the owners, but must resort to his personal
In the ease of The General Sheridan, 2 Benedict, 294, Judge Blatchford refused to sustain an action in rem to recover damages occasioned to the charterer by the refusal of the vessel to proceed under her charter, basing his de
Prom this review of the cases it will be seen that, with the exception of the dictum in the case of the Williams, there is no authority for saying that a court of admiralty has jurisdiction in rem for the breach of a purely executory contract. There is reason as well as authority for the proposition. If the owner of a cargo has a privilege upon the vessel for a breach of his contract, the vessel would be entitled equally to a lien on the cargo for a refusal of the owner to put it on board, and it might be seized upon the dock or anywhere else for the satisfaction of such lien. If the jurisdiction is sustained in this class of cases it ought also to include cases of contract to repair the vessel or supply her with stores, in which the material-man would be entitled to a lien, though nothing had been done under the contract. I find it impossible to say with Judge Emmons, in the case of The Williams,
The continental authorities are explicit to the effect that there is no privilege upon the ship until the goods are laden on board. Indeed, they seem to go further, and hold that even after they are shipped they may be withdrawn by the freighter at any time before the vessel breaks ground. By section 191 of the French commercial code, among the debts which are termed privileged are damages due to shippers for a failure to deliver merchandise which they have put on board, or for reimbursement of injuries suffered by the cargo through the fault of the captain or crew. By section 280 the ship, her tackle and apparel, the freight and the cargo, are respectively bound to the covenants of the parties. These sections are substantially repeated in the codes of Belgium, §§ 191, 280; Italy, §§ 285, 288; and Spain, §§ 596, 797.
In commenting upon these provisions Dufour observes, (1 Maritime Law, 325 :) “With regard to cases which give birth to a privilege in favor of the shippers it will be seen that by the Code they are limited to two, viz.: damages — First, for failure to deliver the merchandise shipped; second, for reimbursement of the damages suffered through the negligence of the captain or crew.” These are the same theories that obtain in the Consolato del Mare, as the foundation of the. privileges of merchants, and experience has not indicated that it is necessary to extend them to other cases. I believe, then, that I ought to add, with Valin, that this disposition is limited. Thus, although article 280 declares that the ship is bound to the performance of the charter-party, this obligation does not confer a lien in favor of the merchant, if the non-performance of which he complains -does not fall within one of the cases provided by our article, (191.) Valin cites as example, in this regard, the damages obtained by a shipper who, upon the occasion of the seizure of the ship or otherwise, has been obliged to withdraw the merchandise which he has put
Caumont, in his Dictionary of Maritime Law, title, “Armateur,” p. 234, § 54, says: “Article 280 of the Code of commerce is limited to cases specially provided for by article 191, either to damages due the shipper for failure to deliver the merchandise taken on board, or for injury done it by the negligence of the captain. Aside from these cases, and especially when no merchandise is laden on board, there is no room for a lien upon the vessel, although the shipper might obtain, by judgment, an allowance for damages for the non-performance of the contract of affreightment.”
See, also, 2 Boulay Paty Droit, Com. et Mar. 299, cited in The Yankee Blade, 90; 1 Hoechster et Sacre Droit Mar. 74. In 2 Malloy, c. 2, § 2, the law is stated as follows: “And, therefore, so soon as merchandise and other commodities are put aboard the ship, whether she be riding in port, haven, or any other part of the seas, he that is exercitor navis is chargeable therewith.
I think the law is too well settled to be disturbed. The libel must be dismissed.