10 F.2d 708 | 2d Cir. | 1926
(after stating the facts as above). Consideration of the apostles does not lead us to add much to the opinion of Ward, Circuit Judge, in the court below. The principal question is wholly of fact, viz.: Why did the mast break?
The original libel asserts the charterers, while “shifting a heavy log,” did the work so badly as to break the mast; i. e., impose undue strain thereupon. There is no doubt that the immediate cause (that nearest in point of time) for the breaking was the catching of one log against another, as the charterers’ stevedores were tiering or stowing in the hold the logs they had hoisted out of the water alongside. What happened is graphically told by the second mate, testifying for libelant:
“You see, the two winches were going full speed, and when one log butted up against the other something had to go, and, as none of the ship’s gear went, the mast went.”
The fault imposing responsibility for resulting loss must have been the act of charterer’s agents (stevedores) in loading too heavy logs, in permitting the logs to jam, or in running the winches improperly, or the default of owner in failing to furnish a proper mast.
As to the weight of the log, the direct evidence is too widely variant to be of value; but we believe, on the evidence of Garmey, an engineer expert for libelant, that the log was not unduly heavy, because no stevedores would have handled a comparatively heavy weight with a “single runner” fall, which was admittedly being used.
As to the handling of the winches, which is now the main complaint of libelant, we agree with the lower court that the absence of all record of contemporaneous complaint in the log, and in the report of damage compiled by a Lloyd’s surveyor, brought from Bluefields by the master immediately after disaster, is persuasive that the stevedoring was up to whatever was the local standard of excellence. We only add, on the subjects of winch management and stowage, a remark of the second mate, who seems to have supervised the handling of incoming cargo.
He was asked whether there was anything improper “in the way they were stowing the logs. A. No; nothing improper about the way they could stow them, unless they had more gear. ® * * As far as I know, that is the only way they could stow them in the hateh. Q. Especially with the gear they had? A. Just exactly.”
The gear was for the most part the ship’s. What fully satisfies us that there was no dereliction of duty on the charterer’s part is the report of the Lloyd’s surveyor, who came 90 miles to examine the vessel while she still lay off Prinzapolea. This man concludes his report thus: “To the best of my knowledge and belief, in my opinion, most, if not all, of the above damage was caused from loading this present cargo of mahogany logs, owing to ship having to load out in open sea and weather being more or less boisterous and rough.” And the master joined in and signed this document.
If at that time there had been any attribution of damage to careless winch running, it would have appeared in this report; and we think it an afterthought.
The question remains whether the mast was weak. On this point we need not repeat what was said below. We add the following: The metal that broke had been in place nearly 20 years, and that is about the life of a mast. The mast, after the ship had been scuttled for some time, had been repaired, and indeed renewed, to within about one foot of the place that broke. It is impossible to resist the belief that corrosion by immersion was riot sufficiently corrected.
Further, we reject, as did the court below, the idea that, because the charter party limited the required capacity of the ship’s gear to three tons, there was a corresponding limitation on the mast strength. Such a mast literally would not hold itself up in heavy weather. The owner was bound to furnish a mast reasonably strong for the contemplated ship’s purposes. Nothing more definite can be found by implication (there is no other way) in this charter.
Libelant’s expert witness thought that such a mast as described would endure a strain of 15 to 20 tons, or, said another witness, 9 to 12 tons. But the breaking strain of such a wire rope as was being used is between 11 and 12 tons. The rope held, and the mast went; the rolling of the ship, to be sure, especially accentuated strains on the mast, but the weight at the end of the fall was certainly insufficient to cause any danger to well-found apparatus. As the second mate said, something had to go; of course, the
We agree with the opinion below on all the other points there touched on.
Decree affirmed, with costs.