219 F. 378 | 1st Cir. | 1914
Lead Opinion
This action was brought by the Southern Pacific Company, a Kentucky corporation, against the Fore River Shipbuilding Company, a Massachusetts corporation, in the District Court for the District of Massachusetts, to recover damages for an alleged breach of a contract of guaranty as to the speed and coal consumption of a steamship which the defendant contracted to build and sell to the plaintiff for use in its transportation service between the ports of New York and New Orleans, and for certain sums of money alleged to be due for work and labor performed and expenses incurred at the defendant’s request. The declaration as originally drawn contained 20 counts. Since then the plaintiff has waived counts 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 17, 18, 19, and 20; that part of count 3 relating to damages for delay in the completion of the ship prior to its original delivery, and for time required to substitute new boilers; and that part of count 2 relating to expenses to be incurred for new boilers. No question is raised as to counts 5, 7 and 8, upon which verdicts were directed for the plaintiff.
The first count reads as follows;
“And tbe plaintiff says that on or about the 14th day of July, 1905, the defendant entered into a contract in writing with the plaintiff, of which a copy is hereto attached, marked ‘A,’ whereby the defendant, in consideration of the sum of $1,000,000, to be paid by the plaintiff in installments, as therein provided, agreed to build for the plaintiff, in accordance with certain plans and specifications, a steamship, to be fitted with twin screw Curtis marine turbine engines and water tube boilers, and to deliver the said steamship, complete and ready for use, at one of the plaintiff’s piers in the port of New York, within 20 months from the said 14th day of July, 1905, the date of the execution of said contract, or as much sooner as possible.
“And in and by the fourth clause of said contract the defendant agreed and guaranteed that the said steamship, when constructed in accordance with said plans and specifications, should show an average speed of 10 knots*380 per hour, In ordinary weather, under such, management as should be agreed' upon by the parties to be proper, on a displacement not exceeding 10,000 tons on sailing, on a round trip between New York and New Orleans, between the points of sea departure at each port, and further agreed and guaranteed that the total coal consumption for the engines, including auxiliaries, in making the above-named speed, under the said, conditions, should not exceed an average of seven tons of coal per hour, of a quality equal to the Clearfield, Berwind-White, or Cumberland, containing not less than 14,000 British thermal units per pound; and it was provided, further, that the defendant should have the right to have an engineer of its own selection present in the engine room of the steamer on any such round trip,, who should have opportunity to observe and inspect the coal used.
“And in pursuance of said agreement the defendant constructed a certain steamship, which was named ‘Creole’; and the plaintiff paid to the defendant, pursuant to the provisions of said contract, in installments as therein provided, the sum of $900,000, the last installment of $100,000 not being payable until after the plaintiff should accept said ship, which the plaintiff never did because the said ship failed to conform to the requirements of said contract as regards speed and coal consumption; and the defendant, from time to time, after delivering said ship to the plaintiff, made various changes in her propellers and other machinery, in attempting to make her conform to the said requirements as to speed and coal consumption, but without success.
“In order thoroughly to test the said ship as originally completed, and also as altered from time to time by the defendant, the plaintiff allowed the said ship to make 14 round trips between New York and New Orleans under the conditions named in said contract; but the said steamship always failed to make more than an average of about 13% knots an hour, while, on the other hand, her coal consumption always greatly exceeded the contract requirements, so that the plaintiff was put to great loss and damage, and will be put to still further loss and expense, in order to make said steamship serviceable and profitable for the business for which she was intended.
“And the plaintiff says that, by reason of the breach of said agreement and guaranty on the part of the defendant, the plaintiff has sustained damages to the amount of $600,000, and the defendant owes the plaintiff said amount.”
The second count is like the first, with the exception that the concluding paragraph reads as follows:
“And the plaintiff says that by reason of the breach of said agreement and guaranty on the part of the defendant it became necessary for the plaintiff to employ other shipbuilders to remove the said engines and to substitute others, at the reasonable expense of $263,005; * * * and the defendant owes the plaintiff said amount, with interest' thereon.”
The third count is to recover damages alleged to have been incurred through loss of the use of the ship for 136 days, from August 9, 1907,, to December 23, 1907, while she was undergoing repairs after the first trip to New Orleans; for 121 days, from July 4, 1908, to November 4, 1908, while she was laid up and undergoing repairs after the tenth trip; for 182 days, from January 26, 1909, to July 28, 1909, while she was laid up after the fourteenth trip; and for 285 days thereafter, during which time the turbines were, removed and reciprocating engines were insalled at Cramp’s; and it is alleged that the value of the ship for charter in the market was $400 per day.
The fourth count is to recover the sums paid for insurance while the ship was laid up and repairs were being made during the periods above stated. '
The sixth and thirteenth counts are to recover the value of stores and equipment on the ship, alleged to have been used, lost, or destroyed
The sixteenth count is to recover the expenses alleged to have been incurred in returning the ship to the defendant’s yard at Quincy after the first trip, in protecting the plaintiff’s property on board die ship while she was in the defendant’s possession, and for traveling expenses of officers and men from New York to Quincy to take the ship back to New York after the repairs were made.
The case was originally sent to an auditor, who heard the parties and filed his report. Later it was set for trial before a jury. At the trial the plaintiff introduced the auditor’s report, and rested, and at the close of all the evidence, the court having made certain rulings as to the meaning of the guaranty clause in the contract, and having declined- to give certain instructions requested by the plaintiff relating to the same subject, the plaintiff excepting, and, in view of the rulings, not desiring to have the issue whether or not there had been a breach of the guaranty submitted to the jury, the jury were directed to return a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount found due by the auditor under the fifth, seventh, and eighth counts of the declaration, with interest from the date of the writ, to wit, for the sum of $2,948.-41, the same being for certain towage charges, the cost of shifting the propeller and the expense of the Diamond Shoals trip.
The plaintiff’s contention is that the words, “under such management as shall be agreed upon by the parties hereto to be proper,” mean that before a trial trip under the guaranty should take place over the designated route, the parties should agree upon the captain and chief engineer who were to take charge of the ship during the trip, and the number of subordinates, such as assistant engineers, firemen, water tenders, coal passers, and oilers, having due regard for the number ordinarily employed on service boats of this character and the accommodations provided on the ship, and that the chief engineer, as was customary, should select the subordinates; that the practical construction put upon the contract by the parties, as disclosed by the evidence, shows that they so understood the matter and endeavored to act accordingly in arranging the trips. In addition to this, the plaintiff contends that this provision of the contract also means that the parties, by agreeing in advance of a trip upon the men who were to officer the ship and the
The defendant, on the other hand, contends that the language of the contract as to this matter is ambiguous; that under the circumstances it would not be reasonable to suppose the parties intended an agreement should be made in advance of a trip that the management would be proper and the trial a fair one, without knowing or having the means of knowing that it was in fact so; that this provision really relates to and' was intended to mean that the parties should agree subsequent to a trip that the trial had been a fair one; and that, if they did not subsequently agree, then the trip would be of no consequence in determining the rights of the parties under the guaranty. It is this view of the contract that was taken by the court below in stating his rulings to the jury, and to which the plaintiff excepted. In his rulings the court, after stating the various contentions of the parties and reading from the contract the clause here in question, said:
“The guaranty from which. I am reading contains nothing express as to the time when that agreement shall be made. On the one hand, the Southern Pacific Company contends that the agreement means an agreement to be made before the trial trips are entered upon; and, on the other hand, the Fore River Company contends that it does not mean an agreement before the trip, that it does mean an agreement after the trip, and that it was open to the defendant to the Fore River Company, after having knowledge of the management on a given round trip, to claim that it was not proper. * * :S Taking the language of the guaranty just as it stands, therefore, there are different meanings which may be given to the contract. The parties have not made it clear by the terms which they have used in contracting just which of those meanings they intended. Under those circumstances, it is the duty of the court to settle the meaning, to determine the meaning, for the purposes of this case. * » * I have, therefore, determined the meaning to be that contended for by the Fore River Company — the meaning of the guaranty on these two points to be that contended for by the Fore River Company, namely, that ‘management’ means the actual handling of the vessel, and that an agreement regarding it was not an agreement to be made before the trial trips were entered upon, but afterwards. Now gentlemen, in view of those rulings, X- have been informed by counsel for the Southern Pacific Company, they do not claim that any agreement was made after the trial trips that the handling of the ship upon those trips was proper, and that in view of the rulings of the court, which I have indicated to you, which they do not accept — to which they object and to which they except for the purpose of ascertaining on appeal whether they are right or not — they do not now ask to have the issue whether or not there has been a breach of guaranty submitted to the jury.”
Now, it is apparent from the foregoing that the court ruled the word “management,” as employed in the guaranty clause of the contract, meant the actual handling of the ship on any given trip; that the agreement as to management there provided for was to be entered into by the parties subsequent to a trial trip; that there could be no recovery under the guaranty, without proof that after one or more of the
This being the situation, we are of the opinion that the ruling of the court was erroneous. The meaning of the contract as to this matter is reasonably certain, especially when viewed in the light of the conduct of the parties in their endeavor to comply with its terms before the trips took place, and that is that the parties intended by this clause of the contract to provide in advance, so far as they reasonably could, means whereby a fair trial or test of the ship’s ability to comply with the terms of the guaranty could be had, and that no test under the guaranty should take place unless the parties agreed before a trip was had upon the officers who should take charge of the ship, and the number of subordinates who were to work under them. This is the limit to which their express agreement as to management extends. The contract does not provide, as is sometimes the case, that the agreed management shall constitute a board of arbitrators to make tests and state results by which the parties shall be concluded, and contains no provision that the tests shall be fair. It does, however, provide for trial tests, and such being the case the law will imply an obligation that the tests called for shall be fair. Arkwright Mills v. Aultman Co., 145 Fed. 783, 76 C. C. A. 347. But it does not follow from this that the parties contemplated that an agreement subsequent to the trials was necessary in order to determine their rights under the guaranty, or that they would not be bound by the result, if the trips were made under an agreed management and were fairly conducted. There was evidence from which it could have been found that the parties agreed in advance upon the management of the vessel as herein defined, that trial tests were had under such management on which the ship failed to make the round trip at an average speed of 16 knots an hour or within the specified coal consumption, and that the tests were proper. The plaintiff, therefore, was entitled to go to the jury upon these questions, and should not have been required to show an agreement subsequent to the tests that they had been properly conducted.
The auditor has found and the evidence discloses that on all of the 14 trips that were made the ship failed to comply with the guaranty and to maintain an average speed of 16 knots per hour, to say nothing of the coal consumed, and that it did not equal the time fixed in the regular service schedules of the Southern Pacific Company on the last four trips, if it did on any. These facts do not seem to have been controverted at the trial. It further appears that, notwithstanding the repairs and alterations made to the ship after the first trip, the performance of the ship grew steadily worse until the end of the tenth, when she was laid off. A conference was then had in New York between Mr. Jungen, the manager of the Southern Pacific Company and Admiral Bowles, president of the Fore River Company, and other representatives of the two companies. At this conference Jungen informed Bowles that the ship had been laid off, and asked what he was going to do about it. Bowles replied that he was not going to do anything, that the failure of the ship was due to bad management, to inefficient and inadequate fireroom service, and to the use of salt and muddy water. To this Jungen replied that he (Bowles) had selected the guaranty engineer (for the last eight or nine trips), who had authority to select his own assistants and the whole fireroom crew, and if that was his attitude he wanted him to write a letter to the president of the Southern Pacific Company and state his case, that he (Jungen) would write a letter to the president telling him to call the guaranty of the Fore River Company, and that he would also recommend talcing out the turbines and putting-in reciprocating engines. Thereupon Bowles said they had better come to an understanding. A discussion ensued as to what could be done to make the ship good. It was then arranged that the ship should go back to the defendant’s yard at Quincy for repairs, that a forced or assisted draft should be installed in the fire-room, a vacuum augmenter should be added, and a more efficient screw installed. There was discussion as to whether the Southern Pacific Company would pay for the forced draft. Jungen declined to pay any.of the expense, on the ground that it was up to the Fore River Company to make good under the contract. Bowles finally agreed that •his company would “make good,” but in giving his testimony said that it was on the understanding that Jungen would accept the ship and put her on the line of the Southern Pacific Company, if she could make her schedule on a decent coal consumption. On the other hand, there was evidence that Jungen said he would recommend the acceptance of the ship, if she could make the schedule on a reasonable coal consumption, and the auditor finds the latter is the true version. Except as to the last proposition, the evidence of all the witnesses is in accord, and the only reasonable conclusion that could be drawn from the arrangement here presented is that the Southern Pacific Company agreed to forego any right it then had to enforce the guaranty for failure on the part of the ship down to that time to meet the contract requirements as to speed and coal consumption; that the Fore River Company agreed to make the repairs and alterations, and to forego any right it had to insist that the previous trips were not fairly managed; that past dif
The rights of the parties under the guaranty, not being dependent upon the success or failure of the trips prior to the eleventh, evidence in relation to them on a subsequent trial of the case will be of no consequence in determining the issues, and should not be received. But as their rights are to be determined by the success or failure of the trials that took place after the tenth trip, and as the contract contemplates an implied obligation that those trials should be fairly conducted, it will be open to the parties to show that on the subsequent trips the officers and men engaged were careful or otherwise in the performance of their duties, and that the trials were fair or unfair, as the case may be.
It is unnecessary to consider further the plaintiff’s exceptions to evidence. From what has already been said, it can be readily understood what was competent and what should not have been received.
The verdict ordered for the plaintiff, to the extent that it goes, is undoubtedly correct, and, although the judgment entered thereon must be reversed, no reason appears why the verdict should not be allowed to stand, so that it may be added to any further sum that may be found due the plaintiff.
The ship having failed on the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth trips to comply with the guaranty as originally drawn or as modified, at a subsequent’trial of the case it will be incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove (1) that the parties agreed in advance upon the management for one or more of the four above-named trips, and that they were made under such management; (2) that the failure of the ship to comply with the guaranty was due to its inability to fulfill the contract and not to the want of a fair trial; and (3) the damages it sustained.
The auditor has found against the plaintiff as to the other items of damage claimed in the various counts in the declaration, and, as the plaintiff does not insist upon them, we do not pass upon them.
It is understood that there is no disagreement among members of the court as to the construction of the contract; that the disagreement relates to whether the questions discussed are properly before the court on the exceptions taken by the plaintiff in error to the rulings of the trial judge.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, the case is remanded to that court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion, and the plaintiff in error recovers its costs of appeal.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I am compelled to dissent in this case. It is too important a case to be .disregarded in the particulars to which I call attention. The opinion of the court is based upon severed portions of the record, when everywhere it is properly understood that the whole of a record or of any instrument should be taken together, under the ordinary' rules of interpretation, by virtue of which various portions of any instrument or record are to be construed in the light of the context.
Quite early in the trial of the case the following colloquy between the court and counsel for the Southern Pacific Company occurred, namely:
“Mr. Morse: But your honor has not ruled that that was not what the parties agreed upon as proper management, and that is what we are contending for. We say that it was the clear intention of this contract, as expressed in the contract, that the parties should agree before each trial in regard to the management for that trial, and that having agreed upon that management then the Southern Pacific is no more responsible for the carelessness or the neglect of an individual.
“Dodge, J.: I understand you say that, but I have been obliged to rule that I cannot take it that way; that I must regard ‘management’ as meaning what was done, how the ship was actually handled during the trial trip.
“Mr. Morse: We have not so understood your honor. Do I understand, from that, that if an individual water tender or fireman failed in his duty, the Southern Pacific is responsible for it?
“Dodge, J.: Oh, no; I have not said that; I have not said that.
“Mr. Morse: Well, I don’t quite understand your honor’s ruling. We say that before each trial these parties' agreed upon the management under*387 which the ship should be sailed. Take, for instance, the ten trials, where Mr. Bowles himself selected the chief engineer, and paid for the chief engineer, and the ship was run under his management. Now, are we responsible for those if they were defects, if there were failures, on the part of men to perform their duty? Where is there room for any questions? The parties have agreed on the management; they have agreed that Jacobs shall be captain; they have agreed that Goudy shall be chief engineer; and they have agreed, as the evidence will show, that the chief engineer shall select his subordinates.
“Dodge, J.: I have not undertaken to rule in detail on exactly what ‘management’ shall moan during the trip; hut I have ruled that I cannot say that, because you put the ship into agreed hands at the beginning of a trip, therefore the whole management during that trip was agreed on as proper.
“Mr. Morse: It is pretty difficult to follow that statement. If the parties before the voyage say that ‘we agree that this ship shall be managed and operated in a certain way and by certain people, and that the results of that operation shall establish whether or not she performs the guaranty or not,’ we say that, after they have agreed to that, and that is an agreement that that shall be a test of the ship.
“Dodge, J.: I understand that, but I cannot quite see it in that way. Well, I will consider this until to-morrow morning.”
These extracts state clearly the issue involved as the case was made by the parties to it. The Southern Pacific Company claimed that, inasmuch as certain persons had been selected for the management of the ship during the trial trips, the selection was conclusive, to which proposition the Fore Fiver Company did not agree. The court, in substance, maintained that, inasmuch as the ship had been intrusted to the possession and custody of the Southern Pacific Company to make the trial trips, the duty of ordinary diligence which the law imposes on a bailee rested throughout on the Southern Pacific Company. Notwithstanding the particular expressions used by the court, this was its position throughout the subsequent case; and this was the real issue in controversy. When the court finally determined that it should so rule, the Southern Pacific Company abandoned the contest and relied upon its exceptions as to the law. On that issue the court was correct, and that overshot all other issued in the case.
Before understanding the case, it must all be examined from the departure point of the extract which we have made.