26 F. 708 | D. Or. | 1886
This suit was brought by the libelants, Alexander Balfour, Stephen Williamson, Bobert Balfour, Alexander Guthrie, and Bobert B. Foreman, doing business in this port as Balfour, Guthrie & Co., on November 22, 1885, to recover the possession of 16,868 bags of wheat, weighing 985,484 — 2,240 gross tons; and $4,600 damages for the non-fulfillment of a contract of affreightment thereabout. On reading and filing the libel, an order was made thereon, allowing process to issue as prayed for therein, on which the vessel and wheat were subsequently arrested. On January 4th,- the master, William D. Bogart, filed a claim of ownership for William W. Trombull. The case was argued and submitted on exceptions to the libel.
From the latter it appears that on October 3, 1885, William D. Bogart, master of the British bark Director, then lying at this port, made a charter-party with W. J. Burns, the local agent of the libel-ants, whereby he contracted to carry on said vessel, at 42s. 6d. a ton, a cargo of wheat to a port in the United Kingdom; that between said date and October 8th said vessel was laden by the libelants with the wheat aforesaid, consigned to their own order, for which the master signed two bills of lading, one of which was delivered to the libel-ants, and on November 14th remailed by them to said agent for re
The prayer of the libel is for due process against the vessel and the wheat, to the end that the former may be condemned and sold to pay said damages, with interest and costs of suit, and the latter delivered to the libelants free of charges or liens; and that the master be cited to appearand answer the libel, and the charter be annulled and declared void from the beginning.
The exceptions to, the libel are to the effect: (1) It “misjoins” a suit in rern against the vessel with a suit in personam against the master; (2) it “misjoins” a cause of suit fora breach of the warranty in the charter, and to avoid the same on account of the fraud of the master; (3) it does not show that the libelants are the owners of the wheat, or what, if any, interest or claim they have therein or thereto; and (4) the allegation in article 11 concerning the sale of the wheat is uncertain and insufficient.
As preliminary to the consideration of the questions made by these exceptions, it may bo premised that, in the absence of the owner or of his special representative, the master of the Director was authorized to make this charter-party, and to thereby contract, as he did, for the carriage of this wheat, and the fitness of the vessel for the service. The transaction was within the scope of his ordinary power, as master, while engaged in the navigation of the vessel in a foreign port, and the vessel and owner are each liable for his fraud or misconduct in making said contract, or the failure to perform tho samo. The Zenobia, Abb. Adm. 48; U. S. v. The Malek Adhel, 2 How. 234; Hurry v. Hurry, 2 Wash. C. C. 149; Ward v. Green, 6 Cow. 175; The Tribune, 3 Sum. 149; 1 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 276, note 3; 2 Pars.
In this case the performance of the contract *had commenced by the lading of the cargo, and the master, owner, and vessel are each liable thereon. Such being the case, can the libelant pursue his remedy against the vessel and the master, the one being in rem and the other in personam, in one suit ? The point has been contested in the American courts, and yet, but for a dictum of Mr. Justice Story in the case of Citizens’ Bank v. Nantucket S. B. Co., 2 Story, 57, I do not think there would be any question about it. That suit, which was brought against the company as a common carrier, wTas decided in its favor, on the ground that the carriage of bank-bills was not within the scope of its ordinary employment, and therefore it was not liable on the master’s undertaking in respect to the same; to which Mr. Justice Story added:
“In the course of the argument it was intimated that in libels of this sort the proceedings might be properly instituted both in rem against the steamboat, and in personam against the owners and master thereof. I ventured at that time to say that I knew of no principle or authority, in the general jurisprudence of the courts of admiralty, which would justify such a joinder of proceedings, so very different in their nature and character and decretal effect.”
It is said that Homer sometimes nods; and, taking this instance as an illustration, I think the same may be said of the learned and enlightened jurist who did so much in his day to establish and maintain the' admiralty jurisdiction of the American courts, unhampered by the arbitrary restrictions once imposed thereon, in England, by the jealousy of the common-law courts and lawyers, and to formulate for them a comprehensive and convenient rule of procedure.
In a suit for a breach of a charter-party or contract of affreightment, whether brought against the master, owner, or vessel, there is no substantial difference, either in allegation, proof, or decree. The liability in either ease grows out of the same facts, and the relief sought and obtainable is the same. The only difference is in the enforcement of the decree, and that is merely a difference in degree; the enforcement of the one given in the suit in rem being, in the nature of things, limited to the sale of the vessel proceeded against, while the one in the suit in personam may be enforced by an execution against the property of the defendant generally. This being so, every
In the consideration of this question in The Clatsop Chief, 7 Sawy. 274, S. C. 8 Fed. Rep. 163, I said:
“My own impression of the matter is with Mr. Benedict, when he says (Ben. Adm. § 397) ‘that whenever the libelant’s cause of action gives Mm a lien or privilege against the thing, and a full personal right against the owner, then lie may, by a libel properly framed, proceed against the person and the thing, and compel the owner to come in and to submit to the decree of the court against him personally in the same suit, for any possible deficiency.’ It is a question simply of procedure, and should be determined in ainly, if not altogether, upon considerations of fitness and convenience; and every argument drawn from this source is in favor of the joinder of the remedies in rem and in personam, whoever the person may be, and pursuing them in one libel, as one suit.”
By the admiralty rules, from 12 to 20, inclusive, adopted by the supreme court in 1845, and since the decision of the case of Citizens’ Bank v. Nantucket S. B. Co., supra, this subject is regulated in some of its phases, but not in the case of a suit for a breach of a charter-party or contract of affreightment. By these, in the case of a suit for wages, pilotage, or damage by collision, the libelant may proceed against the ship and master. The mode of proceeding allowed by those rules is considered to be exclusive of any other in the cases to which they apply. The Richard Doane, 2 Ben. 112. But, under admiralty rule 46, this court may proceed, in all other cases in this respect, according to such rule as may be deemed most expedient for the duo administration of justice. Under this authority the district courts have generally assumed that it is not only expedient, but according to tlio general rule of admiralty procedure, in a cause upon a contract of affreightment, to proceed against the master and the vessel in one suit; and, as I have already said., in my judgment, there is no doubt of the propriety and legality of so doing. The Monte A., 12 Fed. Rep. 336; The Zenobia, Abb. Adm. 52; Vaughan v. Six Hundred and Thirty Casks of Sherry Wine, 7 Ben. 507.
In the latter case the suit was brought on a hill-of lading against the goods, and the consignee thereof, to recover the freight thereon» The libel was excepted to on account of the joinder of the causes of action against the res and the person. Mr. Justice Blatchford, in disposing of the exception, says: “This exception is overruled. The cause of action arises out of a contract winch, if the respondents are liable on if, also binds the property. There is no good reason for not joining the causes of action,”
The second exception is not well taken. If a court of admiralty has jurisdiction of a suit to declare this charter-party void for the fraud of the master, leading to and inducing its execution by the libel-ants or charterer, the joinder, in such suit, of a claim for damages on account of such fraud, does not appear to be improper; but if it has not such jurisdiction, then the prayer for relief against such charter-
The third exception is also disallowed. The right to maintain a suit in admiralty for the possession of this wheat is not challenged by this exception; but the point made thereby is that it does not appear that the libelants have such an interest in the property as entitles them to maintain such suit at all. V/hen the possession of personal property has been changed by means involving a breach of a maritime contract concerning the same, or such possession is wrongfully withheld contrary thereto, the owner or other person'entitled, under the circumstances, to the possession thereof may maintain a suit in admiralty to obtain the same. In re 528 Pieces of Mahogany, 2 Low. 323, and cases there cited; 1 Kent, Comm. 379.
Upon the facts stated, the libelants, as against the vessel and the master, are entitled to the possession of the wheat, and may maintain an action to recover the possession of the same. True, it is not alleged in so many words, that the libelants are the owners of the wheat, though such is the fair inference from the facts stated. Nor is such an allegation necessary. It does appear that the libelants had the possession and control of the wheat, and placed it on board the Director for carriage to Europe, on their own account, under the stipulations of the charter-party, and that the master., in violation thereof, has discharged the same on the clock in this port. Except under special circumstances, a carrier is not allowed to dispute the title of the person who delivers goods to him for transportation. Rosenfield v. Express Co., 1 Woods, 131. In Ben. Adm. 476, a precedent is given of a libel in rem against certain merchandise, by the consignee thereof, for the possession of the same, that was withheld by the master of the vessel on -which it was brought from Liverpool to New York, on a disputed claim for average contribution. It is not alleged that any one owned the merchandise in question, but only that it was shipped by John Brown, of Liverpool, and consigned to the libelant. The master of the Director is not at liberty to question the libelants’ right to the possession of this grain contrary to or outside of the stipulations of the charter-party. Prima facie, they are the owners of it, and entitled to maintain an action to regain the possession thereof, which they appear to have parted with on the faith of the master’s representation that his vessel was “tight, stanch, and strong, and in everyway fitted” for the voyage she was about to undertake, when in fact she was not, and' he knew it.
This proceeding is, in substance, the same as the common-law aetion of replevin. A special property in the goods in question is sufficient to enable the plaintiff to maintain that action against any one but the general owner. Chit. Pl. 187; Dillenback v. Jerome, 7 Cow. 300, note; Smith v. James, Id. 328; Portland Bank v. Stubbs, 6 Mass. 426. In the latter case -the court held that the consignee of a cargo of salt shipped at Liverpool for Boston might maintain replevin
The fourth exception is taken to so much of the eleventh article of the libel as alleges that, by reason of the premises, the “libelants have lost a sale of the aforesaid cargo, negotiated and contracted in London, October 5,1885,” to their damage $4,000. This is not a statement of general damages suffered by the libelants on account of the failure to carry the wheat according to contract, but an attempt to state a case of special damages arising therefrom; and, considered in this light, I think it is clearly insufficient. For instance, the loss of this sale did not necessarily damage the libelants. That depends on circumstances concerning which the libel is silent, such as the subsequent rise or fall of the market; and if they were injured at all by the loss of the sale, there are no facts stated showing, or tending to show, how they were injured or the amount of the damages. In order to prevent surprise to the adverse party, special damages, or such as are not the necessary consequence of the act complained of, and are not therefore implied by law, must bo particularly stated. 1 Chit. Pl. 440-444; Squier v. Gould, 14 Wend. 160; Stevenson v. Smith, 28 Cal. 103.
This exception is allowed.