delivered the opinion of the court..-
Upon the hearing of an appeal from a decree of the District Court, Eastern District of New York, dismissing a libel, the' Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit certified to this court for decision, pursuant to § 6 of the judiciary act of 1891, the following questions:
1. Whether damage to the cargo of an apparently seaworthy ship, through the unexplained admission pf sea water, in the absence of any proof" of fault on the" part of the. officers or crew of the ship, is of itself a sea peril within the meaning of an exception in a bill of lading exempting the carrier from “The act of God .• .. . loss or damage from. . . . explosion, heat, or fire on board •. ... risk of craft, or hulk or transshipment, and all and every the dangers and accidents of the seas, rivers and canals and of navigation of whatever nature or kind.”
2. Whether the ship is relieved from liability in consequence \ of said exception?
The facts upon which the questions arose were thus stated in the éertificate:
The steamship Folmina sailed from Kobe, Japan, for New York with'a large shipment of rice on board in No. 3 hold, under a bill of lading which contained the exception set out in the first of the foregoing questions, and also a provision that the • ship “is not-liable for sweat, rust, decay, yermin, "rain or spiray.” "
*360 The rice was in good order when put on board, but when discharged in New York a large part of.it stowed on the starboard side of the hold was found damaged. The area of injury was downward from the first six tiers of bags.to the bottom of the hold, which was dry, forward from about the after end of the hatchway nearly to the bulkhead, and inboard about three- or four bags. The damage was caused by water and consequent heat.'
A majority of the court are satisfied that the damage was caused by sea water and that it-was not shown that the vessel encountered sufficient stress of weather to warrant the inference that it came in because of the action of external causes. There was.no evidence tending to show any negligence, fault or error on the part1 of the ship’s officers or crew; the cargo was well stowed and ventilated.
The Folmina was a steel steamship of the highest class in Lloyd’s register. Before starting for Japan she was in dry dock’ at New'York and was there surveyed by Lloyd’s surveyor. Some time before she had been in dry dock at -Cardiff, where some repairs were made to the rudder, rudder quadrant and a ventilator. The master testified to the general good condition of the steamer at the time she sailed from Kobe.
During and after the delivery of the cargo the main deck, the between deck, the pipes leading to or connected with No. 3 hold and the shell plating in the wing of No. 3 hold were carefully examined by the officers of the ship, by surveyors representing the libellants and their’ underwriters, and it was afterwards examined by competent and experienced surveyors representing both parties. The decks, hull, side plating and rivets of the ship were found to be sound, intact and free from leaks. No evidence (other than the mere circumstance that the damage was by sea water, if that be considered evidence) was found that "there had been leaks in part of the frame, structure, side plating, riveting, pipes or appurtenances of the ship, through which water might have reached that part of No. 3 hold where the damage was done. No adequate means of access of sea *361 water were found, nor any defect in the steamer which then appeared to be seaworthy.
The answer to be given to the first question will be fixed by determining upon whom rests the burden of proof to show the cause of the damage, when goods which have been received by a carrier in good order are by him delivered in á damaged condition.
As said in
Liverpool & Great Western S. S. Co.
v.
Phenix Ins. Co.,
“By the settled law, in the absence of some valid agreement to the contrary, the owner of a general ship, carrying goods for hire, whether employed in internal, in coasting, or in foreign commerce, is a common carrier, with the liability of an insurer against all losses, except only such two irresistible causes as the act of God and public enemies. Molloy, Bk. 2, c. 2, § 2; Bac. Abr.
Carrier,
A;
Barclay
v.
Cuculla y Gana,
And as observed in' the same case:
“ Special contracts between the carrier and the customer, the terms of which are just and reasonable and not contrary to public policy, are upheld — ;such as those exempting the carrier from responsibility for losses happening from accident, or from dangers of navigation that no human skill or diligence can guard against. . . .”
It was long since settled in
Clark
v.
Barnwell,
*363
The inability of the court below to determine the cause of the entrance of the sea water would imply that the evidence did not disclose in any manner how the sea water came into the ship. In other words, while there was a certainty from the proof of a damage by sea water, there was a failure of the proof to determine whether the presence of the sea water in the ship was occasioned by- an accident of the sea, by negligence, or by any other cause. Manifestly, however, the presence of the sea water must have resulted from some cause, and it would be mere conjecture to assume simply from the fact that damage was done by sea water that therefore it was occasioned by a peril of the sea. As the burden of showing that the damage arose from one of the excepted causes was upon the carrier, and the evidence, although establishing the damage, left its efficient cause wholly unascertained, it follows that the doubt as to the cause of the entrance of the sea water must be resolved against the carrier.
The Edwin I. Morrison,
So far as the second question is concerned, it does not propound a distinct issue of law,' but in effect calls for a decision of the whole case, and therefore need not be answered.
Chicago, B. & Q. Ry.
v.
Williams,
' The first question is answered -No, and the second is not answered.
