195 F. 596 | S.D.N.Y. | 1912
This is a suit in admiralty brought by a Norwegian corporation, the owner of the Norwegian ship Ingrid, and by the captain of the ship, to recover for damages caused by an explosion which took place February 1, 1911, at the end of the pier at Jersey City at which she was lying. The original suit was brought against the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey and the E. I. Du Pont de Nemours Powder Company, as respondents. The Railroad Company, by petition, in analogy to proceedings under the fifty-ninth rule, brought in as a party respondent James Healing, the owner of the steam lighter Katherine W. At the time of the explosion the Ingrid was lying on the south side, and a short distance from the end, of Pier 7, in the freightyard of the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, at Communipaw, Jersey City. The pier had upon it four railroad tracks. The Ingrid was unloading cargo into a car on the track nearest her. On the northernmost of the four tracks, on February 1st, was standing a line of about 11 freight cars. The most easterly of these cars, near the end of the pier, was car No. 91442 of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad. This car arrived at Communipaw on January 25, 1911, and had been placed on the pier on January 26th. It originally contained 670 cases of dynamite, shipped by the respondent the Du Pont Powder Company at Kenvil, N. J., under a bill of lading which consigned the shipment to the shipper at Communipaw. Three hundred of the cases hád, in fact, been sold and were being shipped to Carlisle, Crocker & Co., of Montevideo, South America, and were marked with that address. Arrangements had been made that they should be forwarded upon the steamship Inveric, which at the time the shipment was forwarded from Kenvil was expected to sail about January 26th. After the arrival of the cargo at the pier at Jersey City, the 370 cases which were not addressed to Carlisle, Crocker & Co., were removed from the car, some on the 26th and some on the 28th of January. The remaining 300 cases remained in the car. The Inveric postponed sailing from day to day. It is the custom of steamships taking high explosives to take them on board after the rest of the cargo has been loaded, just before sailing. The Powder Company had a contract with James Healing, the owner of the steam lighter Katherine W., to carry explosives shipped by it from the cars to vessels upon which they were to be shipped, or to other places about the harbor. Notice was given to Healing on January 26th. to be ready to transfer the 300 cases to the Inveric as soon as she would be ready to receive them. The date, of sailing was postponed from day to day until notice was received on January 31st that the Inveric would sail the next day, and in accordance with such notice the Katherine W. came to Pier 7, and moored on the north side of the pier, opposite car No. 91442, about
*600 “The person who, for his own purposes, brings on his hand or collects or keeps there anything likely to do mischief if it escapes, must keep it at his peril, and, if he does not do so, is prima facie answerable for all the damage which is the natural consequence of its escape.”
This doctrine has not been generally adopted in this country. It has been expressly repudiated in New Jersey (Marshall v. Wellwood, 38 N. J. Law, 339, 20 Am. Rep. 394; O’Hara v. Nelson, 71 N. J. Eq. 161, 63 Atl. 836), in New York (Losee v. Buchanan, 51 N. Y. 476, 10 Am. Rep. 623), and in many other states. Some of the earlier authorities in this country held in the case of gunpowder and similar explosives substantially the doctrine of Rylands v. Fletcher; that is, that, if they exploded and did damage, the owner was responsible, without proof of negligence, on the same ground as a man who keeps a wild beast is responsible if it escapes, and does damage. But the more modern authorities establish that the question whether the presence anywhere of a large quantity of dynamite or other dangerous explosive is a nuisance depends upon the question of its situation and surrounding circumstances. The attitude of the courts in modern times in respect to explosives is well stated in the case of Kleebauer v. Western Fuse Company, 138 Cal. 497, 71 Pac. 617, 60 L. R. A. 377, 94 Am. St. Rep. 62, as follows:
“Steam, powder, gas, electricity, dynamite, gunpowder are in daily use, and have become indispensable to the convenience of the public and for the public defense. Invention of man and advancement of science have enabled the manufacturer or dealer in these articles to provide the public or the individual with almost, if not altogether, absolute protection against danger or hurt from explosion. And, even had the manufacturing and storing of gunpowder in its early history been a nuisance at common law, the common-law definition of a nuisance would not include gunpowder at this day.”
“Property not removed by the party entitled to receive it within forty-eight hours (exclusive of legal holidays) after notice of its arrival has been duly sent or given may be kept in car, depot, or place of delivery of the carrier, or warehouse, subject to, a reasonable charge for storage, and to ear-*601 Tier's responsibility as warehouseman only, or may be, at the option of the carrier, removed to and stored in a public or licensed warehouse, at the cost, of the owner.”
The libelants claim that, under this provision of the bill of lading, 48 hours after the arrival of the dynamite at Communipaw the Railroad Company ceased to hold the dynamite as a common carrier, and held it as a warehouseman, and that the dynamite in the car was not any longer in course of transportation, but was held in storage by the Railroad Company. The dynamite originally in the car, other than the 300 cases which were to he sent to Montevideo, was removed within 48 hours after the arrival of the car. The evidence shows that, in the case of articles intended to be transferred to steamers for shipment to foreign countries, the Railroad Company usually allowed 10 days, free of demurrage, for effecting such transfer. The custom of all steamers in shipping explosives is not to put them down in the hold, which would obviously be dangerous, but to take them on board after the rest of the cargo is stowed. The Powder Company was under no obligation to remove the dynamite from the car until the expiration of the 10 days, provided it had reason to suppose in good faith from day to day that the steamer would be ready to receive it on the following day. Of course, if large quantities of dynamite were brought to such a pier, and left there an unreasonable time before being removed, it -would cease to be in course of transport ation, and might properly be held to be stored on the pier; but in mv opinion the evidence in this case does not establish any such condition. Although, at the time of the explosion, the dynamite had stood in the car at the end of the pier for six days, I think that it was still in course of transportation, and that the Railroad Company is not responsible for it as having it in storage,, but that their responsibility is that of any carrier engaged in transporting such an explosive.
Some reference is made in the libelants’ brief to the fact that the Ingrid was first moored at Pier 6, and began discharging cargo there, and was then removed, by direction of the Railroad Company, to Pier 7. The master at first protested against moving, but his objection was evidently based on his assumption that he would be put to the trouble and expense of moving. When the Railroad Company agreed to move the ship, the master acquiesced. I think the new position was not apparently any more dangerous than the old one, and I cannot see that the mere fact of this shifting of the ship affords any legal ground of liability.
Even if there were no act of Congress in existence, T think that there is nothing in the statutes of New Jersey or the ordinances of Jersey City which applies to this case. Those statutes and ordinances all apply, in my opinion, to the case of persons manufacturing explosives or storing and keeping them permanently in cities or dangerous places. There are expressions in these statutes and ordinances prohibiting any one from “having or keeping” explosives except under certain restrictions, hut it is apparent from the context that those expressions refer to having or keeping explosives on permanent storage, or for sale, or while manufacturing them. They do not apply in my opinion to a railroad company transporting them from one place to another.
This was an extraordinary accident, causing great loss of life and damage to property. But there is substantially no evidence how it occurred. I think, from the evidence, that probably something on the Katherine W. exploded first, and that that explosion detonated all the dynamite on the boat and in the car. The Railroad Company claims that the boiler in the Katherine W. exploded, but on the evidence in the case it is impossible to determine accurately whether the boiler of the Katherine W., or some of the dynamite which ^vas being delivered upon her deck, or the dynamite in the car, first exploded, or indeed how the accident happened. Every person near enough to the accident to nave given evidence as to how it occurred was instantly killed, and I cannot see from the evidence in this case any ground for holding that any of the defendants were liable in any respect. The Railroad Company’s men were not handling the dynamite. That was being done by the crew of the Katherine W. I see no ground for any criticism against the Powder Company. The proof is clear that the dynamite was well manufactured, that it was safely packed, and that it was properly stowed in the car. The fact that other dynamite in adjacent cars did not explode shows that the Du Pont Company is .generally careful and skillful in preparing dynamite for shipment. It came safely to Jersey City. The Powder Company, as the consignee, immediately notified Healing to have the Katherine W. in readiness to remove the dynamite as soon as the steamer Inveric was ready to take it. Nor can I see any ground oh which to hold Healing, the contractor, for the removal of the dynamite. He had been for a considerable time engaged in the business of moving explosives about the harbor. His crew were experienced and careful men. They went to the pier as soon as they were directed to go there, and proceeded to engage in removing the dynamite. There is no proof that they were careless in their work, or that any negligence ou their part caused the explosion. Undoubtedly they may have been negligent, and their negligence may have caused the explosion. But, as the explosion was so violent that it practically destroyed all the witnesses and evidence from which any accurate conclusion can he drawn as to what the cause of it was, it is impossible to hold the respondents liable. It is undoubtedly a hard case for the libelants, whose ship was completely wrecked, while lying
My conclusion is that there should be a decree for the respondents, dismissing the libel against the Central Railroad Company df New Jersey and the Du Pont Powder Company and the petition against •Healing, on the merits, with costs.