THE NATAL.[*]
DAMPSKIBS AKTIESELSK ORIENT
v.
W. R. GRACE & CO.
Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Nathan H. Frank and Irving H. Frank, both of San Francisco, Cal., and Duncan & Mount, of New York City, for appellant.
Goodfellow, Eells, Moore & Orrick, Hugh Goodfellow, and George Herrington, all of San Francisco, Cal., for appellee.
Before GILBERT, HUNT, and RUDKIN, Circuit Judges.
GILBERT, Circuit Judge.
From a consignment of 1,779 bundles of iron bars weighing 276,528 kilos, shipped by the appellee from New York to Buenos Aires, Argentina, by the steamship Natal, owned by the appellant, but under a voyage charter to R. P. Houston & Co., 71 bundles weighing 11,035 kilos were missing when the vessel discharged cargo at Buenos Aires, and were never delivered to the consignee. The bill of lading was issued by the charterer. At the time of the discharge, there was no delivery of cargo directly to the consignee, but as many of the iron bars of the consignment as arrived were, according to the rule of the port, discharged into the custom house in charge of the custom house authorities, and were not received by the consignee or his vendee until two or three months thereafter. *383 The owner of the vessel, the appellant herein, in its answer to the libel, alleged the appellee's failure to comply with the provision in the bill of lading that, in case any claim should be made against the carrier for loss or short delivery, such claim must be presented in writing at the office of the agents of said steamship at the port of discharge "within three days after the steamer shall have finished discharging," and that otherwise the loss should be deemed to be waived, and alleged that neither the libelant nor the consignee nor the holder of the bill of lading presented any claim in writing in accordance with that requirement, and that consequently recovery was barred. The vessel arrived at Buenos Aires September 11, 1917, and finished discharging her cargo September 18, 1917.
We cannot follow the court below in holding that the appellee waived the provision of the bill of lading as to notice of claim. Mere knowledge on the part of the carrier at the time of delivery that there is shortage in the cargo does not meet a requirement that within three days after delivery a claim for short delivery shall be presented in writing. The San Guglielmo,
The validity of a stipulation in a bill of lading that a claim for loss or damage must be presented within as short a time as three days after discharge of cargo, or other stipulated event or time, has been generally recognized. The Westminster,
The consignment here in question was to order for account of Enrique Wullf at Buenos Aires. Before delivery, the consignee had sold the iron to Portalis & Co. He received from Portalis & Co. a letter dated February 13, 1918, advising him that, after the discharge of the iron from the custom house, it was found that only 1,708 bundles had arrived, and inclosing a certificate from the carrier showing that fact. He testified that the letter gave him his first information *384 that the iron had been received, and that he forwarded the letter to the appellee in New York, requesting it to "make the corresponding collection." Vincente Carrao, chief of the unloading department at Buenos Aires, testified that the iron was discharged from the ship into the deposits of the custom house, thereafter to be delivered to the buyer upon the payment of duties; that the custom house did not permit persons outside to inspect or look after stored merchandise in government deposits; that on September 18th the carrier knew of the shortage of 71 bundles, and executed a certificate to that effect. To the interrogatory whether or not a written claim was presented at the office of the carrier or its agents at Buenos Aires within three days after the discharge of the cargo, he answered that no claim was presented within that time, and that the first claim that was presented was that of Portalis & Co. on October 18, 1917, for 71 bundles of bars. Captain Petersen of the steamship Natal, a witness on behalf of the appellant, testified that no claim for shortage was made to him or to the charterer's agents at Buenos Aires, but that such a claim was made against his company in New York about two months after the delivery of the cargo. To this testimony adduced by the appellant we think the presumption should attach that the claim so made was made in writing. For loss of goods shipped but not delivered the duty to give notice of shortage in this case rested upon the consignor. It was the party in interest and by whom the damages, if any, were recoverable. We are not persuaded that it was bound to have on hand at the port of delivery an agent to watch the tally of the discharged cargo as it went into the custom house. At that time the shortage was not known by the consignor or by the consignee or by the latter's vendee. The vendee presented the claim to the charterer's agents one month after the discharge, and presumably as soon as it ascertained the fact, and the consignor presented it to the charterer in New York two months after the discharge. In view of these circumstances, and the fact that the carrier had full information of the shortage and the extent thereof at the time of the discharge, and certified the same, and in view of the nature of the claim which is not for damages or injury to cargo, but for short delivery, we are not prepared to hold that the provision of the bill of lading prescribes a condition precedent, the failure literally to comply with which should defeat recovery, or that the claims which were made were insufficient.
The appellant contends that the steamship delivered all of the appellee's shipment of iron bars, and fulfilled her contract, citing James v. Standard Oil Co. of New York,
The decree is affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[*] Rehearing denied October 4, 1926.
