16 F. 601 | S.D.N.Y. | 1883
T,he libel in this case was filed to recover the sum of $3,700 damages to 178 bales of linen rags, part of a consignment of 347 bales from Warsaw, Poland, which were shipped at Danzig on the bark Tommy, and brought thence to New York, arriving on the second of May, 1880. The testimony of the captain and mate and stevedore leaves no doubt that the rags were, on the whole, received on board dry and in good condition, although a few of the bales at that time required additional strapping, which was done by the captain’s direction.
The Tommy was a bark of 394 tons measurement, and of about 500 tons burden. The lower hold was stowed with 148 tons of old iron rails. Aboye these was stowed some scrap-iron, upon which was one tier of bales of the rags. The beams above were open. A temporary flooring was laid of plank, fastened together by cross-cleats riveted to the planks above and below. Upon this temporary flooring a trunk or bin was constructed about eight feet in width, running fore and aft along the middle of the ship, in which the rest of the scrap-iron was placed, and which, according to the captain’s testimony, reached to the upper deck beams. On each side of this trunk or bin the rest of the bales of rags were stowed, but did not reach, as the captain testifies, within three or four feet of the upper beams. The scrap-iron thus stowed amounted altogether to 239'tons. In the forward part of the ship, but not in contact with the iron, were 61 other bales of rags for other consignees; and this, with the iron, comprised the entire cargo, amounting to about 507 tons.
The vessel left Danzig on December 19, 1879, but meeting with heavy weather, cold, and ice, she put into Elsinore roads on January 11th, and on January 17th was towed into Elsinore harbor, where, on account of the floating ice, she remained until February 12th, when she sailed for New York, and after a voyage of 79 days arrived there on the second of May, 1880.
An ordinary passage is about 45 days. Her log shows a constant' succession of stormy weather after leaving Elsinore, and evidently a rough and trying voyage. Some 20 or 30 feet of her bulwarks were carried away on her port side, a number of her stanchions and her water-way seams more or less opened, from which she took in some water. Her injuries, however, do not seem to have been serious; the necessary repair was completed in from eight to ten days. She does
The respondents contend that the cargo was properly dunnaged, and properly arranged and secured, and that the damage is to be ascribed solely to the extraordinarily rough weather and the length of the voyage.
The bill of lading recites that the bales were received in good order and condition. At its close, however, is a clause in writing stating) “Not accountable for weight, contents, packing, marks, and damages.” Without claiming that the clause last named would exempt the vessel from the consequences of proved negligence, it is contended by the respondents that this clause does at least throw the burden of proof upon the libelants to show that the damage to the rags was caused by some positive acts of negligence on the part of the bark, (Vaughan v. Six Hundred and Thirty Casks Sherry Wine, 7 Ben. 506; 14 Blatchf. 517; The Pereire, 8 Ben. 301; The Invincible, 1 Low. 226;) and that the ordinary rule by which it is sufficient for the consignee in the first instance to show that the goods are not delivered in the same good order and condition in which they were received on board, (Clark v. Barnwell, 12 How. 272; The T. A. Goddard, 12 Fed. Rep. 174, 177,) does not apply under this clause in the bill of lading.
The libelants claim that the context in the clause referred to shows that the word “damage,” like the words “marks, contents, weights,”
For so much of the damage as came from the last-mentioned cause the respondents have, I think, sufficiently shown that the ship is not responsible, and that it arose from the perils -of the sea during her long and tempestuous voyage. The Burswell, 13 Fed. Rep. 904.
The other three causes of injury are such as, in my judgment, the ship was bound to guard against, but which she did not prevent through negligence in insufficiently securing the dunnage and the trunk or bin containing the scrap-iron.
On the part of the libelants it was contended that the arrangements whereby the scrap-iron was stowed in a central bin with bales along-side in the wings, and also over the bales in the hold, was, in itself, faulty and improper, through the liability of rust to sift through, and of the iron in the bins to break loose. Several witnesses for the libelants testified to this fact, while others for the respondents testified that it was a proper arrangement, and one or two even state that it was proper even if the bin was unfastened. For the proper trim and to prevent too great stiffness in the bark, it was probably necessary in this ease that a portion of the iron should be stowed between-decks. This might doubtless have been done with equal safety to the ship, and with greater safety to the rags, by constructing bulk
The trunk or bin in which the scrap-iron was placed between-decks is not satisfactorily described by any of the respondent’s witnesses. The carpenter of the ship was examined shortly after her arrival, and ho testified explicitly that this bin was formed of planks or boards, which he sawed at the request of the mate, and which were placed edgewise, one upon another, and resting against the bales stowed along the wings of the ship, and were not nailed or fastened together. A number of witnesses who had taken part in the loading of the vessel at Danzig were examined on commission some two years afterwards, some of whom state that these planks forming the bin “were made fast and stanchioned to the side of the ship.” There is no explanation of the precise mode in which this was done, and it is so indefinite as not to be very intelligible, and would seem to be much less trustworthy than the statement of the carpenter given shortly after the ship’s arrival.
It seems to me self-evident that if the scrap-iron was brought up to the beams, as the captain states, and from three to five feet above the level of the bales stowed on each side of it, the bin or trunk which
There is some reason to doubt whether, in fact, the trunk or bin containing the scrap-iron came up to the upper beams, as is stated . in some of thb respondent’s testimony; and whether the scrap-iron, after being filled into the trunk as high as the bales on each side, was not stowed directly on the top of the bales. The testimony of jihe carpenter that the planks were simply placed on each other edgewise against the bales, and about on a level with them, would well agree with this supposition; and his testimony showed no way in which the planks forming the bin could be kept in position above the bales. Moreover, shortly after the unlading commenced, one of the libelants, on visiting the ship and seeing the iron scattered over the top of the bales, inquired of the first mate how that happened; to which he answered, in substance, that petroleum barrels had been expected, but that to avoid being frozen in the vessel did not wait for them,, and that the scrap-iron was, therefore, put on top of the rags, as they had no idea that the iron or anything could damage the rags; which would seem to indicate that he was not aware of any objection to putting scrap-iron directly upon the bales. The same mate received the cargo at Danzig, and in general attended to the stowage; and it appeared also from the evidence of the witnesses there that none of those who took part in stowing this cargo had ever stowed a cargo of rags and iron before, or were practically acquainted with the proper mode of stowage. It is not improbable, therefore, that a portion of this scrap-iron may have been originally stowed directly upon the rags.
The conversation of the mate, above quoted, was objected to by the respondents, on the ground that it was incompetent; but by long-settled usage the first mate is the officer of the ship whose special duty it is, and not the captain’s, to supervise the receipt and loading, as well as the unlading of the cargo. He is the agent and representative of the owners of the ship in that special business. Upon the ordinary
I have not, however, decided this branch of the case upon that ground, but upon the assumption that the iron when loaded was carried up in the bin to the upper beams, and n'ot spread out upon the rags at all. Not only the carpenter’s testimony, but the weight of the other evidence, shows that the bin thus made was insecurely constructed, and that the vessel should, therefore, be hold liable for the resulting damage.
The same must be said with regard to the dunnage along the side of the ship. The testimony was contradictory in regard to the amount of dunnage used; but, whatever was the amount actually used, it appears, not only from the libelants’ witnesses, but from several on the part of. the respondents, that in many places which were examined or noticed, there was no dunnage standing along the side of the vessel when the ship arrived. The dunnage used in the wings consisted of sticks of fire-wood or petroleum wood set up endwise. Where not seen, it is claimed that it had fallen down in the rough weather; but I do not find any satisfactory evidence of care taken to guard against this liability, or any proof that the dunnage along the sides of the ship was attempted to be fastened securely. Engelke, one of the claimant’s witnesses, says it was not fastened at all. Mere general statements that the dunnage was well done, is of little value against proof of specific acts of neglect. The omission to fasten the dunnage securely to prevent its falling in rough weather, was negligence which exposed the bales to contact with the sea-water along the sides of the ship as she rolled from side to side, and necessarily caused rotting in consequence, for 'which the ship should, therefore, be held liable.
A reference should be ordered to take proof of the damage arising through the contact of the bales with sea-water at the sides of the vessel, and also from the contact of the bales with the iron, and from iron rust, for which the libelants are entitled to judgment, with costs.
The injury from sea-water taken in through the water-way seams and falling upon the bales between the decks, for which the ship is not responsible, must have been no inconsiderable cause, and was probably the sole cause, of the rot among the bales botween-decks.