28 F. Cas. 1193 | D. Mass. | 1858
This is a libel on a-charter-party. Henry Jones & Co., merchants in Boston, chartered the brig Vincennes on the 22d of December, 1853, then lying in that port, for a voyage from Baltimore to Boston. The vessel was immediately to proceed to Baltimore, where the charterers agreed to furnish a full cargo, both under and on deck, of white-oak ship-plank, of the dimensions mentioned, with treenails for small stowage, and to pay freight at the rate fixed by the contract on the-delivery of the same at Boston. The lay days for loading were to commence two days after-the master reported his vessel ready to receive-
This suit is brought by the owner of the ship against the charterer, for a breach of the covenant of the charter-party. The first ground of defence relied on, is that the subject-matter of this suit has already passed in rem judica-tam in the replevin suit at Baltimore. The defense of res judicata, whether made in the form of a plea in bar, or offered as evidence on the general issue to avail this party, must be between the same parties, and the judgment must be on the same question or point that is sought to be litigated in the new action. That was a suit by Edwin A. Abbot against Allen Gatchel. The parties were not, therefore, the same. But it is said that though nominally different, there is a substantial identity between the parties to that suit and this; that Gatchel, as master of the ship, was the representative of the owner; and that between Abbot and Jones & Co., there was such a reía-tionship of principal and agent, that one was the legal representative of the other. But even admitting this to be the case, and this objection to be surmounted, there is another difficulty that appears to me to be not easily overcome. That was a suit by Abbot founded on the right of property, and claiming the possession on the ground of his proprietory right. Gatch-el pleaded, first, the general issue; secondly, a special plea denying the property to be in Abbot,' alleging that it was in Jones & Co., and he claimed the rights of possession as their agent. In a third plea he claimed property in himself. Issues were joined on these pleas, and found for the plaintiff. Nothing more appears by the record to have been necessarily decided in that case, than that the right of property was in Abbot. But this suit is founded on a contract, not touching the proprietory interest in the goods, but for their transportation; and the right of possession is claimed by the libel-lant under this as bailee; a right to detain and hold the goods by virtue of a lien for what was due to him on them under the contract of bailment. It does not appear that these rights of the libellant were necessarily decided in this suit. The pleading opens an entirely different ground of defence. But when a former judgment is relied on as a defence, whether presented as a plea in bar or as evidence only, I think it should appear from the record itself, that the very question, the precise title, which is the subject of litigation in the new action, was involved and decided in a former action; not that it might be, but actually was. The conelusiveness of a former judgment rests on this presumption, res judicata pro veritate ac-cipitur, Dig. 50, 17, 207, which all know is but a legal fiction. It may be true, but it may not, and is so far from being universally time that the uncertainty of judgment, the alea judiciorum, has passed long ago into a proverb. The thousands of overruled cases in the jurisprudence of the commercial law, collected in Mr. Greenleaf’s volume, it must be admitted give some countenance to the proverb. It appears to me, therefore, it is not enough to show that the title set up in this libel, might have been deerded in the replevin suit at Baltimore, but that the record itself, to be a bar, should show that it actually -was.
The second ground of defence is the unseaworthiness of the vessel. And this is presented under a double aspect. First, the in-competeney of the master, and secondly, the unfitness of the ship itself. There is no question but that by the covenant of the charter-party, the libellant was bound to have the brig manned- by a competent master and crew. The owner covenanted not only that the brig should be tight, staunch, and strong, but that she should be every way fitted for the voyage, and this includes a sufficient equipment, and a suitable master and crew. Abb. Shipp. The vessel began to receive her cargo on the 2d of January, and on the 6th, when a considerable part of the cargo had been taken in, Abbot informed tlie master that he should not complete her cargo on account of the unseaworthiness of the vessel. But from the evidence, the principal, if not the sole reason of his refusal at that time, was the difficulty he found in getting insurance on the cargo in Baltimore. The loading was suspended, the owners informed, and further negotiations were entered upon, and on the 20th this loading was recommenced, and again suspended on the 22d, and not resumed. Now, whatever objection to the master there might have been on the 6th and 7th, that was removed on the 10th by the
The whole question of seaworthiness, then, comes to the actual condition of the vessel. The owner covenanted that his vessel was tight and staunch, and if this is called in question on probable grounds it is incumbent on him to prove it. He only has the means of doing it as the ship is in his hands. In the matter of the seaworthiness of the ship, especially of the hull, her age is especially to be regarded. The Vincennes was an old vessel; she was built in 1833, but as is proved, and not questioned, of the best materials in the most thorough manner, with an extra amount of copper fastenings, and was considered as a first-class vessel for one of her tonnage. She was overhauled in 1843, and so thoroughly refitted that she was said to be rebuilt. In 1852-3 further repairs were made, but not so thorough as those of 1848, and in December, 1852, she was chartered for the voyage out of which this controversy has arisen. The age of the vessel, together with the want of a thorough overhauling after ten years’ use, and the possible incompleteness of the repairs last made, I think, impose on the owners pretty rigorously the burthen of proving her seaworthiness, especially in her hull. And it is accordingly to this point that the principal part of the large body of testimony taken in this case is directed.
I do not propose to go into a minute and critical examination of the whole of the voluminous deposition presented. They occupied four days in the reading, and a critical examination of each would draw out this opinion to an inconvenient and tiresome number of folios. I shall advert particularly only to thát part of the evidence which appears to me to have the most direct and stringent bearing to the question at issue. After the Vincennes was discharged of her cargo by the sheriff, she was taken by Mr. Cunningham, a commission merchant in Baltimore, and laden with a cargo of 150 tons of coal, and a few cords of wood on deck. She sailed for Boston on the 23d of February, and arrived there on the 13th of March, and delivered her cargo in good order. The counsel for the respondent objects to the admissibility of any evidence of voyages performed either before or after this charter, as proof of her seaworthiness at that time. I think that it is admissible so far as fair inference may be drawn from it, as to the condition of the vessel at that time, and no farther. It is very far from being conclusive, either way. This vessel performed the identical voyage for which she was chartered, and in the condition in which she then was, in weather at least of the ordinary security of that season, with a cargo that tried her strength quite as much as that for which she was chartered would, and she performed it well. This affords some, though not conclusive, ground for believing that she was fit for the vos'age. She arrived at Portland, her home port, on the 17th, and on the 22d was examined by three sworn surveyors, apoointed by the notary for that purpose. Two of the examiners were old and experienced ship-masters, who had been accustomed to examine vessels, and the third a master ship-builder, who rebuilt the vessel in 1843, and repaired her in 1852 and 1853. The depositions of all three were taken, and they all state that they examined her fully, that two planks of her ceiling were taken off, her timbers tried and found to be sound, and after as thorough an examination as they deemed necessary, they pronounced her seaworthy. This was immediately after she had performed the voyage for which she was chartered, with a cargo at least as tiying to her strength as a cargo of lumber. Without recurring to the subsidiary proof of the libellant by which this is fortified, this must be considered as satisfactory evidence of her fitness for the voyage, unless it is overcome by opposing evidence.
The evidence to control this, relied upon as much as any part of the proofs by the counsel for the respond »nt. is the deposition of Mr. Clockner, of Baltimore. He has been employed for many years by the insurance offices in Baltimore, to examine vessels in that port, and report their condition to the underwriters, and his reports are relied on as a guide in making insurance on vessels and their cargoes. His employment in such a trust is a sufficient warrant of his good character and reliability. These examinations he makes and delivers to all the offices in weekly, printed reports. Two of these he has annexed to his deposition, one made March 26th. 1853, and one January, 1854. In both these, the Vincennes is marked A 2Vá. In his system of marking, he divides vessels into five classes, and in both these reports this vessel is put in the fourth class. In his deposition, he says, without qualification, that a vessel marked in the fourth class, is deemed fit to cany a load of lumber, and that one in the fifth class, the lowest insurable, is fit to carry such a cargo, if not heavily laden. The last of these reports was at the time when this controversy arose. After the report of Jan. 7th, Clockner was employed by Mr. Howell, president of one of the offices, to make a special examination of this vessel, why, he does not state, but probably it had some relation to the insurance of the cargo. On the second examination he made a private report to Howell that she was unseaworthy. The reason of the difference between his general and his private re
In connection with the deposition of Clock-ner, ought to be mentioned that of Capt Hubbs, of Portland. He is an examiner for the Ocean Insurance Co. in that place, and he says that he examined the Vincennes after she was repaired by Dyer in 1852, and that he thought the repairs were insufficient to render her seaworthy. The opinion of Capt. Hubbs would carry with it more authority, but for the fact that she was marked in the books of that company, of which he was then, I think, a director, as an insurable vessel, in the grade of 2y2, the same note at which she was marked by Clock-ner, in Baltimore. Whatever doubts or suspicions may have been suggested by this defective timber in her bow - port, the soundness of which would be naturally preserved by its exposure to the air, but which was liable to be bruised by taking in timber, is, in my mind, overcome by direct proof, and I think of a satisfactory kind, that her timbers were in fact sound. No part of her frame was found detective in April, 185-t, four months after this charter, when she was fully laid open and sheathed by Dyer.
There is a large amount of testimony produced on both sides, more or less confirmatory of the positions assumed by the adverse parties, which I have not thought it necessary to comment upon in detail. When examined minutely it will be found to leave the case standing about where it rests in the deposition to which I have particularly adverted. On the whole evidence, I feel bound to say, that in my opinion the Vincennes was seaworthy. This unhappy bow port which makes so considerable a figure in many of the depositions, might not unnaturally awaken the suspicions of underwriters, and occasion some difficulty in getting insurance. They are a wary and cautious people. But the owners did not covenant that the charterer could get insurance. They covenanted only that their vessel was seaworthy, and thus insurable.
The measure of damages is, I think, correctly stated by the counsel for the respondent. It is the difference between the freight received for the cargo of coal and wood, and what would have been the freight received on such a cargo of lumber as the master stipulated for in the charter-party. The wharfage or any other port charges paid by the master, is, I think, covered by demurrage.
By the agreement of the parties, the lay days for receiving the cargo were to commence two days after the brig was reported to be ready, and that then the cargo should be delivered as fast as the crew comd receive and stow it. and for every day’s detention by the default of the charterer, twenty dollars a day to be paid by him. The loading was begun on the 2d ot January, and continued to the Oth, then it was suspended, and recommenced on the 20th. for two days. The brig was then about half laden. I think that fourteen days ought to be allowed for receiving a cargo of lumber, and being prepared to sail. This time the vessel must spend to earn the freight of the lumber, and as that by the decree is allowed, these fourteen days should be deducted from the period of detention. This would carry the time to the 16th of January. The brig was redelivered to the master after the replevin suit was ended, on the 16th of February. This will leave thirty-one days demurrage, and will amount to $620.
The case will be referred to an assessor to ascertain the amount of freight actually received for the coal and wood, and also what would have been the freight of such a cargo of lumber as the charterer agreed to furnish, and rite difference added to the damages, will be the damages with interest from the time of the delivery of her cargo of coal and wood at Boston.