8 F. Cas. 668 | S.D.N.Y. | 1875
The libel in this case alleges that in November, 1873, at the city of Buffalo, the libelants shipped on board of the canal boat E. M. McChesney, then lying in the Buffalo creek or river, a navigable stream emptying into Lake Erie, about 15,000 bushels of oats, to be transported on said boat from Buffalo to the city of Mew York and there delivered to A. B. Gray & Co., the agents of the libelants, for a certain rate of freight then agreed to be paid by the libelants; that the boat proceeded on said voyage with said oats, and being detained by the ice in the canal did not arrive at the city of Mew York till the month of May, 1874, and then failed to deliver 3,300 bushels of the oats; and that the master of the boat has concealed the oats and converted them to his own use. The libelants claim damages to the amount of $2,145.
The answer which is put in by a mortgagee of the canal boat, as claimant, avers that this court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this suit, in that the boat was a canal boat employed in transporting freight on the Erie canal, between Buffalo and Albany, in the state of Mew York, and was so engaged, and between these points, at the time and on the occasion of the alleged loss and conversion set forth in the libel; that the waters of said canal are not within the ebb and flow of the tide and are not navigable waters within the legal acceptation and understanding of that term, and the said boat is not subject to the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of this court; that at the time the oats were shipped on the boat, and at the time the boat was .libeled and seized, and prior thereto, the claimant had a lien on the boat, of which the libelants had notice, arising from and by virtue of a chattel mortgage executed thereon for the original purchase-money thereof, on the 6th of May, 1873, for the sum of $2,467.50, by Samuel Beebe and Levi Beebe to one William Foster, of Cleveland, Oswego county, Mew York, and duly filed by him in the office of the auditor of the canal depart*ment of the state of Mew York, on the 8th of May, 1878 :
The bill of lading under which the oats were shipped calls itself, on its face, a “ bill of lading.” It is signed by the master of the boat. It says: “Buffalo, Nov. 10, 1873. Shipped by Yan Burén & Co., as agents and forwarders, in apparent good order, on board the canal boat E. M. McChesney, of Rome, Captain John O’Grady, the following described property, to be transported to the place of destination without unnecessary delay, and delivered to the consignees in like good order, as noted below. * * * All damage caused by the boat or carrier, or deficiency in the cargo from quantity as herein specified, to be paid for by the carrier and deducted from the freight, and any excess in the cargo to be paid for to the carrier by the consignee. * * * Received of Yan Burén & Co., shippers, $753, to be used in the transportation of above cargo-and in paying the expenses of running boat from Buffalo to New York, and for no other purpose whatsoever. * * * Order Geo. Ellison, care O. E.
I. As to the jurisdiction of the court. It is set up in the answer that the boat was a canal boat, employed in transporting freight on the Erie canal, between Buffalo and Albany, and was so engaged, and between those points, at the time of the loss and conversion of the oats; that the waters of said canal are not within the ebb and flow of the tide, and are not navigable waters, within the legal acceptation of that term, and that the boat is not subject to the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of this court. The implication of the answer is, either that the boat was wholly employed in navigating the canal, and so was not subject to admiralty jurisdiction, or was, at the time of the loss and conversion of the oats, in the waters of the canal, and so was not subject to such jurisdiction. But the contract of affreightment made by the bill of lading was for the transportation of the oats from Buffalo to New York by this boat, and the bill of lading expressly says that this boat is to run from Buffalo to New York. Of course she herself was to transport the oats in herself from Buffalo to New York, all the way and by water. She could not do so without going down the Hudson river from Albany to New York, although she was to go upon the waters of the canal from Buffalo to Albany. Moreover, the evidence shows that the oats were laden upon the boat in the Buffalo river, a navigable stream connecting with Lake Erie, and at some distance from the entrance of the mouth of the Erie canal into such river. In the case of The Ann Arbm\ in this court, before judge Ingeesoll, in December, 1854, a libel was filed against a canal boat, to recover the value of some butter alleged to have been shipped on board of her at Borne, New York, on the Erie canal, for transportation by her, by way of said canal and the Hudson river, to the city of New York. The court held that it was shown that all the butter which was shipped was delivered at New York, but went on to say: V It
By virtue of section 563 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, this cburt has exclusive jurisdiction of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, this pro
In the ease of The Eagle, in 1858 (8 Wallace, 15), it was held that the district courts have cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty jurisdiction upon the lakes and waters connecting them, the same as upon the high seas, bays and waters navigable from the sea. The effect of this decision was to hold that the admiralty jurisdiction, created by the constitution and conferred by statute on the district court, is the same everywhere within the United States, and that no distinction between tide waters and other navigable waters exist in that regard.
In the case of The Belfast, the contract of affreightment was for transportation between two places in the same state,-, and on a river which was navigable water of the United States. In the present ease, the contract was for transportation a short distance on a navigable river emptying into Lake Erie, and then on an artificial canal to Albany, and then down a navigable river 150 miles to the city of Hew York. It is a well known fact that a large commerce is carried, on between Buffalo and Hew York by boats, such as the one involved in the present case, which, to avoid transhipment of cargo at Albany, are towed from Albany to Hew York, in the-Hudson river, by steam tugs, they having been towed from-
In the case of The Montello (11 Wallace, 411), the question arose as to what was a navigable water of the United States, within the meaning of a statute requiring a steam vessel to be licensed, in order to transport merchandise or passengers on navigable waters of the United States. The water in question was the. Fox river, in the state of Wisconsin. The court said that the point to be determined was, whether the Fox river had such a connection with other waters as to form with
On these facts, the supreme court held, that although the Fox river, in its natural state could not be navigated throughout its entire length by steamboats or sail vessels, yet as it could be navigated through its length, by the aid of a few portages, by boats propelled by animal power, and carrying a
In the case of The Avon (6 Chicago Legal News, 41), the jurisdiction of the admiralty over a collision in an artificial canal was upheld. The case was one where a Canadian vessel, on her way from a Canadian port on Lake Ontario to a Canadian port on Lake Erie, collided in the Welland canal, a wholly artificial canal, wholly in Canadian territory, and extending from Lake Ontario to Lake Erie, with an American vessel on her way from one American port to another American port. It is not necessary in the present case to inquire whether the admiralty has jurisdiction of a collision in the Erie canal, or whether it has jurisdiction of a contract of affreightment for the transportation between two points on the Erie canal of merchandise which is not by the same contract agreed to be transported, by water, to a point beyond the terminus of such
In so far as jurisdiction is questioned, because the boat is a boat built to navigate the canal, and has no means of locomotion in herself, the objection cannot prevail.
Á large portion of the commerce of the Hudson river is carried on by vessels which are towed by steam vessels between different places on that river. Whatever narrow views may at one time have prevailed, the case of The MonteUo, last cited, is an authority for holding that a vessel moved otherwise than by the power of the wind, or by steam power within herself, and thus carrying on commerce, is a subject of admiralty cognizance.
As to any lien possessed by the claimant by virtue of the mortgage, it is subordinate to the claim of the libelants. The respondent with full notice allowed the boat to be used as a general freighting boat. She was so used with his consent. If he had been the absolute owner of the boat she would have been responsible for contracts of affreightment made by her duly appointed master. The mortgagee, who allows the owner to run and use the boat as a general freighting boat, to earn compensation for the benefit of such owner, subjects her to the ordinary obligations which such boats incur through the contracts of the master. The master was j)to hac vice the agent of the mortgagee. The mortgagee can have no exemptions which the owner would not have.
As to the defense that the oats not delivered were feloniously abstracted from the boat with the knowledge of her master, and without the knowledge, privity or consent of the claimant, it is sufficient to say, that the terms of the bill of lading are absolute; that all the damage caused by the boat or carrier or deficiency in the cargo from quantity, as specified in the bill of lading, is to be paid for by the carrier. It was open to the carrier to restrict his liability, but he made an absolute engagement to respond with the boat for any loss of cargo.
It can make no difference as to the jurisdiction of this court that the oats abstracted were taken at a place not within the jurisdiction of this court. The jurisdiction depends wholly on the arrest of the vessel within the jurisdiction of this court.
There must be a decree for the libelants for the value of the oats named in the bill of lading which were not delivered, with costs, with a reference to a commissioner to ascertain such value.