33 Cal. 60 | Cal. | 1867
This action was brought by the plaintiff, master of the British bark Harwood, against the defendants, owners and consignees of a portion of the cargo of the bark, for contribution in general average. The complaint alleges the proper facts constituting a cause of action, setting forth that the
The cause was tried by the Court without a jury, and a finding and judgment rendered for plaintiff against Cross & Co. for three hundred and thirteen dollars, besides costs. They applied for a new trial, which was denied, and then appealed.
The only point presented on the motion for a new trial, which we are called upon to review, may be stated to be that the evidence was insufficient to justify the findings and decision of the Court, and therefore the judgment is against law.
At the very threshold of this question the objection is made that this Court cannot reverse a judgment on account of the insufficiency of the evidence to support it, if there is any conflict in the testimony material to the issue, for the reason that we have no jurisdiction in such case to pass upon the facts in issue. On the other hand, it is maintained that, as the testimony produced to make out the plaintiff’s case consisted of depositions, the Court which rendered the decision and judgment had no better opportunity to determine from the manner, bearing, conduct and character of the witnesses, the credit and weight to be given to their testimony, than this Com’t has, and that therefore the reason of the rule which ordinarily governs the subject cannot be applied in this case. Where there is a conflict of evidence upon a material fact in issue, Courts of appeal are not in the habit of reversing judgments depending upon the finding of the issue either the one way or the other. Where the testimony of the witnesses is conflicting, the result depends mainly upon the degree of credibility to which they may respectively be entitled, and of that the jury and the Court before which such witnesses
These authorities show very clearly the ground on which this Court has placed its refusal to disturb verdicts and judgments in cases where the testimony in support of the respective sides of the issue joined is in conflict, and at the same time inculcate it as the right and duty of the Court to do so when there is a substantial conflict, and the ends of justice upon the clear weight of the evidence require a judgment and verdict different from that rendered.
In the examination of this case the value and weight of the testimony of the witnesses whose depositions were read in evidence is to be estimated by its worth as it appears upon the face of the depositions, as the circumstances of manner, hearing and conduct of the witnesses in the presence of the officer who heard them testify and observed their deportment were not apparent to the Court that determined the case upon the testimony of such witnesses, except'from the face of the depositions themselves; and in respect to what so appears this Court has the same opportunities of judging as had the Court below. Hence, we shall proceed to examine the evidence produced at the trial with the view of determining whether, in our judgment, the Court below deduced therefrom right conclusions of facts or otherwise, in order to further determine whether such conclusions of facts were correct or, as a matter of law, were erroneous.
The doctrine of general average, says Kent, grows out of the incidents of a mercantile voyage, and the duties which it creates apply equally to the owner of the ship and of the cargo. General, gross or extraordinary average means a contribution made by all the parties concerned toward a loss sustained by some of the parties in interest for the benefit of all. (3 Kent, 6th ed., 232.) Whether the master of the hark in this case, the representative of the owner of the vessel, can properly maintain the action for contribution for expenses incurred and damages sustained by reason of the leaking of the vessel, must depend upon the fact whether the alleged cause of peril was because she was not seaworthy when she
The evidence upon which the finding and judgment was based consists mostly of depositions and the protest made by the officers of the bark before the British Consul at San Francisco, purporting to narrate the particulars of the voyage, of the storms and bad weather the vessel encountered, and the accidents and disasters which occurred. The testimony of the witnesses who appeared in Court has no reference to the condition of the bark before she arrived at the port of San Francisco. The protest prepared as above
The plaintiff deposed on his direct examination that the bark left Glasgow, bound for the port of San Francisco, on the 26th of December, 1864, at which time she “was stanch, stiff, tight and strong, well found, manned, rigged and equipped, her hatches sufficiently secured, and she was in every respect seaworthy and fit for the voyage,” and that the cargo was well stowed. He further testified that the voyage was generally rough and tempestuous until the 28th of January, when, owing to the straining of the vessel by previous heavy weather, he found a heavy leak near the water closet pipe. It was then repaired by the carpenter, after which the vessel leaked less. On the second of February, upon consultation with the mate and carpenter, it was determined, says the plaintiff, that it would be unsafe for the vessel, cargo and all concerned to proceed around Cape Horn without thoroughly repairing the leak, and thereupon the bark was run into the harbor of Eio de Janeiro, where the expense in part for which this action was brought was incurred; and he stated as a witness that it was his opinion the vessel could
The deposition of the ship carpenter was also given in evidence. From his superior opportunities of knowledge as to the condition of the vessel when she left Glasgow and subsequently, his testimony is entitled to more weight than that of any other witness and of all the witnesses beside in respect to the matters of which he gave evidence. He testified that he believed the incidents of the voyage set forth in the protest to be true and correct in every respect, and that up to the second of February the vessel did not experience what could be called rough weather. The nature of the weather and the rolling of the sea on the first, second, third, ninth and tenth days of January as described in the protest would undoubtedly seem rough and tempestuous to a landsman, but upon the mind of the witness, who had been a sailor for many years, it produced no such impression, though large quantities of water were shipped, requiring almost constant attention at the pumps. This witness further testified that sometime in January (which, by reference to the protest, is ascertained to have been on the twenty-eighth of that month)
Considerable evidence was produced for the purpose of showing that the deviation of the vessel from her course and her entrance into the port of Rio de Janeiro was not mainly because it was not safe to proceed on the voyage without a more thorough repairing of the vessel than had already been accomplished by the carpenter immediately after the place of the leak had been discovered, but on account of the sickness of plaintiff’s wife, who was with him on board the vessel. The evidence on this subject tended strongly to the conclusion that the case of the sick woman was more the cause of the stopping at Rio de Janeiro than was the condition of the vessel, because, before the course of the vessel was changed to enter the port of Rio de Janeiro, the plaintiff consulted the mate on the subject, and the reason given for wishing to
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered.
Mr. Justice Sawyer did not express an opinion.