Anderson v. J. J. Moore & Co.

173 F. 539, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 136
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedAugust 31, 1909
DocketNo. 13,767
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 F. 539 (Anderson v. J. J. Moore & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. J. J. Moore & Co., 173 F. 539, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 136 (N.D. Cal. 1909).

Opinion

DE HAVEN,-District Judge.

This is an action brought by the owners of the ship Columbia to recover $3,261.42 as demurrage for an alleged delay of 42 days in unloading that vessel, under a charter party entered into between the managing owner of the ship and the respondent corporation June 26, 1907. The Columbia carried, under this charter, a cargo of coal for respondent from New Castle, Australia, to the port of San Francisco, arriving in the latter port January 14-, 1908, and the next day her master gave notice to respondent, who was also the holder of the bill of lading, of the vessel’s arrival and readiness to discharge, and her managing owner was informed, by the respondent, that the cargo carried by her had been sold to the Western Fuel Company, and that the ship “would dock at the bunkers of that company”; that the bunkers were crowded, and the vessel would probably be delayed three or four weeks before she could [540]*540reach the place of discharge. The vessel, however, was not given a berth until March 19, 1908.

The reason for this delay seems to have been that prior to that date the bunkers were continuously occupied by cargoes and vessels which had arrived in the port of San Francisco before the Columbia,, and it was the general practice of the Western Fuel Company to discharge vessels in the order of their arrival in port, although it appears from the evidence that, during the time the Columbia was delayed, one schooner, which arrived in port after her, was permitted to discharge 300 tons of cargo at these bunkers. But with this exception, the practice of the Western Fuel Company in discharging vessels was to discharge them in the order of their arrival. The Columbia, after reaching the berth assigned her, was" discharged at the rate specified in thé charter, and the delay of which she complains is that which occurred prior to reaching the berth to which she was ordered.

1. The question for decision here is whether the libelants are, by the terms of the charter party, entitled to recover demurrage for the delay in discharging the cargo of the Columbia under the circumstances above stated. The charter party first provides that the vessel shall load a full and complete cargo of coal at New Castle, and then proceeds :

“ * * * And being so loaded sliall therewith proceed to San Francisco-harbor, California, to discharge at any safe wharf or place within the. (tolden Gate and deliver the said full and complete cargo, in (he usual and customary manner at any safe wharf or place or into craft alongside as directed by consignee.
« * * * * * * * * * * *
“Frost or floods * * * or any other hindrance of what nature soever beyond the charterers’ or their agents’ control, throughout this charter, always, excepted.
“To be discharged as customary, in such customary berth as consignees shall direct, ship being always afloat, and at the average rate of not less than 150 tons per weather working days (Sundays and holidays excepted), to commence when the ship is ready to discharge, and notice thereof has been given by the captain in writing; if detained over and above the said laying days, demurrage to be at 3d. per register ton per day.”

It will be seen that by the terms of the charter, the respondent, as consignee, had the option to direct the vessel to deliver her cargo at any safe wharf or place within the Golden Gate, or in craft alongside; and I think the evidence shows that the respondent exercised this option on the 15th day of January, 1908, by informing the managing' owner of the Columbia that the cargo of the vessel had been sold to the Western Fuel Company, and that she was to be docked at that company’s bunkers, although formal written notice directing the master to repair to a berth there provided for the ship was not given until March 16, 1908. The fact that the coal bunkers occupied three separate piers does not render the notice of the place of discharge insufficient, as the bunkers were under one management, and the master of the vessel must have understood that the ship was to be assigned to the first vacant berth at one of the parallel piers, and no more specific designation was requested.

[541]*541It is the settled rule that the lay days named in the charter or the bill of lading, within which the ship is entitled to deliver her cargo, do not commence to run until she lias arrived at her destination— that is, until she has reached the place where she has contracted tO' deliver her cargo; and, until her voyage has been thus completed, there is no obligation upon the part of the charterer or consignee to discharge her, and the vessel is not entitled to give notice of readiness to discharge.

In Leonis Steamship Company, Limited, v. Rank, Limited, 1 K. B. Div. (1908) 499, the rule for determining when a ship is an “arrived ship” — that is, when it may be said the ship has completed the carrying voyage — is thus stated by Kennedy, L. J.:

“Now, the answer to the inquiry whether the ship can or cannot properly he described as an ‘arrived’ ship obviously depends upon the point which the parties liare chosen 1o designate in the charier party ns the destination. The degree of precision is purely a matter of agreement between them. In practice, the destination is generally one of the following: (1) A port; (2) a speeiiied area within a port, such, e. g., as a basin, a dock, or a certain'distance or reach of shore on the sea coast or in a river; or (3) the still more limited and precise point where the physical act of loading is to take place, as, e. g., a particular quay. pier, wharf, or spout, or (where the operation is to be performed by means of lighters, and the ship is not to be in a shore berth) a particular mooring. In each of the last two cases — (2) and (3) — it. is settled law that the point of destination is equally to be treated as designated in the charter party, whether the point be named in the document by its local title, or there is in the charter party an express reservation to the charterer of the privilege to iix the point of destination by his order or direction.”

Now, as already stated, the Columbia was, upon her arrival at San Francisco, seasonably directed, by respondent, to deliver her cargo at the bunkers of tíre Western Fuel Company. This direction was given in the exercise of the right given by the charter party, and, under the rule stated in the case just cited, the place so designated is to be regarded as if specifically named in the charter party as the place of delivery; and, this being so, it must be held, under the authorities, that the voyage of the Columbia did not terminate until she reached the berth to which she was directed, and she was not, within the meaning of the charter party, ready to deliver her cargo, or entitled to give notice of her readiness so to do, until that time. Tharsis Sulphur & Copper Co., Limited, v. Morel Bros. & Co., etc., 2 Q. B. Div. 647; Murphy v. Coffin, 12 Q. B. Div. 87.

In the first of the cases last cited, the question arose in an action to recover demurrage under a charter party which obligated the ship' to proceed to Mersey, or so near thereto as she might safely get, and. deliver her cargo “at any safe berth as ordered on arrival in the dock at Garston.” The vessel was ordered to a particular berth, which she was not able to reach for some time on account of its crowded condition, but it was held that the obligation of the charterer to unload did not commence until the vessel was in the berth ordered.

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Related

Mowinckel v. Dewar
173 F. 544 (N.D. California, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
173 F. 539, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-j-j-moore-co-cand-1909.