Arthur v. The Cassius

1 F. Cas. 1194, 2 Story 81
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 1194 (Arthur v. The Cassius) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur v. The Cassius, 1 F. Cas. 1194, 2 Story 81 (circtdma 1841).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

This cause has been- very fully argued upon the appeal. The merits of the whole controversy mainly turn upon the following points. 1. Whether there was in fact a final refusal on the part of the consignee at Velasco to receive the goods there. 2. If there was, whether the master had a right, under all the circumstances, to carry the same to New Orleans, and there to make sale of them on account of the shippers. 3. If the respondents fail, .on these points, to make out a satisfactory .defence in proof, whether, as owners of the •Cassius, they are responsible for damages to the libellants. 4. If they are so liable, what should be the rule and measure of the damages.

In respect to the liability of the owners of the Cassius, (who have intervened for their own interest,) in this suit, I have no difficulty. The charter-party is in no just sense a mere personal contract of the master. It contains an express stipulation, pledging not ■only the personal security of the master, but also the Cassius and her freight and appurtenances. for the due fulfilment of the covenants of the charter-party on his side. Now, if the master was, as the owners of •the Cassius by their answer assert, owner for the voyage, under a special agreement with them. I do not perceive why he is not to be deemed so for all purposes whatsoever, and to have a perfect right as such owner to pledge the Cassius for the due fulfilment of the charter-party. If, on the other hand, the general owners were owners for the voyage, •as I am of opinion upon their own statement of their agreement with the master, they ought to be held to be, then the Cassius is liable upon the charter-party, which is not .denied to have been only authorized to be made for the voyage therein stated. What •was that agreement, as stated in the answers both of the master and the owners? That the master “should employ and navigate the Cassius, and victual and man her, and should be entitled to retain as his compensation therefor, and for his own services as master, one half of the freight, which should be earned by the Cassius, and he was to pay the other half of the freight to the •owners of the said schooner.” The owners, then, were, upon acknowledged principles of law, jointly interested with the master in the freight; and jointly responsible with the master to the shippers, as partners or part •owners in the freight and profits of the voyage (the gross freight); or he was to receive the half freight in lieu of and as a compensation for his services as master, and then the owners were directly liable as owners for the •voyage; as well as general owners. In either view, the case would fall within the principles applicable to the jurisdiction of courts of admiralty by proceedings in rem upor charter parties, which were recognized i) the case of The Volunteer, [Case No. 16,991, with which I have not since seen any reasoi to be dissatisfied. The case of Taggard v Loring, 16 Mass. 336, has been cited at the bar as establishing, that the master was owner for the voyage. That ease is distinguishable in its actual circumstances from the present. The agreement in that case does not appear from the statements of the Report to have been identical with the present. And if it were, I must say, that I should have some difficulty in acceding to the authority of that case, if it meant to establish, that the master had an exclusive special ownership in ihe ship for the voyage. I should rather incline to the opinion, that if he had any ownership at all for the voyage, it was in common with the general owners. In the present case there does not appear to be any distinct proof of what the agreement between the owners and master was. None is produced in writing, and none is established in the testimony. It rests wholly upon the answers of the owners and master, whose statements on such a point, even if responsive to the allegations of the libel, (which they are not,) would not of themselves, in a court of admiralty,’ be satisfactory evidence. Besides, there is this additional consideration,, that the charter-party, in this very ease, was executed by the master in his character as master, and not as charterer and owner for the voyage. The respondents have admitted, in effect, that he was entitled, to make the charter-party; and they held him out to the public, from the nature of this employment as a freighting vessel, as having general authority to bind the owners on a freighting voyage. The secret agreement, therefore, between the master and the owners, as to the shares of the freight between them, or the rights of the master in the navigation and control of the vessel, cannot, as they were not made known to the charterers, bind them, or vary their rights against the general owners. This objection, therefore, in every view is unmaintainable.

Then as to the merits of the case. In the first place, was there any absolute, positive, and final refusal of the consignee to receive the cargo? There certainly is something in the conduct and management both of the master and the consignee in respect to then-proceedings at the port of Velasco, which is exceedingly suspicious and mysterious, not to say, which gives rise to great doubts, whether there was not some connivance between them for purposes adverse to the interests of the charterers, on whose account the shipment was made. . It has been suggested at the argument, that the consignee was, or at least might fairly be presumed to be, the real owner of the shipment. I see no sufficient foundation for such a suggestion in the facts of the case.' It is repugnant to the apparent objects and intentions of the [1199]*1199charter-party; and if the consignee had been the intended shipper in the original enterprise, it is inconceivable, why he was not made a direct party to the charter-party. His conduct at Velasco, while it may furnish some reason to doubt (if the evidence is believed) his good faith to the charterers and shippers, cannot be admitted to control their rights or change their property without their knowledge and adoption of all his conduct. It is said, that he might have been made a witness in the cause on the part of the libel-lants. Perhaps he might, but certainly not without a release, which, if he has sacrificed their interests, they would be very unwise to give. On the other hand, the respondents could have used him as a witness without a release; and if they meant to rely upon his being the owner of the shipment, it was their own fault not to take it, or to exhibit other proofs of the fact, since it is properly a mat-rer of defence to the suit.

Tlye conduct of the master in signing two protests, each of which was false in its statements, as he in his answer on oath now admits, is utterly without excuse. It was -done in connivance with the consignee, under the pretence on his side, (as his letter to the master shows), that- the landing of the •cargo was either impracticable, or so dangerous and expensive, that the whole might be abandoned to the underwriters, and thus the loss thrown on them; when in point of fact, as all the evidence now in the case conclusively shows, the landing might have been effected without danger or difficulty. These protests were drawn up and signed by the master for the purpose of giving this very gloss to the transaction. Neither of these protests alludes in the slightest manner to the refusal of the consignee to receive the cargo. On the contrary, both of these protests, as well as the letter of the consignee, put the case upon the other ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 1194, 2 Story 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-v-the-cassius-circtdma-1841.