Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co. v. Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp.

277 F. Supp. 242, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11019
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedNovember 2, 1967
DocketCiv. A. No. 589
StatusPublished

This text of 277 F. Supp. 242 (Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co. v. Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Co. v. Chilean Nitrate Sales Corp., 277 F. Supp. 242, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11019 (N.D. Fla. 1967).

Opinion

[244]*244MEMORANDUM-DECISION

CARSWELL, Chief Judge.

Under consideration here is interpretation of contractual agreements of lease of buildings and covenants with respect to use of certain machinery and equipment. The essential and material facts have been adduced to record and are not in dispute. The issue is presented on Motion for Summary Judgment filed by plaintiff, Atlanta & St. Andrews Bay Railway Company (“Railway”) against defendant-third-party plaintiff, Chilean Nitrate Sales Corporation (“Chilean”). The motion is directed only to the issue of liability for fire damage to warehouse building, machinery and equipment held by Chilean pursuant to a lease contract from Railway and operated for and on behalf of Chilean by third-party defendant, Smith Stevedoring and Forwarding Company (“Smith”). There is on record a general agency contract and agreement (“the agreement”) between Chilean and Smith. The Court concludes that the motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability should be granted. The terms of the lease and the agreement control, and these provisions read in the context of the record as developed convince the Court that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and Railway is entitled to judgment as a matter of law in accordance with Rule 56, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

It is necessary to state relevant facts and review the applicable law. As recited in the lease, Chilean is engaged in the business of shipping, bagging, milling and storing fertilizer and fertilizer materials and had leased warehouse, dock and terminal facilities together with all listed machinery and equipment for the express purposes of such business. As shown by the agreement, Chilean’s own stated business activity was managed and operated for and on its behalf by Smith. Smith conducted Chilean’s own business activity on Chilean’s premises by using Chilean’s instrumentalities, supplies and methods. Also by the terms of the agreement, Smith is under a duty to follow Chilean’s directives and to receive and place in store all shipments directed to the warehouse by Chilean. (Emphasis added.) Smith is under further duty pursuant to the agreement to follow Chilean’s instructions in preparing the nitrate of soda for reshipment, and Smith should bill Chilean weekly in an amount directly related to the volume and type of Chilean’s business activity according to a formula fixed by the agreement. Chilean is bound by the agreement to furnish all bags necessary for the reshipment of nitrates and to furnish the machinery and equipment. Refunds of wharfage and handling on movements subject to shipside rail rates accrue to the ultimate account of Chilean and not Smith. Moreover, under the agreement, Smith must publish a schedule of tariffs which meets with Chilean’s approval. All amounts collected in accordance with the tariffs are paid to Chilean with Smith retaining one-half. Smith obligates itself to work to maximum capacity pursuant to orders of Chilean. Smith further obligates itself to indemnify Chilean for any damage to the warehouse caused by Smith’s employees or agents. Smith promises to return the machinery and equipment in good condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted, and to make ordinary repairs to so maintain the machinery and equipment in good operating condition. Smith is responsible for all wages of personnel and related taxes.

Chilean has an absolute right to terminate the agreement upon thirty days written notice to Smith and vice versa.

It is noted that Chilean’s Vice-president elsewhere in the record repeatedly refers to Smith as Chilean’s agent. Chilean’s Vice-president also states that Smith was acting at Chilean’s direction in doing that particular work which Smith was engaged in at the time of the fire.

Fire broke out in the warehouse while Smith’s employees were using an acetylene torch to repair the links in the bucket elevator system in accordance with the proviso of the agreement that [245]*245Smith should make ordinary repairs to maintain the machinery and equipment in good operating condition. The fire spread very rapidly throughout the entire warehouse.

One of Smith’s employees had been loaned to Railway for a specific purpose. However, Smith’s personnel continued to carry on Chilean’s activities including the use of the acetylene torch, and at the first indication of fire the loaned employee returned to the service of Smith. After the fire was spreading, a broken telephone wire impeded Smith’s efforts to summon the fire department, and Smith’s personnel also had difficulty turning on the water or taking any other effective countermeasures.

Heat from the acetylene torch is admitted by Chilean to have been the cause of the fire which destroyed the property, and Smith’s warehouse superintendent further stated that the' acetylene torch had been in use for approximately one hour when the fire broke out and that prior to the use of the acetylene torch there had been some effort to wet down the vicinity of the repairs by throwing water around in the work area.

The Lease requires Chilean to indemnify Railway for any loss to the building caused by any of Chilean’s agents, and this covenant is completely unrelated to and independent of any other provisos in the lease. The lease also requires Chilean to return the listed machinery and equipment in good condition with the exception of normal wear and tear. In order to do this it is Chilean’s responsibility under the lease to make ordinary repairs to maintain such machinery and equipment until such machinery and equipment is worn out to the extent that ordinary repairs are no longer sufficient, and then Railway must replace the machinery and equipment with items of like kind and quality in good working condition.

Chilean now attempts to disclaim its liability to Railway for the damage caused by the fire by asserting that the repairs undertaken by Smith for Chilean were really replacements which were the responsibility of Railway and which were purported by Chilean to be for Railway’s account although the record indicates that Chilean paid Smith and never billed Railway. Moreover, Chilean never invoked the arbitration provision of the lease in order to bind Railway to Chilean’s interpretation of the lease in this respect.

However, putting this question aside momentarily, it is clear that Smith was nevertheless making the repairs as agent of Chilean because agency is established by consent; and while Railway might possibly have had some contractual liability to Chilean under the lease if Chilean had been correct in its interpretation, Smith was not Railway’s agent because Railway never consented to the establishment of such an agency relationship. The mere receipt in Railway’s office of a letter from Chilean is not ratification for an agency relationship relating to repairs which Chilean well knew Railway had already refused to perform. Chilean’s purported notification was merely another aspect of its assertion of contractual liability against Railway under the lease.

The repairs were not only performed by Chilean’s agent within the scope of its agency under the agreement, but such repairs were the responsibility of Chilean under the lease. Practically every repair, no matter how ordinary, involves replacement of some item, and the mere necessity for replacing some component part is not an absolute test which indicates extra-ordinary repairs. In Dreyfuss v. Process Oil and Fuel Co., 142 La. 564, 77 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 F. Supp. 242, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-st-andrews-bay-railway-co-v-chilean-nitrate-sales-corp-flnd-1967.