Balfour v. The Director

34 F. 57, 13 Sawy. 172, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedFebruary 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 F. 57 (Balfour v. The Director) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balfour v. The Director, 34 F. 57, 13 Sawy. 172, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30 (D. Or. 1888).

Opinion

Deady, J.

The libel prayed for process against said bark, wheat, and master, to the end that the first might be sold to pay the damages of the libelants; that the second “might be delivered to the libelants,” free of all charges and liens; that the master may be restrained from interfering with the wheat during the pendency of the suit; and that he and all others claiming any interest in said vessel or wheat may be cited to appear and answer the libel.

On reading and filing the libel an order was made thereon, allowing process to issue, as prayed for in the libel, on the filing of a stipulation by the libelants, in the sum of $50,000, as security to the adverse -parties for costs and damages thereby incurred, on which the vessel and wheat were subsequently arrested, and all parties in interest cited to appear. Thereupon the master filed a claim of ownership of said vessel on behalf of William W. Turnbull and others, and, on the same day, said parties and the master appeared in the suit, by counsel, and claimed the possession of the wheat.

The libel alleges that on October 8, 1885, the master of the Director chartered her to the libelants to carry a cargo of wheat from this port to Europe, at 42s. 6d. a ton, stating therein that the vessel was “tight, stanch, strong, and in every way fitted for such voyage;” that the vessel was laden by the libelants, and, as soon as the cargo was on board, she commenced to leak so badly she could not proceed on her voyage, and the cargo was discharged.

On exceptions to the libel for misjoinder of causes of action, it was held—

“ (1) In a suit by a shipper for the non-performance of a contract of affreightment, the facts which establish the liability of the master, also give the libel-ant a lien on the vessel for the amount of his claim, and, therefore, it is proper and expedient that the proceeding against the owner or master and the vessel should be joined in one libel;” and “(2) when the possession of personal property has been changed by means involving the breach of a maritime contract concerning the same, or such possession is wrongfully withheld contrary thereto, the owner or other person entitled, under the circumstances to the possession the'reof, may maintain a suit in admiralty to obtain the same.” The Director, 11 Sawy. 493, 26 Fed. Rep. 708.

’An amended libel was subsequently filed, in which a sale of the wheat, on October 5, 1885, is alleged to have been made to Arthur Bald of Liverpool, at 36s. 9d. per 500 pounds, including freight and insurance, [59]*59to be shipped from this port during the month of October or November of that year by the Director, she being “a first-class wooden vessel” and fit to carry said cargo, and the loss of the same by reason of the inability of the Director to carry the wheat as per the terms of the sale and the stipulation of the charier-party, to the damage of the libelants $3,086.

On May 81, 1887, the master and claimants answered the libel, admitting the making of the charter-party, and the loading and unloading of the cargo, as stated in the libel, and allege that the master, after discharging the cargo, had the Director hove down and repaired, so that she was ready to receive the wheat again before the expiration of November, and fit to carry the same to its destination, as per the charter-party.

In the course of the trial the claimants offered in evidence copies of the Bureau Verijas, or the French Lloyds, for the years 1884 and 1885, to show the character and construction of the Director, in connection with evidence tending to show that the libelants’ agent at ibis port, Mr. Walter J. Bums, was familiar with these registers at and before the chartering of the Director, and was therefore chargeable with a knowledge of the facts therein stated concerning the Director. They were admitted, without objection, for whatever they might prove.

These registers, so far as the libelants are concerned, are mere hearsay, derived from local surveys and inspections made at the instance of the owners, and usually in their interest. Judging from what I have seen of such surveys in this case, they are of little or no value as evidence of the true condition of a vessel. Underwriters, from their vocation and business, may be presumed to have a knowledge of their contents. Whart. Ev. §§ 735, 1243. But as to others not so related to the subject, such presumption does not obtain. 1 Whart. Ev. § 639.

And, so far as these libelants are concerned, they are not evidence of any fact about which there is any doubt or controversy in the case.

Assuming, however, that the agent was familiar with these volumes of Veritas, the information imparted to him by them was to the effect that the Director was a first-class wooden vessel, built in 1873, in New Brunswick, principally of spruce, birch, pitch-pine, and hackmatack, with a character rated at 3 | 3, A 1. and about five years of life before her, the last survey having been made at Liverpool in 1883. And this, of course, does not tend to show, as maintained by counsel for the claimants, that the agent of the libelants must or could have known that the Director was not a first-class wooden vessel, but the contrary.

Certain certificates of survey of the Director, made in this port, were also offered in evidence by the claimants to prove the seaworthiness of the vessel, as well as an authenticated copy of a survey purporting to have been made in Hong Kong, just prior to her departure from that port for this, Libelants objected, and they were admitted subject to the objection. The objection is well taken. \ The certificate of the survey of a vessel is ex parte, — mere hearsay,' — and is not evidence of the facts contained in it in favor of the person procuring it, whatever it may be when offered against him. Hall v. Insurance Co., 9 Pick. 476; Watson v. Insurance Co., 2 Wash. C. C. 152; Cort v. Insurance Co., Id. 375; U. [60]*60S. v. Mitchell, Id. 478; Saltus v. Insurance Co., 10 Johns. 489; Abbott v. Sebor, 3 Johns. Cas. 46; 1 Whart. Ev. § 120.

Such certificate is evidence of the fact that a survey was made, and, when a question arises as to the propriety or necessity of a sale by the master of a stranded or injured vessel in pursuance of such a survey, it may be evidence of the facts contained therein, tending to justify the action of the master. But even then it is not conclusive, and may be contradicted. Gordon v. Insurance Co., 2 Pick. 263.

In this case the proper proof of the facts ascertained on the surveys of the Director is the testimony of the surveyors. In the case of The Fortitude, 3 Sum. 262, the surveyors appear to have been examined as witnesses. But the certificate of the survey, dated November 25, 1885, and signed by Nathaniel Ingersoll and John E. Lombard, is 'competent evidence to qualify the testimony of said Lombard concerning the condition of the vessel at that time, as a statement made by him out of court.

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34 F. 57, 13 Sawy. 172, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balfour-v-the-director-ord-1888.