Barreda v. Silsbee

62 U.S. 146, 16 L. Ed. 86, 21 How. 146, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 630
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 31, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 62 U.S. 146 (Barreda v. Silsbee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barreda v. Silsbee, 62 U.S. 146, 16 L. Ed. 86, 21 How. 146, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 630 (1859).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This ease comes before the court upon a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the district- of Maryland. It is an action of indebitatus assumpsit, and was brought in the court below by the defendants in error, who were the original plaintiffs, to recover the freight earned by the ship Shirley on a charter of the ship made by the plaintiffs to the original defendants for the transportation of guano from the Chincha Islands to the-United States. At the date of the charter-party,' the defendants were the agents of the -Peruvian Government, and, as such, had been for some time in the habit of chartering vessels to bring guano to the United' States for sale. Its. exportation from the islands is a Government monopoly, in which none except those employed by the Government are permitted to engage, and the. defendants are the sole agents of that Government in -the United- States. They reside in Baltimore, and have agents in New York and Boston, duly authorized to negotiate for vessels, and, after the charters are signed by the owners, to transmit them to the defendants for their- approval and signature. Their agents in Boston negotiated the charter of the Shirley, and, after it was executed in behalf of the owners, it was accordingly transmitted and signed *152 by the defendants. It is dated Boston, April 11, 1854, and recites, among other things, that the Shirley was then lying at New York, and that she was to proceed to Callao, from Australia, where she was then bound, and from thence with all convenient dispatch to the Chincha Islands, to take in her ' cargo of guano. She was to be at Callao ready to load in the course of January and February, 1855, or sooner, and ninety running days were allowed for loading. After completing her loading, she was to proceed direct to Hampton Roads, her place of destination, to receive orders from the defendants or their agents to discharge at any safe port not south of Hampton Roads or north of Cape Ann. Freight was to be paid at the rate of twenty-five dollars per ton, custom-house weight, and the ship was to have the benefit of any advance in the guano freights made by the charterers in the United States before she finished loading at the islands.

She sailed from New York the first of May, 1854, with a full cai’go on owners’ account, which she discharged at Australia, and sailed thence, in pursuance „of her charter, to Callao and the Chincha Islands. Her cargo of guano was loaded between the first day of January and the ninth day of March, 1855, and on the following day she sailed for Callao, and thence to her place of destination for orders. On her arrival at Hampton Roads, she received orders to go- to Baltimore, which she accordingly did, and was there unloaded between the first and the twenty-fifth day of July, 1855, having brought home, fourteen hundred and fifty-nine tons of guano. Sorbe correspondence, however, had taken place between the parties before the Shirley arrived. On the eighth day of June, 1855, the plaintiffs wrote to the defendants, referring to that clause in the charter providing for an advance] and suggesting that they had been induced to make the charter at the solicitation of their agents, upon. the assurance that they should receive every advantage from any rise in freight, and expressing their astonishment at learning that they did not intend to pay more than at the rate of twenty-five dollars per ton, and signifying at the same time their willingness to listen to any fair proposition the defendants had to make. To that letter the defend *153 ants replied, under date of the eleventh of June, 1855, to the effect that the guano freights had remained at the same rates since the Shirley was chartered, admitting, however, that they' had since taken up certain'vessels with the privilege of using them outwai Is, and saying that they had done so in several instances, and that in such cases they had allowed the vessels a compensation for that use, hut that such additional compensation had nothing to do with the rates of guano, as would appear by referring tó those charters. Other correspondence took place between the parties, or their counsel, which it is not necessary to notice at the present time. After the cargo • of the.Shirley was discharged, the defendants rendered an account of the voyage .to the plaintiffs, showing a balance in their favor of twenty-one thousand nine hundred and forty-three dollars and eighty-nine cents, calculating the freight at twenty-five dollars per ton, without any allowance for a rise under • the advance clause of the charter, which was not satisfactory to the plaintiffs. They claimed a further sum under the advance clause, equal to five dollars per ton upon the whole freight brought home. Seven other vessels were chartered by the defendants between the eleventh day of April and the. twenty-seventh day of May, 1854, for the transportation of guano from the Chincha Islands to theTTnitéd States. All of those charters were introduced by the plaintiffs, subject to objection, and they are substantially the same with that of the Shirley, and' contain a similar clause, giving the vessels the benefit of a subsequent rise in the guano freights. On the first day of June, 1854, after these charters were executed, the defendants wrote to their agents in New York and' Boston, enclosing a pro f orma charter-party for vessels out and home, and authorized and instructed them to take up as many vessels as they could under such charters, without allowing the least deviation from its terms, and directing them in the same communications to keep former rates, without benefit.,of’ advance, for home charters. It. recites that the vessel taken up"shall proceed to Callao, from a port in the Indian or Pacific oceans, “where she is at present bound,” and thence with all convenient dispatch to the Chincha Islands to take in her car *154 go, and that the vessel shall be ready to load in the course of January, 1855, and shall thence proceed to Hampton Roads for orders and to discharge, as is provided in the charter of the Shirley. Freight was to be paid on charters conforming to those instructions at the rate of twenty-five dollars per ton, custom-house weight, and the charters were to contain the fol-. lowing stipulation:

“It is further agreed, that within one week from the date hereof, the owners of the vessel may, if they see fit, elect to dispatch her direct to Callao and the Chincha Islands, to load, as hereinbefore provided; and in case the owners shall so elect, the charterers shall be entitled to all her earnings for-such outward voyage, and shall further have the privilege of shipping by her such outward cargo, not exceeding two hundred tons, as they may desire, provided they shall do so within ten- days after the owners shall have announced their election. The charterers, on the arrival of the Vessel at the home port, to pay, ■ in full satisfaction for such earnings and privilege, and of all outward freight, such gross sum as shall be equivalent to five dollars per ton on the return cargo delivered.”

Twenty-five vessels were subsequently taken up under charter-parties substantially conforming to that stipulation, all bearing. date prior to the thirtieth day of July following that instruction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 U.S. 146, 16 L. Ed. 86, 21 How. 146, 1858 U.S. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barreda-v-silsbee-scotus-1859.