Baxter v. Leland

2 F. Cas. 1048, 1 Abb. Adm. 348
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 1048 (Baxter v. Leland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter v. Leland, 2 F. Cas. 1048, 1 Abb. Adm. 348 (S.D.N.Y. 1848).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

As between the original parties to the shipment, it is competent for them to show, by evidence outside the bill of lading, the actual condition of the flour at the time of shipment, (Howard v. Tucker, 1 Barn. & Adol. 712,) without the aid of this exception; and the reservation by the master, in executing the bill of lading, imposed on the shipper no obligation to give other evidence than the bill of lading itself, that the contents of the casks corresponded with the admissions in it, until affirmative evidence is furnished tending to show a mistake in the receipt in that respect.

The memorandum made by the master, that the contents and weight of the casks were unknown, does not change the character of the instrument.. It operates as it would without that reservation, as prima facie evidence that the shipment corresponded with the representation, but subject to be rectified by proof that it was otherwise.

The libellants show that ten barrels were stained upon the outside when received on board, but they furnish no evidence raising a reasonable presumption that the contents of any part of the shipment were injured.

The gist of the controversy has been, on the part of the libellants, to show that the damage the flour had received arose from its inherent qualities,—from dangers of the sea,— or from the usual and ordinary damp and sweating of the ship on the voyage.

The struggle on the part of the respondents has been to make it appear that the cargo of the ship was improperly stowed, and that the injury received by the flour was occasioned by placing it in the hold of the ship on the top of hogsheads of new sugar, and laying over it sacks or bags of Indian corn.

The libellants deny their liability for the damage, should it be found to have been so occasioned, upon the assertion that the stor-[1050]*1050agre was in consonance with the common and well-known usage of ships engaged in freighting from New Orleans to the northern Atlantic ports.

I do not think a custom has been established in this respect, which, if the loss sustained by the respondents is owing to wrongful stowage of the ship’s cargo, will, of itself, exonerate the libellants from their liability as carriers. As .to the essential damage, the case hinges, then, in my view of it, on the point whether it is satisfactorily made out by the respondents that the injury to the flour was caused by stowing it in juxtaposition with the sugar and com, and that such stowage was improper and unsafe.

There seems to be no essential disagreement in the evidence respecting the condition of the hold when opened to unlade the cargo. It was found heated to a high degree. The corn in some of the bags had sprouted, and the grain was so hot as to render moving it by hand painful. This part of the vessel was filled with a strong vapor and dampness. The flour in many of the barrels was found caked or coagulated, so that it could not be separated by the hand, and in others it was soured; and there is no reason to question, upon all the proofs, that the condition and temperature of the hold would ordinarily and probably produce the consequences found to exist in respect to the flour, had it been sweet and in good condition when laden on board at New Orleans. The disagreement in the testimony is as to the probable cause of that state of the hold of the vessel.

The ship, when she took in cargo, was in sound condition, and on her arrival here was found not to have leaked at all.

It is proved, by numerous witnesses of great experience in the New Orleans trade, that vessels running north will almost invariably sweat, or disclose an interior moisture or dampness, sufficient often to be productive of serious injury to goods on board, and that this condition of the ship, except as to degree, is irrespective of the cargo she carries. The cause of this cannot be ascertained with certainty, but it appertains in no way to the insufficiency of the ship; it is generally ascribed to the sudden change of climate, and augmented, as has been usually noticed, by rough weather, and also by any natural moistness in the cargo, yet exhibiting itself to the highest degree in the cold seasons of the year. ■

The libellants contend that if the damage to the flour is imputable to the state of the vessel, whether produced by the sweating of the ship or the character of the cargo, they are exonerated from liability;—on the first supposition, because their undertaking does not guarantee against loss; and on the second, upon the custom or usage of the trade, which justifies this method of stowage; and also on both, by the exception in the bill of lading, of “the dangers of the seas,” in one copy, or “the dangers of navigation,” as expressed in the other. It is to be remarked that this change of phraseology is not to be understood to indicate any different intent with the parties; and either mode of expression, standing without qualification in an instrument of this character, should be accepted as equivalent to “perils of the sea,” and all are treated in the cases as convertible terms. In The Reeside, [Case No. 11,657,] and Aymar v. Astor, 6 Cow. 267, the exception was of “dangers of the seas,” and in Fairchild v. Slocum, 19 Wend. 329, the “dangers of Lake Ontario;” and these exceptions were regarded by the courts as of the same significance as the common one of perils of the seas. It is, however, plain that the exception is not to be understood as embracing those losses flowing from culpable or negligent stowage of cargo,—2 Sumn. 56S, [The Reeside, supra,]—or other improper acts of the master or owner, which are proximate causes of the loss,—Story, Bailm. § 512; Abb. Shipp. 384, 385; 3 Kent, Comm. 300.

So, also, upon the authorities referred to, the dampness or sweating of the ship cannot properly be ranked in the class of perils of the sea. Tempestuous and violent weather tends to increase this difficulty, but does not produce it; all the testimony showing that it occurs in smooth and quiet voyages, when there is no straining or unusual rolling or pitching of the ship. Its causes are probably atmospheric, but whether ascribable to that source or to others more occult, it is at: tended but imperfectly with those characteristics which might class it -with perils of the sea. Story, Bailm. § 512; 3 Kent. Comm. 216, 217. It is of ordinary occurrence, scarcely failing to exist in any case of navigation from New Orleans to northern ports, in the cold seasons of the year. It does not result from, nor is it accompanied by, any irresistible force or overwhelming power, nor does it take the aspect of inevitable accident, in the sense of a sudden or violent occurrence, although it cannot be guarded against by the ordinary exertion of human skill and prudence. Story, Bailm. § 512. It is a quiet, secret exhalation, generated from the hold of the vessel, and in no other known way produced by winds and waves and navigation than that these are the agents and accompaniments of her transit out of a warm into a cold climate.

But although within the fair import of the exception in the bill of lading, the master or owners may not be protected from answering for such injury, I think they are not, in their capacity of carriers by water, absolutely responsible for the injury, in so far as the damage is not incontestibly traceable to faulty stowage; because, if occurring otherwise, or if the testimony leaves it doubtful whether the damage was not occasioned as well by other causes as the manner of stowage, they are entitled to the benefit of the [1051]

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 1048, 1 Abb. Adm. 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-leland-nysd-1848.