Beers v. Hamburg-American Packet Co.

62 F. 469, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 21, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 F. 469 (Beers v. Hamburg-American Packet Co.) 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
Beers v. Hamburg-American Packet Co., 62 F. 469, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56 (S.D.N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The above libel was filed against the-steamship Normannia in rem, and against the Hamburg-American Packet Company, her owner, in personam. The libel alleges false representations made to the libelant by the company’s agents in London just prior to his embarkation on the Normannia on August 27, 1892, and at the time of the outbreak of cholera at Hamburg; that the libelant, who had previously bought a first-cabin ticket for passage by the Normannia from Southampton to New York, but who desired to surrender it in case she carried steerage passengers, through fear of contagion and quarantine, was induced to take passage on the Normannia at Southampton on August 27th, on the agents’ assurance that no steerage passengers were on board; whereas in fact she had 500 steerage passengers, who had embarked at Hamburg on the 25th; that in consequence of the presence of the steerage passengers, and of the outbreak of cholera among them,. [471]*471the libelant was detained at quarantine 13 days, and subjected to much suffering, sideness, and subsequent loss of time, for which suitable damages are claimed.

The libel also alleges various breaches of duty in the performance of the contract of carriage, viz., in receiving steerage passengers on board at Hamburg; in not properly inspecting and purifying them; in not providing sufficient medical attendance; in not properly dealing with those attached with cholera on the voyage; in not taking proper precautions against the apresid of the disease on hoard, and in not properly providing and caring for the condition and treatment of passengers who were not attacked, after the arrival of the ship in blew York.

1. For faults in the execution of the contract of carriage, and the damages accruin'g therefrom, a privilege upon the ship arises by the general maritime law'; and such a privilege is also specially given by the German Code, art. 452, § 2; Id. art. 757, § 9. But none of the alleged breaches of contract are sustained by the evidence, except the bare fact that the Xormannia took steerage passengers; and the circumstances show manifestly that this was neither a breach of the libelant’s contract of carriage, nor a breach of any duty that the Xormannia owed to him. For it had long been the custom of the Xormannia and other fast steamers of the line, to carry steerage passengers, as the libelant knew, or is presumed to have known. The libelant’s contract of carriage had been made in the ordinary course of business, by the purchase of his ticket some' time before the outbreak of cholera at Hamburg. When the ticket was purchased there were no rei>resentations, and no expectation, that steerage passengers would be excluded from the ship. Contracts for the carriage of steerage passengers on the Xormannia had been previously made as usual; they had come to Hamburg accordingly; and their legal right to transportation was precisely the same as that of the libelant. It, was doubtless the duty of the owners, upon the outbreak of cholera, at the port of departure, to take all known precautionary measures for the purification of the ship, and to prevent from embarking all persons, whether of the crew', steerage, or other passengers, who, on examination, might show reasonable probability of infecting the ship. Measures to this end were in fact taken by the owners, and there is no evidence of remissness in this particular.

On arrival at Xew York, the officers of the ship and the agents of the company seem to have been most energetic in their efforts, and liberal in their expenditures, for the health and comfort of the passengers, and the protection of the ship, and her company, against infection. Nearly $37,000 extra expenses were incurred by the company in tliis work.

2. The principal ground of the libel, however, is the charge of falsely representing that there were no steerage passengers on board the Normannia, whereby the libelant was induced to take passage on that ship, to his alleged injury and damage, as above stated. The libelant had, no doubt, a right to decline to take passage on the Xormannia, and to forfeit his passage money, if he [472]*472chose to do so, for any reason, whether good or bad; and in a matter likely to affect his health or comfort, he had certainly a moral claim on the company and its agents for any reasonable information that might aid him in forming a judgment whether to forfeit his contract and refuse to go on the Normannia or not. It may be that the libelant had no legal right to claim information, and that the company was under no legal obligation to afford him information, for the purpose of enabling him to avoid his contract. If the company, or its agents, had, on inquiry, refused any. such information, I do not know of any mode in which they could have been legally forced to give it, or to pay damages for withholding it; but if they chose to answer such inquiries, knowing that the libelant intended to act upon their information, they were bound, by the obligations of good faith, to answer honestly,'and without deceit; just as a person inquired of as to the personal responsibility of another, is bound to answer in good faith, and without deceit, if he answers at all. The gist of an action for false representations is deceit; to sustain it, a fraudulent intent, or its legal equivalent, must appear. Marsh v. Falker, 40 N. Y. 562; Wakeman v. Dalley, 51 N. Y. 27, 35; Daly v. Wise, 132 N. Y. 306, 312, 30 N. E. 837; Stewart v. Ranche Co., 128 U. S. 383, 9 Sup. Ct. 101; Iron Co. v. Bamford, 150 U. S. 665, 673, 14 Sup. Ct. 219. And the same rule is applicable to this branch of the libel.

. 3. It is urged that the alleged false representations, being no part of the contract of carriage, but subsequent to it, and made on land, are not the subject of an action in admiralty, because not maritime. I cannot sustain this objection; for the reason, that the alleged representations were not independent of the maritime contract of carriage, but were made with evident reference to it, and made for the purpose of inducing the libelant to carry out that contract; and for the reason also that the damages which are alleged to have arisen from the false representations, arose upon the sea, in the course of maritime transportation. Though the origin of the tort, i. e., the false representations, began upon land, its consummation, effect, and damage, arose upon the water; and this locus of the damage is. sufficient to give the admiralty jurisdiction. The Plymouth, 3 Wall. 20; Leonard v. Decker, 22 Fed. 741, and cases there cited.

It may be doubtful, considering the decision of Mr. Justice Nelson in the case of The Eli Whitney, 1 Blatchf. 360, Fed. Cas. No. 4,345 (see, also, The Baracoa, 44 Fed. 102; The Electron, 48 Fed. 689), whether such false representations would sustain an action in rem; but this is now immaterial, since the owner being sued in personam has appeared in the action, and on the attachment of the vessel, has procured her release on stipulation; so that the cause is now before the court as a suit in personam, for an alleged maritime tort; and as such it is maintainable if the averments of the libel as to the wrong, and as to the damage, are sustained by the evidence.

The steamship arrived in this port on the 3d of September. Up to that time but five deaths had occurred on the ship from cholera, viz., one, a second cabin passenger, 57 years of age, and four children [473]

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Bluebook (online)
62 F. 469, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beers-v-hamburg-american-packet-co-nysd-1894.