Ben Franklin Transp. Co. v. Federal Sugar Refining Co.

242 F. 43, 154 C.C.A. 635, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1917
DocketNo. 173
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 242 F. 43 (Ben Franklin Transp. Co. v. Federal Sugar Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ben Franklin Transp. Co. v. Federal Sugar Refining Co., 242 F. 43, 154 C.C.A. 635, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1858 (2d Cir. 1917).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

It may be remarked that the caption of of this case in this court is wrong, there being a reversal of the parties as at common law; and at the trial a number of the allegations in the libel as originally filed were found to be erroneous and were amended by consent. But no change was made in the allegation that the parties had entered into a contract for carrying freight at a certain agreed freight rate, which is specified, “plus demurrage per day while waiting at either or both ends of the route according to the prevailing rates on boats of that class for demurrage in the harbor of New York.” The suit, as indicated, is in admiralty. The Transportation Company sues upon the contract to recover various sums of money, the whole aggregating $1,956.40, with interest on the various items, claimed to be due for demurrage, under circumstances hereinafter stated.

[44]*44[ 1 ] It appears that the Transportation Company entered into a contract with the Refining Company for carrying freight, consisting- of sugar and sugar products, from the refinery at Yonkers to wherever ordered by the Refining Company in and about the harbor of New York, at a certain agreed freight rate. The libel alleges that the Refining Company, in addition to freight, agreed by its contract to pay demurrage, as already stated, and that it has paid the freight charges from time to time as the bills were rendered, but in certain instances has neglected to pay charges for demurrage. It declares that bills for the demurrage were duly rendered both to the Refining Company and to the steamships to which the sugar was consigned and their agents and owners, and that in each instance where the delay was caused at the steamship end demands were made by it, in behalf of itself and in behalf of the Refining Company, but in no case has it been paid; the steamship in each case alleging that their contractual relations with the Refining Company were such that they would not pay demurrage. : The answer admits a contract and calls on the Transportation Company to produce it at the trial. It admits that it has paid the freight charges accruing under the contract and that it has refused to pay charges for demurrage, and alleges that no amount is due from it to the Transportation Company. The court has found in favor of libel-ant and entered a decree in the sum of $2,076.58. The transactions between the parties began in 1902 and ended in March, 1916. There was a written contract between them, and later an oral renewal thereof. The written contract merely set forth the prices to be paid and received for the carrying of freight. There is nothing in it in regard to demur-rage or “charges for demurrage.” £

The traffic manager of the Transportation Company, after stating ■that his company had a contract with the Refining Company, was asked whether it provided for the payment of demurrage, and he replied that it did not, but provided simply for the payment of freight. Later the contract was introduced in evidence, and it showed that the above testimony was in accordance with the facts. He, however, stated that the Refining Company had agreed to pay his company for the time the lighters were held at the refinery end. He was asked whether that company had ever paid charges for delays at that end, and he replied, “They paid us $762 for that very thing.” But an agreement to pay for delays at the docks of the Refining Company, and which were presumably due to the acts or omissions of the Refining Company itself, is clearly not an agreement to pay for delays at the vessel end, which were presumably due to the acts or omissions of the vessel to which the cargo was consigned. Nevertheless the court in its opinion declared that

“The fact that the respondent paid this demurrage in some cases without protest leads me to the conclusion that there was a contract between the parties for the payment of the demurrage at the steamship end as well as at ■the refinery end.”

If there ever was an agreement between these parties-to pay for delays at the vessel end, it was not embodied in the written contract into which they entered, and is not disclosed in this record. The traffic manager of the Transportation Company fails to testify to the existence [45]*45of any such understanding, while stating that there was an agreement to pay at the other end. The traffic manager of the Refining Company explained the exceptional case in which his company had paid the de-murrage charges at the vessel end by showing that in that case his company had collected the charges at the other end and paid over the sums so collected. In other cases he said bis company had never considered itself responsible for demurrage charges at the vessel end, although it had paid such at the refinery end. He declared the Refinery Company had objected to every bill when presented for demurrage charges at the vessel end, except where it had itself collected such charges. When the representative of the Transportation Company called at his office three or four times a month, “he would speak of being unable to collect the bills from the steamship company,” “but I would always tell him we were not interested in the demurrage bills.” “You always told him you were not interested in the demurrage bills?” Answered, “Yes.” It is evident to us from this testimony that there was no contract between these parties that the Refining Company should pay demurrage charges at the steamer end. Moreover, it is inconsistent with the existence of such a contract that the Transportation Company always presented its bills for such charges in the first instance to the steamships and then on their refusal to pay presented them to the Refining Company. Why should the Transportation Company have presented the bills to the ships, if there had been a contract with the Refining Company to pay? We can understand why in some cases the latter company should have interested itself in collecting demurrage charges from the vessels. The testimony of the traffic manager of the Refining Company makes that clear. He testified that he was in the habit of talking to the traffic manager of the Transportation Company three or four times a day and — ■

“when these boats were held up, for his accommodation, 1 said I would talco it up with the people, to try and get the boats released, the same as I would with the railroad companies. Not because it was my duty to, but he thought I had a little influence.”

We think his testimony also makes it clear why, in the absence of any agreement to pay demurrage at the steamship end, the Refining Company did not regard itself as responsible. He testified as follows:

“The sugar is purchased through houses here, who hare European correspondents, and some pay cash against a dock receipt. We do not in any case secure room on any steamer, or ask it; the buyers of the sugar arrange with the steamer Cor their own room; we have nothing whatever to do' with the steamer. They furnish us a permit Cor the shipment, which we in turn send to the refinery and hand to the lightermen; so the steamship people would not recognize us in any event, for we do not obtain the payment. Q. No one, though, really had any contract with the Een Franklin Transportation Company except yourselves? A. No; we had a contract with them to carry our freight, but we had absolutely nothing whatever to do with the room of the steamer or the permit, except handling it from the purchaser to the lighter-man.”

[2]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Southern Pacific Transportation Co. v. Matson Navigation Co.
383 F. Supp. 154 (N.D. California, 1974)
Wilson v. Elwin
338 P.2d 762 (Washington Supreme Court, 1959)
New York & Cuba Mail S. S. Co. v. Lamborn
8 F.2d 382 (S.D. New York, 1925)
Simmons Transp. Co. v. Alpha Portland Cement Co.
286 F. 955 (S.D. New York, 1922)
The Saturnus
250 F. 407 (Second Circuit, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 F. 43, 154 C.C.A. 635, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ben-franklin-transp-co-v-federal-sugar-refining-co-ca2-1917.