Bennitt v. The Guiding Star

53 F. 936, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 27, 1893
DocketNo. 1,697
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 53 F. 936 (Bennitt v. The Guiding Star) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennitt v. The Guiding Star, 53 F. 936, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18 (S.D. Ohio 1893).

Opinion

SAGE, District Judge,

(after stating the case.) The facts in this case are in the main undisputed. The Southern Transportation Company was neither a corporation nor a partnership. Each of the boats included in it did business solely on its own account. There was no community of interest, no sharing of profits or losses, The arrangement was that the boat first at a landing should take on its own account whatever freight was there deposited for shipment. The object in forming the association was to increase business by preventing delays and maintaining regularity in shipments. The boats [939]*939had regular dates and hours for leaving New Orleans and Cincinnati,,hut no time schedule for intermediate points, and the arrangement that (he first boat should take the freight was made to prevent delays resulting from holding freight for particular boats.

When the hills of lading referred to in the libel were issued, James Burke was southwestern freight agent for the Cincinnati Hamilton & Dayton Railroad, with headquarters at Greenville, Miss., and had been employed in that capacity about five years. He had in his pos-, session blanks of a joint bill of lading; the top part of it for steamboats, and the bottom part for railroads. On the 15th of September, 1889, he was authorized in wilting by the masters, respectively, of the steamers Golden Rule, Mary Houston, Guiding Star, Sherlock, and II. P. Sehenck, to sign the joint hills of lading in use between the1 Southern Transportation Line and the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton road, and to represent their boats as agent for such business. This authority continued, and was unrevoked at the time of the issuing of the hills of lading aforesaid. The cotton referred to in the libel wan purchased by McBath & Co. upon the order of (he libelant. McBath & Co. made the purchase and took the hills of lading in their own name. They then drew at sight on the libelant for the amount, and attached the drafts, which were to the order of the bank of Rosedale, to the hills of lading, which they indorsed in blank, and had the drafts cashed by the hank, and the hank sent them forward. The cotton,' as it was brought in, was placed in (he cotton yard at Rosedale owned by Davis, cashier of (he hank. The hill of lading, dated on the 15th of January, was signed by McGowan, Burke’s clerk, in Burke’s! name, while the cotton was in Davis’ cotton yard. McGowan testifies! that lie was sent to Rosedale by Burke, and authorized to sign his name to bills of lading for ill is cotton. The other hill was signed by Davis himself, in Burke’s name, on the 22d of January, when the cotton therein described was yet in Davis’ yard; and Davis testifies that he signed by verbal authority given him by Burke. The signature was at the end of the joint bill, which contained first a hill for the steamer, then, with a line separating, the bill for the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad Company, stipulating that upon the arrival at Cincinnati, and delivery of the property “described in the above bill of lading” in good order to (hem as therein consigned, they would receive and forward (he property. The portion of the bill relating to the steamer carriage stipulated for the delivery of the cotton at the port of Cincinnati, Ohio, and the description was of 138 bales of cotton marked “B. A. T. H. (138) shipped to order Jewett City, Conn. Notify Henry T. Bennitt, Norwich, Conn.”

On the 22d of January, Davis, as cashier of the hank, issued a guaranty to Burke to deliver the cotton on the bank of the river at People’s landing, which is about a mile from Rosedale. He testifies that Burke wished this as security that the cotton would he transferred from the cotton yard in Rosedale to the landing, and that it was delivered in accordance with the terms of the guaranty on the 25th of January, and placed within a foot or two of the water’s edge. On the morning of the 2fith it was discovered to he on fire. If had been left in the open air, uncovered, and there was no guard placed [940]*940over it. The testimony does not disclose the origin or the cause of the fire. The landing keeper who had charge slept that night in the warehouse, about 75 or 100 yards from the landing. McBath, having been notified of the fire, reached the landing about 2 o’clock in the afternoon of the 26th. The cotton was still burning, and all but about 75 or 100 bales, some, of which was then smoking, had been consumed. These 75 or 100 bales were destroyed by the fire that afternoon and the night of the 26th. There were no engines or other appliances at hand to extinguish fire. McBath & Co. paid for the storage of the cotton on the landing. At the time of the fire the Guiding Star was below Rosedale, coming up the river. She was the first boat of the line that passed up after the bills of lading were issued. She passed Rosedale Monday night, January 28th, according to the testimony of Oapt. Hegler, without landing, because she was not hailed, or notified to do so. The bill of lading dated the 15th of January recites that the 100 bales therein described were shipped “on board the good steamer called Sou. Trans. Co., or any other boat in the employ of same line.” The bill of lading dated 22d of January, for 138 bales, recites that it was shipped “on board the good steamer called-, or any other boat in the employ of same line.” Capt. Hegler, of the Guiding Star, testifies that generally the boat’s name was left blank in the bill of lading until it was known certainly what boat would take the freight, and that he had often received and taken on board freight with bills of lading made in the name of other boats, and in such cases he would have the name erased, and the ■name of the Guiding Star inserted, or, if the bill of lading was blank, would insert the name of the Guiding Star. The cotton was fully ■insured. An arrangement was made by the insurance company with the libelant, whereby the insurance company advanced to him the value of the cotton as a loan without interest, upon the Tinderstanding, it may fairly be inferred, that' the libelant should prosecute the ' claim against the libelee, and, if successful, he should pay the loan; if unsuccessful, tiie loan should be converted into payment of the insurance.

The right of the libelant to prosecute the libel under this state of facts is challenged. The transaction with the insurance company did not divest the libelant of his title to and interest in the property, and was not a satisfaction of his claim either against the insurance company or the libelee. If it were, in terms, a satisfaction of the claim for insurance, it would not avail the libellee. The Monticello, 17 How. 152. That objection, therefore, is not well taken.

It is next objected that the Guiding Star is not mentioned in the bills of lading. The custom, in pursuance of the arrangement under which the boats of the Southern Transportation Line were associated, ■ when bills of lading were issued, that the first boat should take the freight, and the fact, which is stipulated in the case, that the Guiding ■ Star was the first boat, together with the testimony of Oapt. Hegler ¡ that when bills of lading for freight which he took on board had been ■ issued in the name of another boat of the line he erased that name, and inserted the name of the Guiding Star, or, if the bill of lading was 'in blank, he filled the blank, makes it immaterial whether the name [941]*941of the Guiding Star was inserted in the hill of lading or not. The bills stipulate for conveyance by steamer, and. the name of the steamer is certainly not essential to their validity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 F. 936, 1893 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennitt-v-the-guiding-star-ohsd-1893.