Cargo Ships El Yam, Ltd. v. Stearns & Foster Co.

149 F. Supp. 754
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 27, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 F. Supp. 754 (Cargo Ships El Yam, Ltd. v. Stearns & Foster 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
Cargo Ships El Yam, Ltd. v. Stearns & Foster Co., 149 F. Supp. 754 (S.D.N.Y. 1956).

Opinion

DAWSON, District Judge.

This cause was tried by the Court without a jury, pursuant to stipulation of all the parties.

Findings of Fact

The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of Israel and was, at all material times, the owner of the SS Akko. On May 8, 1953, it executed a charter party providing for the chartering of the ship for a period of from three to five months. The charter party was signed on behalf of the plaintiff by Maritime Overseas Corporation, its duly authorized agent. The party chartering the ship was stated in the charter party to be Stearns and Foster Company of Lockwood and Cincinnati, Ohio, and the charter party purported to be signed on its behalf as follows: “Everest Shipping Corporation, as agents for Stearns & Foster Company, F. V. Grauds, President”.

The defendant, The Stearns & Foster Co., Inc. (hereinafter called “Stearns & Foster”) is an Ohio corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling bedding and mattresses. It has never been in the shipping business. The evidence is clear, and the Court finds as a fact, that Stearns & Foster never authorized the execution of the aforesaid charter party.

The circumstances which led up to this situation involve an unusual cast of characters. The first is the defendant James E. Steams who, at the time of the execution of the charter party, was twenty-five years of age, a young man of engaging personality, but apparently devoid of both a sense of responsibility and an appreciation of ethics. Young Stearns was distantly related to certain officials of Stearns & Foster and is a descendant of one of the founders of this Company. He apparently had been well educated and was of average intelligence. After he was graduated from college, he served for a brief period in the Navy, and then took a job as a salesman in the New York office of Stearns & Foster. *758 He held this job for about two years, leaving their employ in the early part of 1951. He then embarked, with a partner, upon the operation of a dance studio. This, however, did not continue for long. At the time of the incidents involved in this lawsuit, he was unemployed and living on the income of a trust fund which furnished him approximately $300 a month.

During the latter part of April, 1953, young Stearns met William L. Spaniard who, at the time, was working as manager of the chartering department of the defendant Everest Shipping Corporation, a New York Corporation with only a few employees, which was engaged in the business of being a ship broker and of operating steamships. Young Stearns told Spaniard that he would like to get into the shipping business and asked his advice.

Spaniard then arranged for a luncheon conference on or about May 4, 1953 between Stearns, himself, and George C. Kiskaddon, an employee of Harry T. Randle who, under the name of Harry T. Randle & Co., was engaged in the business of steamship broker. Kiskaddon was a man of many years experience in the shipping business.

Stearns advised Kiskaddon and Spaniard of his connections with Steams & Foster, giving them to believe that he was actively connected with it, and that he and his family controlled the Company. He repeated his desire to get into the shipping business. There was some discussion of the business procedures involved in chartering ships, securing cargos, etc. Stearns was advised by Kiskaddon at this luncheon that it would be practically impossible for him as an individual to engage in the business of chartering ships, but that if Stearns & Foster, an established and reputable corporation, wished to do so, this could be accomplished without too much difficulty.

Shortly thereafter Stearns advised Spaniard and Kiskaddon that Stearns & Foster wished to go into the shipping business, that he was authorized to represent that corporation, and that a ship should be chartered.

Thereupon, Kiskaddon, acting as an employee of the defendant Randle, and within the scope of his authority as such, communicated with Mr. Feder of Maritime Overseas Corporation, a firm of ship brokers who were acting as managing agents of the plaintiff, and asked if the plaintiff had a ship which it wished to charter to a company which was described as a first class charterer. Plaintiff’s representative indicated that it did have such a ship, and on May 7, 1951, all of the significant terms of the charter were orally agreed upon between Kiskaddon and Feder, subject to plaintiff’s approval of the proposed charterer. Kiskaddon then stated that the charter was to be taken by Steams & Foster and that he was acting on their behalf.

On May 8, 1951, plaintiff’s agent, having ascertained from a Dunn & Bradstreet report that Stearns & Foster was a substantial and financially sound corporation, accepted that Company as the charterer and confirmed the terms of the charter in a letter to Harry T. Randle & Co.

Thereafter, the office of Harry T. Randle prepared the charter party, had it executed on behalf of the plaintiff as the owner of the ship, and sent it to the Everest Shipping Corporation for execution on behalf of the charterer. Before Everest Shipping Corporation signed the charter party, Spaniard asked young Stearns for some authorization which would give them power to sign it on behalf of Stearns & Foster. Young Stearns thereupon personally dictated and signed a letter which was written on the letterhead of “Freedman & Slater, Inc., International Freight Forwarders & Customs Brokers” at whose office he apparently was making his headquarters. This letter read as follows:

“May 14, 1953
“Everest Shipping Company 25 Broadway New York, N. Y.
“Gentlemen: Attention:
Mr. William Spaniard
“This is to advise you of the existence of an Agency on your part *759 to act in the interests of the Steams & Foster Company and myself, to the same degree and authority as if action were personally taken.
“Exact transaction must at all times be authorized by this person; specific arrangements made at time of decision.
“Very truly yours,
H/s/ James E. Stearns
“James E. Steams, Chairman”

Neither at the time of the writing of this letter, nor at any time thereafter, or heretofore, had young Stearns been Chairman of Stearns & Foster nor, apparently, of any other company. He had received no authorization from Stearns & Foster to represent them or to write the letter to Everest Shipping Company. He admitted personally composing and dictating the letter. He stated that he intended the letter to mean only that Everest Shipping Corporation could represent him personally and that it was given to them so that they would have some assurance that if Steams & Foster later went into the shipping business, Everest Shipping Corporation would be protected. He, however, had no power to give them this assurance and the letter did not give such assurance, nor was it limited to any such assurance.

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Bluebook (online)
149 F. Supp. 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cargo-ships-el-yam-ltd-v-stearns-foster-co-nysd-1956.