Chadwick v. Denniston

33 F. 515, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 33 F. 515 (Chadwick v. Denniston) 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
Chadwick v. Denniston, 33 F. 515, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159 (S.D.N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The charter and the subcharter were both in the same form, which described the Rover as being “tight,' stanch, strong, and in every way fitted for the service.” By this clause of the charter, as well as by the legal implication of the bill 'of lading, the owners warranted the seaworthiness of the vessel; that is, that she was reasonably fit for the service in which she was to engage. This warranty extends to latent defects not discoverable by prior examination. . Either the ship or the freighter must bear such risks; under the warranty of seaworthiness, the law places this risk upon the ship and her owners. Talcot v. Insurance Co., 2 Johns. 124, 128; Work v. Leathers, 97 U. S. 379; The Lizzie W. Virden, 19 Blatchf. 340; Kopitoff v. Wilson, 1 Q. B. Div. 380; The Titania, 19 Fed. Rep. 101, 107; The Regulus, 18 Fed. Rep. 380; Sumner v. Caswell, 20 Fed. Rep. 249, 253. Exceptions in the bill of lading precisely similar to the exceptions in this case have been repeatedly held to apply only to matters arising upon the voyage, and not to override the express or implied warranty of seaworthiness, or to cover faults or defects, amounting to unseaworthiness, existing before the commencement of the voyage. Kopitoff v. Wilson, supra; Steel v. Steam-Ship Co., 3 [517]*517App. Cas. 72; Tattersall v. Steam-Ship Co., 12 Q. B. Div. 297; Glenfrum, 10 Prob. Div. 103, 108; The Hadji, 16 Fed. Rep. 861; The Brantford City, 29 Fed. Rep. 381, 382; Gleadell v. Thomson, 56 N. Y. 194, 197. The clause of the charter, “Not responsible for delivery of cargo in bad condition,” must be held subject to the same limitation; and in the absence of such further express provisions as existed in the case of Cargo ex Laertes, 12 Prob. Div. 187, does not absolve the charterer from the duty of providing a seaworthy vessel, or from liability for not doing so.

There is no convincing evidence of negligence on the part of the officers or crew in the management of the ship, nor on the part of the owners in her equipment. The opinion of the witness Whitton, that the shaft was out of line, and that that was the cause of the break, is insufficient as against the evidence of many other witnesses. The case must therefore turn, in my judgment, wholly upon the question whether the break in the shaft was caused by such defects in the crank-shaft as amounted to unseaworthiness. Upon this point the case has been prosecuted upon each side with the most painstaking thoroughness and ability. A great amount of testimony has been produced, the broken parts of the shaft exhibited, and numerous experts examined on each side. The experts on the part of the libelant, while they all agree in condemning the shaft, do not altogether agree as to the nature or extent of the defect to be inferred from the appearances which the different parts of the surfaces of the broken shaft now present. The rupture was a transverse one across the forward arm of the crank, beginning about two inches below the highest point of the fillot of the shaft. The rupture upon the opposite side is at about the same level, but it does not pass directly across in a straight line. The line of fracturo, as it approaches the axis of the shaft, describes a curve upward on the one side and downward on the other, corresponding with a part of (he circumference of the shaft, and sloping down at the side, so as to present upon one side of the fracture a part of the section of a cone, or crescent, or semi-cup-shaped form, as variously described. Some of the experts on the part of the libelant express the confident opinion from this feature that the shaft had been, welded into the arm in the mode formerly practiced and called the “jumping on” process; by which the end of the shaft made conical in shape was welded into the concave surface of the arm. This crescent-shaped part of the ruptured surface, termed “Z,” as it now appears, is pretty uniform as regards smoothness, and the apparent texture and fiber of the iron. Of the flat portions of the ruptured surface, the part along the edge which is in front of the line of motion, termed “W,” is quite worn and smooth; while the part upon the opposite side, in rear of the. line ol‘ motion, termed “ Y,” is quite rough and jagged, the part between being intermediate in character. From the form and present appearance of the raptured surface, Z, the libelant’s witnesses in general infer that there must have been an original flaw or defect in the welding, which gradually extended over nearly the whole surface, Z. The defendant’s witnesses contend that no such inference is warranted.

[518]*518The controversy turns mainly upon this question. The inferences that might fairly be drawn from the appearances of all the ruptured sur-* faces are much complicated by the fact that the ruptured parts were strapped together as firmly as possible after the accident, and were subjected to attrition through the subsequent working of the engine for 60 hours, by means of which the vessel was brought into port. As the ruptured surfaces could not be strapped together perfectly tight for this service, it is manifest that there must have been some play of the parts,—■ the engineer says there was much play between them,—and consequently there was some lifting and forward movement along the edge at Y, and much pressure and attrition at W. The respondents contended that this play and action of the ruptured parts was sufficient to account for the smoothness of the crescent-shaped Z; while the libelants’ witnesses considered this impossible, and attributed the somewhat smooth appearance of that surface to an imperfect union in the welding, arising from the formation of a “cinder,” or from a “cold shut” at too low temperature. .One eminent expert on the part of the libelant was also of the opinion that no combination of forces upon the crank-shaft could produce, in homogeneous iron without flaws, a break showing the crescent shape of Z; maintaining that the rupture would be in a line tangential to the fillet, or nearly so, as the weakest part and the line of least resistance. '• Quite as many witnesses for the respondents testify that ruptures of crankshafts in this region frequently show a crescent-shaped surface, like Z, and that the break upon these lines was along one of the paths of least resistance; and even the libelant’s witness Whitton says that the shape of the break at Z is not uncommon, and would occur in homogeneous iron.

■ It is difficult and embarrassing to determine the cause of this break amid such a conflict of opinion between eminent scientific and practical men. So far, however, as I am able to understand the action of mechanical forces, considering the fact that no material is absolutely perfect, or absolutely homogeneous, I do not think that the fact that the break commenced below the upper line of the fillet is proof of a faulty construction. The libelant’s witness says, as I understand, that the maximum strain is at about the middle of the fillet, and it is near that point that this rupture began.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. 515, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-v-denniston-nysd-1887.