Compagnie Du Port De Rio De Janeiro v. Mead Morrison Mfg. Co.

19 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 14, 1927
Docket741
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 163 (Compagnie Du Port De Rio De Janeiro v. Mead Morrison Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compagnie Du Port De Rio De Janeiro v. Mead Morrison Mfg. Co., 19 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129 (D. Me. 1927).

Opinion

PETERS, District Judge.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the collapse of a pier and coal-loading apparatus constructed at Rio de Janeiro for the plaintiff by the defendant. The work, which was performed by subcontractors under the defendant, was begun early in 1913, and com•pleted, delivered to, and accepted by the plaintiff in October of that year. The construction was largely of concrete, including concrete piles supporting a floor which was supposed to carry a load of 5,500 tons. The pier was 410 feet long, 51 feet in width, and, with the superstructure, cost approximately $450,000. On June 10,1915, the first time the pier was loaded to anything like its agreed capacity, having at the time a load of about 4,000 tons of coal, it collapsed in the middle and was largely wrecked.

As the written contract under which the work was done was made and was to be wholly performed in Rio de Janeiro, the law of Brazil applies.

The plaintiff, a French corporation, held a concession from the Brazilian government to build and use this pier under an arrangement whereby it was later to become the property of Brazil.

The defendant is a Maine corporation, having its office and transacting its usual business in Boston.

In the year following the collapse of the pier the plaintiff, frequently referred to as the Port Company, brought an action against the defendant, Mead Morrison Manufacturing Company, in the federal court of Brazil, a, court corresponding very- closely to this *164 court, and in that action judgment was rendered for the plaintiff by default.

The plaintiff brings its action of as-sumpsit in this court, and in the fifth count of its writ seeks to recover on the Brazilian judgment. In various other counts the plaintiff seeks relief on other grounds; but, at the trial without a jury, it was thought to be expedient to first consider and decide all questions arising under the fifth count, on the foreign judgment, and then take out the evidence on the other counts if necessary. ■

After a hearing on the fifth count, I ruled temporarily that the action could not be maintained on that alone, and the trial proceeded on the merits under all other counts. The plaintiff’s counsel, however, insisting that the foreign judgment and the proceedings leading up to it meet all legal requirements, and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover on it without further inquiry into the merits, have filed a notably able and elaborate brief, and on account of the importance of the matter I have reviewed this branch of the case, and find the pertinent facts and the law as follows:

The plaintiff offered in evidence the judgment roll of the federal court of Brazil. I find this to be sufficiently authenticated, and from it and from other evidence it appears that it is permissible under the Brazilian Code to institute a judicial inquiry into the cause of an accident of this kind immediately after its happening. The proceeding is called a “vistoria,” and seems to be a combination of inquest, arbitration, and deposition in perpetuara. A board is constituted, consisting of three experts, one chosen by each party and the third selected by the judge from names submitted by the parties, which proceeds at once to investigate the cause of the accident and make a report to the court, which, if a suit is brought later, can be used as evidence.

In this case a petition for a vistoria was filed by the Port Company on June 11,1915, the day after the accident. On June 12th citation was served on F. H. Walter & Co., of Bio, on the theory that they were agents of Mead Morrison Manufacturing Company, the defendant. It is denied by the defendant that Walter & Co. were its agents for the service of process, and for this and other reasons it is claimed that the vistoria proceedings are nugatory.

Legal experts in Brazilian law, called by the defendant, testified that the vistoria proceedings in this case where wholly void under the law of that country. Other Brazilian experts, called by the plaintiff, testified directly to the contrary.

However, the federal court of Brazil evidently considered the vistoria to be regular, and from a North American viewpoint it would seem that it should be so regarded, largely from the fact that the manager of the defendant participated in it and tried to get a finding in his favor on the merits.

Assuming, for the purposes of the discussion, that the vistoria was legal under local law, it appears from the record that the experts made a careful investigation, and on April 29, 1916, made a report holding the defendant responsible, from a technical standpoint, for the collapse of the pier. Prom this point the defendant, and all persons possibly acting for it,' withdrew from active, voluntary participation in the local proceedings, and had" no further connection or contact in Brazil with the matter, except as mentioned below, and except that, following the report of the experts, the plaintiff wrote Walter & Co., ‘asking whether Mead Morrison Manufacturing Company intended to make a settlement without suit. Whereupon Walter & Co. replied that they would ascertain the defendant’s intention, and subsequently the defendant wrote Walter & Co., refusing to aceept responsibility for the collapse, which letter was transmitted to the plaintiff August 24, 1916.

On September 4, 1916, suit was begun in the federal court of Brazil by Compagnie du Port de Bio de Janeiro against Mead Morrison Manufacturing Company.

It is not claimed that citation to participate in a vistoria is sufficient summons in a suit that may be subsequently commenced. In such eases, under Brazilian law, a new service of summons has to be made. The citation in the vistoria proceedings does not require a defendant to answer to a suit that may follow. The sufficiency of the service of the summons in the suit brought September 4th, and the effect of the subsequent proceedings, is an important field of controversy in this branch of the ease.

The officer’s return, as translated, 'is as follows:

“I certify that I summoned Morrison Manufacturing Company through their representatives, F. H. Walter & Co., in the person of F. H. Walter, for all the contents of the petition, he became informed and refused to receive the summons. The above is true, to which I certify. Bio, September 4, 1916. The Cotrt Officer, Oldemar Pinto Ferreira Marado.”

On September 14th Walter & Co. filed *165 a petition in court, saying that, having been summoned as representative of Mead-Morrison Manufacturing Company, “to speak with regard to a common suit for indemnity hereby declare to your excellency that they have already given up the representation of the said corporation, for which reason they are unable to receive initial summons in the cause, their renunciation haying been communicated to the principal. In such emergency the supplicants petition that your excellency cause the suit to be stopped, notifying the plaintiff, the Compagnie du Port de Rio de Janeiro, to make summons directly on the corporation at its head office by letters rogatory.”

Mead Morrison Manufacturing Company did not appear in the suit, nor did any agent or attorney for it, and the action was defaulted. Before, judgment was entered, Walter & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compagnie-du-port-de-rio-de-janeiro-v-mead-morrison-mfg-co-med-1927.