Cottingham v. Abbott

90 F. 669, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 6, 1898
DocketNo. 834
StatusPublished

This text of 90 F. 669 (Cottingham v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottingham v. Abbott, 90 F. 669, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17 (D. Mass. 1898).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

The libelant in this case is the owner of the schooner James Baird, upon which a cargo of hard pine timber and flooring was shipped from Pascagoula, Miss., to Boston, consigned to the respondents.. The material parts of the charter party are as follows:

“A full and complete cargo of kiln-dried and resawn pitch pine lumber under and on deck. Cargo to be all kiln-dried lumber under deck. It is agreed that the lay days for loading or discharging shall be as follows (if not sooner dispatch), commencing one clear day from the time the captain reports his vessel ready to receive or discharge cargo at such safe anchorage as the charterer may direct: Loading with all possible dispatch, but not less than 25 M. feet daily, Sundays excepted; and that, for each and every day’s detention by default of said party of the second part or agent, thirty-seven & °o/ioo dollars per day shall be paid by said party of the second part or agent to said party of the first part or agent. The cargo or cargoes to be received alongside, within reach of vessel’s tackles, and delivered according to custom of the port of discharge.”

The material parts of the two bills of lading are as follows:

“(1) Shipped in good order and well conditioned:
“32,945 pcs. rough kiln-dried lumber, containing- 200,863 feet.
“9,313 pcs. dress kiln-dried lumber, containing 40,342 feet.
“About 99,378 feet of the above lumber is on deck.
“(2) 4,612 pcs. 4%x4 rift, fig-., containing- 35,560 feet.
“16 pcs. resawn lumber, containing 14,526 feet.
“About 32,000 feet of the above lumber is on deck.”

The captain duly reported his arrival on May 21, 1896, about 5 p. m., and was directed to Mystic Wharf. The “resawn lumber,” or timber, all of which was on deck, was there discharged into the water at a time which I am not able to determine precisely from the evidence, but, at the latest, before the noon of May 25th. Otherwise no berth was provided and no cargo was discharged until May 26th, when a berth was provided, but, as the day was rainy, the discharge did not begin until May 27th. [671]*671It coni limed, upon every week day through. June 3d, when the discharge of the deck load was completed. On June 4th the Baird was moved to a dock owned by the respondents, but could not come close alongside It, owing to want of water, until a part of the cargo below deck had been Taken oil over a temporary bridge. This occupied two or three days, ifter which the Baird, being lightened, was hauled up to the dock. Thereafter it is admitted that the discharge was sufficiently prompt.

The libelant contended in argument that the charter party provided expressly for a discharge at the rate of 25 M. per day, but in this I think he is mistaken, and that the express agreement relates only to the rate of loading, although a rate of loading, stipulated by the parties, may, in some cases, be evidence of what is a reasonable rate of discharge. The libelant further alleged a custom of the port of Boston fixing 25.000 feet per day as a reasonable rate for the discharge of this kind of flooring, while the respondents alleged an established custom of less than 20,000.

The evidence on both sides satisfies me abundantly that no customary rate, properly so called, exists for the discharge of this kind of lumber. The appropriate office of a custom is to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intentions of the parties or to ascertain the true meaning of a particular word. See The Reeside, 2 Sumn. 567, Fed. Cas. No. 11,657. To he valid, a custom must he not only established and reasonable, but certain and definite. One of the libelant’s witnesses, for example, testified that the custom calls for a discharge of 25,000 to 30,000 feet; one of the respondents’ witnesses, in like manner, testified to a customary rate of 17,000 to 20,000. I do not think either custom is possible. There might he a definite rate of discharging lumber fixed by custom for the sake of convenience, as 100 tons a day, Sundays excepted, is said to be the customary rate for the discharge of coal. See Thacher v. Gas-Light Co., 2 Low. 361, 364, Fed. Cas. No. 13,850. A custom which fixes The rate at from 17,000 to 20,000 feet, however, is an impossibility, unless the minimum is the privilege of one party and the maximum that of the other, or unless the custom defines the circumstances under which every rate between the maximum and minimum becomes customary. Neither condition exists here, and the meaning attached to the words “custom” and “customary” is well defined by the witness Childs:

“The point lias been raised here on tlie words ‘customary,’ ‘average,’ ‘usual.’ The way that I look at the three words is that they are practically one word. ‘Customary’ means the average or usual dispatch at the port at which the vessel discharges. That is the term that is used among the brokers and the merchants in every port where the vessels go. The word ‘customary’ is considered to mean what is the average or usual time for unloading at that port..”

The testimony given on both sides is therefore valuable only as it shows what are the limits, under ordinary circumstances, of a reasonable rate of discharge of this kind of lumber within the port of Boston. It does not establish a definite rate, or obviate the necessity of considering (he circumstances of each case.

Tito charter party in this case gave the respondents “one dear day” in which to provide a berth for the schooner. I need not here determine precisely what these words mean under all circumstances. In this case they bound the respondents to furnish a berth where the Baird [672]*672could discharge throughout the whole of May 23d. In fact, no berth was furnished until May 26th, and the libelant lost the use of May 23d and May 25th, except so far as he emnloyed them in discharging the timber, something less than half a day’s work. It is practically admitted that no discharge is to be expected on Sundays and holidays, and, so far as kiln-dried lumber under deck is concerned, I think it is fairly established that no discharge is to be expected on rainy days. I hesitate to apply this exception to a deck load, even of kiln-dried flooring, which has been carried from Pascagoula to Boston; but as there is no evidence whether the failure to discharge on May 26th was caused by the stevedore or by the consignee, and as no one is shown to have asked for discharge on that day, I shall allow no demurrage for it. Discharge was continued on every other week day that the schooner lay at Mystic Wharf, including May 30th. Presumably it was permitted on that day for the convenience of both parties, and the discharge upon a holiday leaves the case as if the schooner had so much less cargo to discharge on her stipulated lay days.

The libelant contends that the discharge was hindered at Mystic Wharf by its inconvenient arrangement and management, and by the inability of the surveyor properly to keep up with the stevedore. The evidence to this effect is not very definite. That Mystic Wharf is somewhat less convenient than other wharves in Boston appears pretty plainly, and the rate of discharge thereat seems to be somewhat lower than at some other wharves. I am not convinced, however, either by the evidence or by the argument, that a reasonable rate of discharge is necessarily the same at all wharves and under all circumstances.

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Related

The Reeside
20 F. Cas. 458 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1837)
Thacher v. Boston Gas Light Co.
23 F. Cas. 874 (D. Massachusetts, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
90 F. 669, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottingham-v-abbott-mad-1898.