Davis v. Pendergast

7 F. Cas. 159, 8 Ben. 84
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 159 (Davis v. Pendergast) 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
Davis v. Pendergast, 7 F. Cas. 159, 8 Ben. 84 (S.D.N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

This is an action to recover for thirteen days’ demur-rage, at nine pounds sterling per day, on a [160]*160charter party made at New York, September 19th, 1866, between the libellants, owners of the bark Mary and Louisa, by their agents, and the respondents, by which that vessel was chartered to the respondents for a voyage from New York lo Rio de Janeiro in Brazil. The charter party provides that there shall be allowed for the loading and discharging of the vessel, at New York and Rio de Janeiro, “lay days as follows: that is to say, forty-five running days for loading and discharging,” and that, “in case the vessel is longer detained,” the respondents shall- pay “demurrage at the rate of nine pounds sterling per day, day by day, for every day so detained, provided such detention shall happen by default” of the respondents or their agent.

The libel, after averring the execution of the charter party and setting forth a copy of it as a part of the libel, states that it was agreed thereby that the respondents should have forty-five running lay days for loading and unloading, and that, if the vessel should be longer delayed, the respondents would pay to the libellants nine pounds sterling per day, day by day, so long as she should be so detained. This averment wholly ignores thi* clause in the charter party which provides that the respondents are not to pay demur-rage for the detention of the vessel beyond the forty-five running days, unless such detention happens by the default of the respondents or their agent. The libel also avers, that the respondents, after being notified of the readiness of the vessel to receive cargo at New York, used in loading her thirty-two of the i-iy days provided for in the charter party; and that, after the agents of the respondents at Rio de Janeiro were duly notified that ihe bark was there and ready to discharge her cargo, it could easily have been discharged within six days, but the vessel was detained by such agents, in the discharge of her cargo, for the thirteen days after the expiration of the forty-five lay days.

There can be no doubt that, under this charter party, the burden of proof is on the libel-lants to show that the vessel was detained by the default of the respondents. The express contract was, in effect, that the respondents should be liable only for such detention of the vessel, after the forty-five running days were exhausted, as should happen by their default or that of their agent. The mere lapse of time was not necessarily a default. It was for the libellants to show' such default affirmatively. Towle v. Kettell, 5 Cush. 18, 23.

Although the libel avers that the respondents consumed, in loading the vessel at New York, thirty-two of the lay days provided for in the charter party, yet it does not aver that such thirty-two days w'ere improperly or unnecessarily so consumed, nor does it aver that there was any detention of the vessel by the respondents, within the meaning of the charter party, in loading her, or any default on the part of the respondents in taking thirty-two of the- lay days to load the vessel. Nor is there any evidence that there was any such detention or default in loading the vessel. The allegation of the libel and the evidence are directed wholly to the point, that, the detention and the default were in the-discharging of the cargo at Rio de Janeiro.

The libel avers that the bark arrived at'Rio-de Janeiro on the 19th of December, 1866; that the agents of the respondents there were-notified on the 24th of December that the bark was ready to discharge cargo; that the-cargo could easily have been discharged by the bark within six days; but that she was thereafter detained by the agents of the respondents, in the discharge of the cargo, until and' Including the 19th of January, 1867, when the-unloading was completed. If these aver-ments be regarded as equivalent to an averment that the vessel was in fact ready to discharge on the 24tn of December, the libellants-have failed to show that she was ready to-discharge by that day, and they have also failed to show satisfactorily when afterwards she was ready to discharge, so as to set running the thirteen lay days that were left. She was not at any wharf by the 24th of December, nor did she have by that day any lighter alongside, into which she could discharge. The notice of her readiness to discharge amounted to nothing unless she was in fact ready to discharge. The master of the-bark, who is a witness for the libellants, testifies, that the vessel arrived at Rio de Janeiro on the 19th of December; that he reported to the agents of the respondents there on the 24th of December, as being ready to discharge; that the first cargo was taken out two or three days after that, and he cannot say •positively what day; that the cargo, was finally discharged on the 19th of January; that all of the cargo was discharged into lighters while the vessel was at anchor, except the coal, which was discharged at a wharf; that the delay was caused by the lighters not coming fast enough; and that, if the lighters had come fast enough, he could have discharged the whole cargo easily in six days. He also testifies, that he applied to the agents of the respondents to furnish the vessel with lighters; that he applied to no one else for a lighter; that the vessel paid for the use of the lighters; and that he- remonstrated with the agents repeatedly about the insufficient number of fighters. The master appears, on his own evidence, to have chosen the method of discharging by fighters, and to have employed what he considered proper measures to procure them, and, although he thought at the time that the supply of fighters was not sufficient, he did not resort to any means to procure more lighters, or resort to any other means of discharging any of the cargo. He testifies that there was plenty of room in Rio to land coal and lumber; that there were other methods of discharging coal and lumber than in lighters; that coal and lumber were not custom house [161]*161goods and could have been discharged at other wharves than the custom bouse wharves; that the reason for his resorting to lighters was that he thought he could discharge the custom house goods sooner by lighters, than by waiting his turn for a custom house wharf, because there were a number of vessels ahead of his; and that he was informed that if he wanted to discharge otherwise than by lighters he would have to wait such turn. The charter party contains a clause that “the cargo shall be received and delivered alongside within reach of the vessel’s tackles, or according to the customs of the port.” The fact that the master employed the agents of the respondents to procure the lighters is of no consequence. The charter party provides that the vessel shall “be consigned to charterers’ friends at port of discharge, subject to a commission of two and one-half per cent.”' The master says that the vessel paid for the use of the lighters. This made the agents of the respondents, pro hac vice and in reference to the furnishing of lighters, the agents of the vessel. As respects, therefore, all of the cargo that was discharged by lighters, which included all of the cargo except the coal, I do not see that the libellants have shown any detention of the vessel by the respondents.

[NOTE. On an appeal by libellants to the circuit court, this judgment was reversed.' Case No. 3,647.]

As regards the coal, the master says lie could have discharged it in one day, and that seven days were consumed in discharging it at tlie wharf, because the respondents failed to provide means lor taking it away as they should have done.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 159, 8 Ben. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-pendergast-nysd-1875.