Devato v. Eight Hundred & Twenty-Three Barrels of Plumbago

20 F. 510, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 98
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 31, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 20 F. 510 (Devato v. Eight Hundred & Twenty-Three Barrels of Plumbago) 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
Devato v. Eight Hundred & Twenty-Three Barrels of Plumbago, 20 F. 510, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 98 (S.D.N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Bbcwn, J,

This libel was filed to recover the sum of $2,888.63, freighs alleged to be due upon 828 barrels of plumbago, brought on board the bark Guiseppe Mazzini, from Colombo, in the island of Ceylo i, and discharged at Pierrepont’s stores, Brooklyn, immediately adjae mt to the Wall-street ferry. The plumbago was shipped under a bill of lading which describes the bark as “bound for New York,” and t íat the goods were to be “delivered at the aforesaid port of New York’ on payment of freight, etc. There wore numerous other con-signe ;s of different portions of the cargo, under various bills of lading, quite a number of the other shipments being also of plumbago. The vesse arrived in New York on the fifteenth of January, 1882. Prior there o a majority of the consignees, upon the solicitation of thte agen! a of the proprietor of Pierrepont’s store, had signed requests that the b irk should go to Pierropont’s stores, Brooklyn, to unload. The clain ants of the plumbago in suit were not consulted. They wanted their cargo landed in New York, and on learning that the bark had gone to Brooklyn, protested against her unloading there. The plumbago, however, was put upon the pier there, and subsequently taken them e by the claimants in lighters to New York. The claimants, Gañiz, Jones & Co., contend in their answer that, under the bill of ladin g, the ship was bound to make delivery at the city of New York; that bhe delivery upon the dock at Brooklyn was wrongful; that while then a portion of the plumbago was injured through exposure to snow and rain; and that the claimants were subjected to the expense of [512]*512$132.22, in the subsequent lighterage of the plumbago to New York, which they claim as an offset against any sum which may be due for freight.

■ Upon the trial the claim for injury to the goods while on the pier was waived, in order that a decision might be had upon the single question concerning the right of the vessel, under such a bill of lading, to make delivery of the cargo in Brooklyn, against the protest of one of the consignees, and without compensation for lighterage across the river.

For some 30 years past there has existed at this port a controversy, or something" in the nature of a controversy, between shipowners and importers as to the right of a vessel to make delivery of •cargo consigned to “the port of New York” on the adjacent shores of Brooklyn, Jersey City, or Hoboken. The evidence shows that it began some 30 or 35 years ago, about which time some of the steamship lines began to go to Jersey City. Complaint was immediately made by the merchants in regard to that practice, and some compensation was paid for the extra expense of ferriage. This liability was soon avoided by an alteration of the terms of the bills of lading so as to give liberty to discharge at Jersey City; and several lines now provide generally for an option to discharge at Jersey City, Hoboken, or New York. About the same time commodious warehouses began to be' erected in Brooklyn, which now extend almost continuously from Fulton ferry to below Hamilton ferry, on the Brooklyn side. These warehouses, with the docks to which they are adjacent, furnish superior facilities for the ready handling and storage of cargo; and during the last 25 years they have been more and more used for storing goods not intended for immediate consumption. In certain lines of business, the East India trade particularly, a large majority of the .cargoes of late years have come to be discharged at the Brooklyn stores; and this tendency has lately been still further increased by the erection of the Brooklyn bridge, as the vessels engaged in that trade are mostly unable to go above the bridge without housing their topmasts. During the last five years, as the evidence shows, almost all the vessels from Colombo and Ceylon have discharged at Brooklyn.

Some 15 or 20 witnesses upon each side have been examined in reference to the custom of delivery. The witnesses on the part of the respondents are, for the most part, merchants or persons identified in interest with importers. Some of them, however, are entirely impartial, and have been familiar with the controversy on this subject for 25 years or upwards, and one of them has been frequently called on to arbitrate upon differences and claims for damage arising through deliveries in Brooklyn. The respondents’ witnesses all testify that the practice of delivering in Brooklyn, so far as it has been the practice to unload there under bills of lading of this description, has always been more or less protested against, and a constant subject of claim for compensation on the part of those merchants who [513]*513desire* l tlieir goods to be landed in New York. In a few instances the co it of lighterage has been paid; but, generally, the only com-pensal ion allowed, where any was given, was the ferry charges for trucks employed to cart the goods to New York.

On the part of the libelants, while such claims are admitted to have ! ieen made to some extent by persons who wanted their goods in Ne j York, it is contended that such complaints are now much less frequent than formerly; that they never amounted to much, and always * ¡ame from only a very small proportion of the consignees; that no pa ymonts for lighterage were known; and that the occasional sums oaid for ferriage were paid from policy, in the competitions of trade, or, in a few instances, to avoid litigation, and were so small in am rant as not to be worth contending for; while quite a number of the witnesses had never heard of any such objections, or any claims for co npensation at all. Many witnesses for the libelants testify to the pi rctice of late years of landing nearly all the cargoes from Ceylon al Brooklyn, as above stated; and also to the general practice of del vering cargoes at any dock in New York or Brooklyn selected by a i íajority of the consignees.

Th( first ground of defense is that a delivery at Brooklyn is not a fulfilli cent of the contract contained in this bill of lading, because the bi 1 of lading describes the vessel as “bound for New York,” and makes the goods deliverable “at the aforesaid port of New York.” If thi; contention is sound, no freight was earned. The Boston, 1 Low. 464. This contention, however, cannot prevail, for the Brooklyn whan js are clearly within the legal limits of the “port of New York,” and hence within the possible limits of the port, as commercially under, itood.

1. 1 ,’he legal limits of the port of New York must be hold to be such iís are fixed or recognized by the statutes of the state or the Unite* l States. No statute of the United States defines these limits with e fcrietness. By section 2535, the state, for the purposes of the collect ion of the revenue, is divided into 10 collection districts, the secom' of which is the “district of the city of New York,” comprising “all tl *e waters and shores of the state of New York, and of the counties ol Hudson and Bergen, in the state of New Jersey, not included in other listricts” in which New York is made “the port of entry;” and 10 otl er towns and cities between Newburgh and Troy, inclusive, as well í s Cold Spring and Port Jefferson, on Long island, are made “ports of delivery;” while Jersey City is made “a port of entry and delive y,

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. 510, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devato-v-eight-hundred-twenty-three-barrels-of-plumbago-nysd-1884.