Dudoit v. Spencer

2 Haw. 493, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 6
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Haw. 493 (Dudoit v. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudoit v. Spencer, 2 Haw. 493, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 6 (haw 1862).

Opinion

[494]*494The Court per

Justice Robertson :

The complainant in this cause alleges in his bill, in substance as follows, viz : That in the autumn of the year 1858, he was the sole registered owner of the Hawaiian schooner “Alice,” and entered into an agreement with Thomas Spencer of Honolulu, the defendant, to take an interest in said schooner, and to fit her out for a whaling voyage, under the control and management of the defendant, who had her repaired and fitted out, and dispatched her to the Coast of California about the month of November, 1858, under the command of Rhodes Spencer ; that after her departure, defendant furnished the complainant with an account, by which it was made to appear that said schooner and outfit’had cost $9,168 52, (valuing the vessel before her repair at $2,000,) and by which account defendant takes to himself six-sevenths interest in said schooner and- outfits, and allows the complainant one-seventh interest therein, but which account contains overcharged in items for supplies ; that the schooner returned to Honolulu in the spring of 1859, when the defendant disposed of the oil ’procured by her, and having furnished her with the requisite supplies, dispatched her on a cruise to the North, where she whaled during the summer, but did not return to these Islands, her then-master, Joseph Spencer, having transhipped her catchings to the bark “ Florence,” owned by defendant, which brought the samé to Honolulu, but as to how much such catchings amounted to, or how the same was disposed of, the complainant has no means of knowing that in the spring of 1860, defendant forwarded a master, officers, crew, and supplies to the schooner, to enable her to whale during the summer of that year, with the assent of complainant, when she had a very successful season, having-, taken ten whales, which were cut in by her crew, the greater part of the blubber, however, being carried on board of the “ Florence,” and there tried out and put into casks in common with the oil procured by her boats ; and that, in particular, one large whale secured by the boats of the schooner was taken alongside the “ Florence,” cut in and mixed with her catchings ; that the schooner was of sufficient capacity, and furnished with sufficient means, for trying out and stowing away her own catchings, and therefore the trying out and stowing away of her oil on board the “ Florence,” [495]*495was unjust towards the schooner, and the complainant as part owner; that the “ Florence ” returned to Honolulu about the 26th October, 1860, when defendant disposed of the oil and bone brought by her, including that procured by the schooner ; that the “ Alice ” had again been left at the North, in Shantar Bay, contrary to the desire and expressed wish of the complainant, notwithstanding that all the moveable property on board of her had been stolen by the Indians the previous winter, and although said schooner was in a condition to have made the voyage back to Honolulu in the early part of the fall season ; that the conduct of the defendant in taking and stowing the catchings of the schooner on board the bark “ Florence,” was unjust towards the complainant, who never had any connection with said bark, and denies the right of the defendant to involve the catchings and accounts of the schooner with those of the bark, but claims that the same should be kept separate, as regards the summer season of 1860, when the catch of the schooner was large, in like manner as was done with those of the two previous cruises, when her catch was comparatively small; that complainant has been unable to procure from defendant any account of the proceeds of the whaling cruise of 1860, and has also been damnified by the “Alice” having been left for another winter in the northern seas, against his express protest; and the complainant prays that an account may be taken of the proceeds of the catchings of the “ Alice,” and of the disbursements made by defendant, and that he may have compensation for the damage he has sustained by the detention of the “ Alice ” in Shantar Bay, and the appropriation of his share of that vessel by the defendant, without his consent.

The defendant, in his answer, admits that he entered into an agreement with the complainant, in the fall of the year 1858, to fit out the “ Alice ” for a whaling voyage under his management, in pursuance of which agreement said vessel was fitted out, and sent to the Coast of California about November, 1858, and that after her sailing he furnished to complainant an account of disbursements and supplies, which he avers to be correct and containing no overcharges. Defendant further admits that the “ Alice ” returned in the early part of 1859, when he disposed of her catchings, and that she was refitted and dispatched to [496]*496the North on a whaling cruise, from which she did not return, her catchings being transhipped on board of the “ Florence,” which brought the same to Honolulu ; and avers that complainant has been shown the. account sales of such catchings as furnished the defendant, who has also rendered an account current to the complainant, giving him credit for his net interest. Defendant admits, also, that, in the spring of 1860, he forwarded a master, officers, crew and supplies for the “ Alice,” with the concurrence of the complainant, but that the crew were shipped on the articles of the “ Florence,” and furnished with provisions belonging to her, with the understanding that the “ Alice ” was to be used as a tender to the “ Florence ;” and he avers further, that the men employed on the “ Alice,” during the season, were only sufficient to man her boats for wh'aling, at which they wore constantly employed, and it was impossible to try out the “ Alice’s ” blubber on board of that vessel,-wherefore it was taken on board the “ Florence ” to be tried out and put in casks, that vessel being supplied with extra men for that purpose. Defendant further admits that the “Alice” had again been left in Shantar Bay, but avers that she was of necessitj' abandoned, being unseaAvorthy and incapable of performing the voyage back to Honolulu, after the close of the whaling season. ■ Defendant avers an agreement with complainant that the “ Alice ” should be used as a tender to the “ Florence,” during the summer of 1860, and that he is ready to allow, for the services of the “ Alice,” such proportions of the catchings during that season as may be just, so soon as the same are sold and accounted for, which had not been done when the suit was commenced. Defendant denies that complainant has ever complained of the leaving of the “ Alice ” at the North during the winter of 1859-60, but has 'always expressed himself satisfied with the defendant’s management, up to the return of the “ Florence ” in the fall of 1860, when he complained because the “ Alice ” had not been brought back. And defendant avers that he instructed the master of the “ Florence,” if he should find the “ Alice ” in a condition to make the passage to Honolulu, to man her and send her down, but that, as he is informed and believes, she was unfit to make such passage, and therefore left in Shanter Bay.

[497]*497Complainant filed a replication, in which he denies that there was any understanding or agreement between the parties, in the spring of 1860, that the “Alice ” was to be used as a tender to the bark “Florence;” or that the “Alice” was abandoned or left in Shantar Bay, as unseaworthy for a voyage to Honolulu ; and traverses several other less important averments contained in defendant’s answer.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Haw. 493, 1862 Haw. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudoit-v-spencer-haw-1862.