Evans v. Blair

114 F. 616, 52 C.C.A. 396, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 1902
DocketNo. 420
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 114 F. 616 (Evans v. Blair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Blair, 114 F. 616, 52 C.C.A. 396, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121 (1st Cir. 1902).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

This appeal arises out of a libel for demurrage, filed by the owners of the schooner Augustus Hunt against a cargo of Cumberland coal, shipped from Philadelphia to Portland, Me., and claimed by Mr. Evans in behalf of the Maine Central Railroad Company, its owner, and the real party in interest. The decree of the district court was in favor of the vessel, and Mr. Evans appealed. .

The bill of lading provided that the vessel should have a lien on the cargo for demurrage. The case turns on the application of the following provision contained in it:

“Said vessel shall have precedence in discharging over all vessels arriving or giving notice after her arrival, and for any violation of this provision she shall be compensated in demurrage as if, while delayed by sncli violation, her discharge had proceeded at the rate of three hundred tons per day.”

The bill of lading also provided lay days, to be computed at the rate of one day for every one hundred and fifty tons of coal. The vessel was discharged within the lay days computed at that rate,but, of course, this provision was qualified, and in part overruled, by the stipulation giving her precedence. The vessel claims that the Lewis H. Goward and the John Twohey, which arrived and reported after her, were given before her berths at which she might and should have been discharged.

The three vessels were laden with bituminous coal, but from different mines, and therefore, perhaps, of different qualities and intended for different uses. The Lewis II. Goward was laden with George’s Creek Big Vein Cumberland coal, as appears by her bill of lading. This coal did not belong to the Maine Central Railroad Company, and therefore it was consigned to it, to be unladen by it, and transshipped over its rails to its owners. The John Twohey was laden with New River steam coal, also shown by her bill of lading, and which the evidence proves was intended for the passenger locomotives of the Maine Central Railroad Company. The Augustus Hunt was laden with Davis bituminous coal, as also shown by her bill of lading.

The Maine Central Railroad Company controlled three wharves at which coal was discharged, — one its principal place of discharge, [618]*618at which about 90 per cent, of its coal was received, being the same at which the Augustus Hunt was unladen; and two others, which are described as ‘‘above the bridges,” and one of which was used for discharging the Lewis H. Goward, and the other, the upper one, the John Twohey. Under these circumstances, the defenses set up in the answer were that the Augustus Hunt “had on board Davis bituminous coal, intended for the use of the railroad of said Maine Central Railroad Company, and that said Maine Central Railroad Company was then, and had been for a long time, in the habit of discharging coal of this description, intended for the use as aforesaid, upon its pile upon said lower wharf, and nowhere else, and that it had no facilities at any other'wharf for discharging schooners loaded with coal as aforesaid; that, according to the terms of the bill of lading under which said cargo was brought, it was optional with said Maine Central Railroad Company to discharge said schooner at said lower wharf or at its wharf above the bridges; that exercising such option, and without delay, said Maine Central Railroad Company ordered said schooner to said lower wharf, and there discharged her;” that “the cargo upon said schooner John Twohej’ consisted of a different kind of coal from that on the schooner Augustus Hunt, and was not intended to be placed upon the pile at said lower wharf, or for use upon the railroad of said Maine Central Railroad Company in the same manner as the coal upon said schooner Augustus Hunt; and that the discharge of said schooner John Twohey did not in any way interfere with or delay the discharge of said schooner Augustus Hunt.”

There is a further defense in connection with the Lewis H. Goward, to which we will refer in its proper connection.

The bill of lading in issue hardly sustains the allegation of the answer that, according to its “terms,” it was optional with the consignee to discharge at its lower wharf or at a wharf above the bridges. It is true that, in accordance with the custom at most Atlantic ports, if not at all of them, and also in accordance with the necessities of the case (Davis v. Wallace, 3 Cliff. 123, 130, Fed. Cas. No. 3,657), the Maine Central Railroad Company had, in a general way, the privilege of determining at which of its wharves it should discharge the Augustus Hunt; but in view of the provision in the bill of lading securing to this vessel her turn, and, indeed, without it, it cannot properly be said that this option was an absolute and arbitrary one.

Both parties have cited judicial decisions supposed to elucidate the case; but an examination of them results in giving us no assistance, unless it be found in Stephens v. Macleod, 19 Sess. Cas. (4th Series) 38. Charter parties and bills of lading which proyided for loading or discharging an entire cargo at ports where there were several berths for loading or discharging, and which have been under discussion in the English courts, contained the expression, “at any safe berth as ordered,” or its equivalent. Murphy v. Coffin, 12 Q. B. Div. 87; Copper Co. v. Morel [1891] 2 Q. B. 647. The result of this class of cases, after some fluctuation, has been to leave the consignee a somewhat unlimited power in the matter of select[619]*619ing the berth, regardless of its crowded state, provided, only, it is a safe one. This, however, comes from the fact that the charter party, or bill of lading, contained express language favorable to the consignee, and from the application of the well-known rule that where, in maritime contracts, parties have seen lit to choose fixed forms of expression, the great variety of contingencies incidental to maritime transactions disenable the courts from establishing any safe theory by which the letter can be modified to meet any supposed intent. In the case at bar, however, there is no such express phraseology, and we are left to work out the construction of the bill of lading as though it provided in effect, in general terms, for a specified number of lay days which the consignee could not exceed, but with also an obligation to give the vessel its turn, even though thereby she is the sooner discharged. Practically, therefore, this case comes down to the mere question whether or not the vessel was given her turn, subject to whatever customs or necessities existed at the port of discharge which might be fairly within the contemplation of both parties.

As we have already said, the custom at most Atlantic ports, including, undoubtedly, the port of Portland, gave the Maine Central Railroad Company, in a general way, the privilege of determining at which of its wharves it should discharge the Augustus Hunt', leaving the vessel to be satisfied if she received her turn at that wharf, provided the lay days expressly limited in the bill of lading were not exceeded. As we have already said, this privilege which the Maine Central Railroad Company had of selecting the berth at which the vessel should be discharged did not come from any express stipulation, as in the English cases to which we have referred, but from the general rules which necessarily govern the relations of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
114 F. 616, 52 C.C.A. 396, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-blair-ca1-1902.