Fore River Shipbuilding Co. v. Southern Pac. Co.

219 F. 387, 135 C.C.A. 129, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1662
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1914
DocketNo. 1046
StatusPublished

This text of 219 F. 387 (Fore River Shipbuilding Co. v. Southern Pac. Co.) 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
Fore River Shipbuilding Co. v. Southern Pac. Co., 219 F. 387, 135 C.C.A. 129, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1662 (1st Cir. 1914).

Opinions

BINGIIAM, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought by the Fore River Shipbuilding Company against the Southern Pacific Company, in the District Court for the District of Massachusetts, to recover the final payment of $100,000 under a contract in which the plaintiff agreed to construct and deliver to the defendant a steamship for use in its transportation service between the ports of New York and New Orleans, or, in the alternative, to recover the difference between the actual cost of the ship and the sums paid therefor by the defendant, and to recover the expense of certain repairs and alterations made in the ship by tlie plaintiff after it was delivered to the defendant.

The declaration contains four counts. The first count is to recover the final payment of $100,000, called for by the contract; the second is to recover $546,929.52, the difference between the alleged actual cost of the ship and the sum of $900,000, which the defendant has paid the plaintiff; and the third and fourth counts are to recover $120,572.-90 for expenses incurred in repairing and altering the ship on two occasions- — the first occasion being after the first trial trip to New Orleans, when the expenditure amounted to $69,579.98, and the other after the tenth trip to New Orleans, when the expenditure was $50,992.92.

The case was originally heard by an auditor, who reported his findings. Later it was set for trial before a jury. At the trial the auditor’s report and other evidence were introduced, and at the close of all the evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendant, subject to the plaintiff’s exception. The case is now here on the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions, and the errors assigned are to the order of the court directing a verdict for the defendant and to the exclusion of certain evidence.

in the contract it was provided that the defendant should pay tor the steamship $1,000,000 in 10 payments of $100,000 each, The first payment was to be made when the keel was laid and the steel material was ordered, and the title to the ship and the materiarpurchased therefor was thereupon to pass to the defendant. The ninth payment was to be made when the ship was delivered; the tenth, when the steamship was “finally accepted,” and “when the performance of the vessel shall have equaled, in the opinion of the Pacific Company, in a satisfactory and substantial manner, the guaranty requirements herein set forth as to speed and coal consumption.” The intervening payments became due at stated times as the work progressed. ’ All of the payments, prior to the tenth, were met in accordance with the terms of the contract. The guáranty as to speed and coal consumption was that the steamship “shall, under such management as shall be agreed upon by the parties hereto to be proper, show, on a displacement not exceeding ten thousand (10,000) tons on sailing, on a round trip between New York and New Orleans, between the points of sea departure at each port, an average speed in ordinary weather of 16 knots per hour,” and “that the total coal consumption when making the above-named speed under the above-named conditions shall not; exceed an average of seven (7) tons of coal per hour, including auxiliaries, of a quality equal to the Clearfield, Berwind-White, or Cumberland, containing not less than fourteen thousand (14,000) British thermal units per pound.”

[390]*390[1] The evidence discloses, and the auditor has found, that 14 trial trips or tests under the guaranty were had, on none of which did the ship maintain an average speed of 16 knots per hour, or keep within the required coal consumption, and that on this account the defendant declined "to accept the ship as complying with the guaranty, and to make the final payment of $100,000.

Assuming these facts to be true, the plaintiff contends there was evidence from which it could reasonably have been found that the ship was capable, under proper management, of complying with the terms of the guaranty, and was prevented from so doing through the negligence of the defendant; that the evidence would not only authorize a finding that the ship’s failure to comply with the guaranty was due to a lack of skillful handling on these trips, but would also justify the conclusion that the engines, boilers, and machinery comprising the motive power of the ship were so damaged by the defendant’s negligent conduct that the ship was prevented from doing, what it would otherwise have accomplished; that the ship being capable, under proper management, of complying with the guaranty, and her structure being so damaged through the defendant’s negligence as to prevent her complying therewith, it became the duty of the defendant to restore the ship to the capacity she possessed when received from the plaintiff, and upon the defendant’s failure to do this thp plaintiff would be excused from showing actual performance on the part of the ship under an agreed management in accordance with the terms of the guaranty.

The defendant contends that the guaranty calls for actual performance on the part of the ship; that it is therefore unimportant whether the ship was ever capable of complying with the guaranty; that the management for 14 trial trips was agreed upon in advance, on all of which the, ship failed to meet the guaranteed requirements; and that if the ship’s structure was damaged on these trips through the negli- . gence of the officers and men employed, their conduct, they having been ágreed upon in advance, would not be attributable to the defendant, and would not impose a duty upon it to restore the ship to the condition she was in when received, or excuse the plaintiff from seeing that she actually complied with the guaranty.

The auditor has found that during the voyages to New Orleans the ship was in the possession and control of the defendant, and the voyages were made as trips in its transportation service. This is but another way of stating that the officers and men employed on these trips were the servants and agents of the defendant, for whose conduct it was legally chargeable. The 'stipulation in the guaranty calling for an agreed management does not have the effect, when a management is agreed upon, of shifting the responsibility for the conduct of these officers and men from the defendant to the plaintiff. - Its effect, as pointed out in our decision in Southern Pacific Co. v. Fore River Shipbuilding Co., 219 Fed. 378, 135 C. C. A. 120, is to preclude the parties from thereafter claiming or being permitted to show that the officers and men were incompetent, or their number inadequate, and leaves the responsibility for their conduct in the actual handling of the ship chargeable to the defendant, the same as it would have been had [391]*391the guaranty contained no such stipulation and no agreement as to the management had been made. Then, again, if the management of the ship on these trips was not agreed upon in advance, there could be no question but that the officers and men in charge of the ship were the servants and agents of the defendant, for whose negligent conduct in damaging the structure of the ship it would be responsible.

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Bluebook (online)
219 F. 387, 135 C.C.A. 129, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fore-river-shipbuilding-co-v-southern-pac-co-ca1-1914.