Fox v. Holt

9 F. Cas. 630, 4 Ben. 278, 36 Conn. 558, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28, 1870 Conn. LEXIS 27
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 27, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 630 (Fox v. Holt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Holt, 9 F. Cas. 630, 4 Ben. 278, 36 Conn. 558, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28, 1870 Conn. LEXIS 27 (D. Conn. 1870).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This was a libel in- personam against the respondent Holt as master, and both the respondents as owners, of the schooner “ Daniel Russell,” a domestic vessel belonging to Portland in this state, within the collection district of Middletown, and registered at the latter port. The suit is to recover damages for the breach of a contract of affreightment in the failure to deliver a part of a cargo of coal shipped at Rondout, in the state of New York, and to be delivered at Deep River, in this state. The amount in controversy is not large, but the principles involved are of interest to persons [559]*559owning, navigating and dealing with domestic vessels employed in the coasting trade. As the facts in the case are peculiar, a somewhat extended statement of them may be useful.

The Daniel Russell is one of a number of vessels owned in great part by the Middlesex Quarry Company, a corporation located at Portland and engaged in quarrying stone and delivering the same at various ports beyond the limits of this state. The Quarry Company own 15-16ths of this schooner, and, on the 10th of March, 1865, Holt became the owner of l-16th, by bill of sale from one White. On the same day a new enrollment was taken out of the Collector’s office at Middletown, in which Holt is described as master. He took charge of her as such, and the answer admits that ho continued as master down to about the 30tli of January, 1868. The bill of lading of the cargo was signed by him on the 31st of March, 1868. The Quarry Company deny that he was master at the latter date, and also that he signed the bill of lading as master. . On the facts before the court he must be deemed master on the day the bill of lading was signed. He had been master for several years preceding this contract. “Being once master, he must be deemed still to hold that character, until some overt act or declaration of the owners displaced him from that station.” The Schooner Tribune, 3 Sumn., 144, 149. He is described in the enrollment as master. “ The enrollment is evidence of what it declares at the time it was made, and it may be presumed that the same facts exist until a change is shown.” Jordan v. Young, 37 Maine, 276, 280. Of course neither the fact that a person was master at a particular time, nor that he is so described in the enrollment or any other of the ship’s papers, is conclusive evidence that he was so at any subsequent date however little remote. If he was afterwards displaced the fact can be shown. In order to effectually displace him, so that he can no longer bind the vessel or owners, it is not necessary that his formal discharge should come to the actual knowledge of others. If he is legally deprived of his authority and disconnected from the ship, that determines his authority. If he is legally dis[560]*560charged, but in fact continues in command, he is a mere usurper, and all persons haying knowledge of his discharge are bound by it, and can make no contract with him binding on the ship or owners. But there is no evidence in this case that Holt was discharged from the command of the Daniel Bussell prior to his receiving this cargo on board under this bill of lading. It is true the Quarry Company have proved the following vote, passed by them March 10th, 1868:— “Voted, to discharge H. B. Holt from the captaincy of schooner Daniel Bussell, unless he pays §200 on what he now owes this company.” But this vote is both conditional and vague. It was not a discharge, but a mere threat that he would be discharged unless he should pay two hundred dollars on his indebtedness. When he was t8 pay that amount in order to save his place the vote does not specify. This vote was never communicated to these libellants, or at least not till this cargo was received on board the schooner at Bondout. There was a correspondence between Holt and the Quarry Company’s agent about the subject matter of this vote, but there was no overt act, or declaration to the world, by either, which could bind third parties. Indeed, the only material fact proved, bearing on this point, is this conditional discharge, until the schooner had arrived at her port of destination with the coal on board, when,' before the delivery of any part of it, Holt was discharged absolutely, and displaced from his station. Until this latter act he must be deemed to have been master.

The objection that he did not sign the bill of lading as master is untenable. He described himself in the body of the instrument as master, and signed the same with his own name. The fact that he did not add the word “ master” to his signature is of no importance. If he was in fact master, with the authority to contract for the delivery of the cargo, and the latter was laden on board, the vessel and owners would be liable in case of a breach of the agreement, even had there been no bill of lading signed. “ It is the fact that the goods are shipped, and not the written acknowledgment of it—the obligation to carry them safely, and not the written contract, that create the liability and fix the jurisdiction of [561]*561the court.” Benedict’s Adm., §286 ; The Peytona, 2 Curtis C. C. 21. Of course I am here speaking of the contract, in its ordinary legal aspect, to carry and deliver this cargo laden on board, and not the peculiar agreement in relation to the mode of payment which the libellants rely on in the main feature of their claim. The cargo was in fact laden on board, the voyage performed, and a portion of it actually delivered. The question whether the owners are liable for the non-delivery of the remainder would be the same if there had been no bill of lading at all. The pertinent enquiry here is, not what was the form of the bill of lading, but whether Holt was master of the vessel, and thus had the authority to receive the coal on board and bind the vessel and owners to transport and deliver it.

I now come to the more important part of this controversy, in reference to which a detail of the facts is necessary in order to properly present the questions which arise. The primary business of this schooner was transporting stone from Portland to ports out of this state. In addition to this she was, unless ordered home light by the agent of the Quarry Company, accustomed to take return cargoes and deliver them at other ports. These return cargoes were not always taken from the ports at which the stone was delivered, but from other places. The port of delivery of a return cargo was not often, or at least not always, on the direct route of the voyage home, and, of course, a deviation from that route was sometimes made. The master had been accustomed to make and execute contracts of affreightment for these return voyages. His last trip down, before the close of navigation on Connecticut river, was from Portland to New York. He delivered his cargo of stone at the latter place, and not being ordered home light, went a short distance up the Hudson river to Cold Spring after a load of iron to be taken to Pali River in Massachusetts. The cold weather caught the schooner at Cold Spring, where she was frozen in, and laid up for the winter, or till she should be released by a thaw. The mate was left in charge as ship-keeper, and the captain [562]*562returned home to Deep River in this state, where he and the libellants reside, and remained there through the winter.

The practice of the captain to take return cargoes in the manner stated was well known to the agent of the Quarry-Company. He testified on the hearing that Capt. Holt had taken the schooner up the Hudson river in the summer of 1867 for freight.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 630, 4 Ben. 278, 36 Conn. 558, 1870 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28, 1870 Conn. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-holt-ctd-1870.