Hasler v. West India S. S. Co.

212 F. 862, 129 C.C.A. 382, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2136
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1914
DocketNo. 119
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 212 F. 862 (Hasler v. West India S. S. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hasler v. West India S. S. Co., 212 F. 862, 129 C.C.A. 382, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2136 (2d Cir. 1914).

Opinions

ROGERS, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). [1] The question for this court to decide is whether the respondent committed a breach of the charter party and is liable in damages therefore as decreed by the court below. In determining this question it is necessary to apply the ordinary principles of contract law. For a charter party is regarded, after all, as simply an ordinary contract and as such is subject to the same rules that govern ordinary contracts.

Under the terms of the contract in the case at bar the respondent or charterer had the right to load the libelant’s vessel with sugar at some one or two of the ports on the north side of Cuba for a voyage to New York, or Philadelphia, or Boston as ordered. The vessel by the express terms of the contract was to be at the loading port ready for cargo by July 12, 1910. It was the duty of the respondent; the charterer, when the vessel was tendered at Havana on July 11th to inform the libelant to which port or ports on the north side of Cuba she should proceed as her loading port. The order was issued that the boat should proceed to Nuevitas. This she did not do, basing her refusal to go upon the conduct of respondent, which, it is claimed, released her from the obligation to proceed to the designated port. It is also alleged that respondent’s conduct amounted to a breach of the charter party.'

It is our understanding that under a charter party if the ship is not at the loading port its duty is to proceed there with reasonable diligence, and if she fails to arrive by the designated time the charterer may refuse to load her and may also have his action for damages— unless the delay was occasioned by excepted perils. But in the case under consideration the action for damages is not brought by the charterer although the ship made no attempt to reach the designated port. Here the action is brought by the shipowners, and as they did not comply with the terms of their contract and do not claim that they did the circumstances must be somewhat unusual if they can maintain the suit.

It appears that the steamer reached Havana on July 6, 1910, with 3,200 tons of coal and 200 tons of coke on board, and the work of [864]*864unloading began at 6 o’clock the next morning. That same day the libelant informed the respondent that they would work nights and would go to any expense necessary to discharge the cargo so as to be ready to load on time as fixed by the charter. The reply was that the respondent did' not intend to cancel; that it was not necessary to work overtime and would be a waste of money; and that, as the respondent had a cargo ready, it would not make any difference if the boat was two or three days late. It also appears that, if the libel-ants had not been misled by the respondent, the vessel could and would have been ready according to the contract. About 500 tons — a ten-hour day — was actually discharged each day, and, when night work was done, fresh gangs of men being used, about the same amount of coal was discharged each night. Because of the representations and assurances of the respondent that there was no intention to cancel and that there was no reason why the libelant should work nights, no night work at unloading was done the first two nights. But later, suspicions having been aroused that the intentions of the respondent were not according to its professions, night shifts were put on and worked all Saturday night and Sunday night, and it was agreed that if night shifts had also worked on the nights of Thursday and Friday the vessel might have cleared on Saturday and conformed in all respects to her contract.

On July 11th, the steamer being unloaded, one of the agents of the respondent, well aware of the representations previously made, came to see the libelant stating that he had “a dirty business to perform,” or words to that effect; adding that the respondent had no cargo for the boat, and that if orders were wanted they would be given in writing to proceed to Nuevitas the farthest port to which she could be sent from Havana, and that when she got there “we are going to cancel her.” The testimony also showed that the order to go to Nue-vitas was given simply because it was known that the vessel finishing her discharge on July 11th could not reach Nuevitas on the 12th.

The libelants claim that, in view of all that took place, the respondent was in fact guilty of a breach of contract and that was the view taken in the court below. The libelants also claim that there was a waiver of the requirement that the libelants tender the steamer at the loading port on or before July 12th.

In all this we do not discover anything which amounts to a breach of contract on the part of the respondent. That there was a breach of the charter party is evident. But it occurred when and because the libelant failed to send the ship to Nuevitas and was committed by the libelant and not by respondent. There was nothing in the conduct of the respondent, bad and reprehensible as that conduct was, which discharged the libelant from its obligation to perform its agreement. The fact that the libelant was intentionally misled so to delay its unloading that it could not reach the portxm the north side of Cuba within the time fixed in the charter party, did not, in itself, constitute any breach of contract by the respondent. But we are far from saying that it was without effect upon the rights of the parties under the contract.

[865]*865There is no reason we are aware of why fraud or misrepresentation or misconduct in the dealings had between the parties to a charter agreement should have any different effect than would follow similar conduct as between parties who had entered into any other kind of contract. And we must admit that the testimony we find in the record has not made a favorable impression upon us, or served to convince us that the characterization given to the business by the respondent’s own representative, already quoted, was not deserved. But while this representation was made by the respondent, and was acted upon by the libelants to' their prejudice, it is proper to add that it was made by one of respondent’s subordinate officials, and that'thé chief officers of the respondent company denied that they had ever authorized it or that they had any knowledge of it until after the harm had been accomplished.

A court of admiralty exercises, within certain limits, equitable as well as legal jurisdiction and is entirely competent to afford certain equitable relief. In Andrews v. Essex Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 3 Mason, 6, 16, Fed. Cas. No. 374, Mr. Justice Story in 1822 said that:

“In ttie exercise of their general jurisdiction, courts of admiralty may be properly said to be courts of equity; that is, courts proceeding ex sequo et bono, and not confined to the narrow notions of the common law.”

And in Benedict’s Admiralty (2d Ed.) § 329, it is said that the court of admiralty is bound, by its nature and constitution, to determine the cases submitted to its cognizance upon equitable principles, and according to the rules of natural justice. It cannot in a technical sense be called a court of equity. It is rather a court of justice.

But there is no legal or equitable principle under which this court can hold that this culpable conduct of the respondent put an end to this contract, or relieved the libelant from its obligation to send the vessel to such port as the respondent directed. The most effect the courts could give to the respondent’s conduct would be to recognize it as giving rise to an equitable estoppel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 F. 862, 129 C.C.A. 382, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 2136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hasler-v-west-india-s-s-co-ca2-1914.