Hawgood v. One Thousand Three Hundred & Ten Tons of Coal

21 F. 681, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 150
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 14, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 F. 681 (Hawgood v. One Thousand Three Hundred & Ten Tons of Coal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawgood v. One Thousand Three Hundred & Ten Tons of Coal, 21 F. 681, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 150 (E.D. Wis. 1884).

Opinion

Dyer, J.

On the seventeenth day of August, 1882, R. R. Hefford, as agent for Pratt, Parker & Co., shipped on board the following [682]*682named vessels, at Buffalo, certain cargoes of coal, all consigned to A. Pugh & Co., care of Green Bay, Winona & St. Paul Railroad Company, at Green Bay, Wisconsin, namely: On board the steamer Belle Cross,—which was a steam-barge engaged in towing other vessels and carrying cargoes upon the lakes,—817 net tons of Blossburgh coal; on board the sailing barge Chicago Board of Trade, 693 gross tons of chestnut coal; on board the sailing barge George H. Wand, 638 gross tons of stove coal; on board the sailing barge Little Jake, 654 net tons of stove coal; and on board the sailing barge S. Clement, 783 net tons of stove coal; of all which vessels the libelants were the owners. 'Freight was to be paid at the rates of 85 cents per ton for the cargo of chestnut coal, and 90 cents per ton for all the other cargoes. The bills of lading provided that the consignee was to discharge cargoes without expense to the masters of the vessels, who were to collect the freight, but they contained no stipulation as to the time within which the cargoes were to be unloaded at their destination, nor as to the payment of demurrage in case of detentions in unloading. The vessels, sailing as a fleet, left Buffalo with their cargoes about August 17th, and arrived at Green Bay on the twenty-eighth of that month. They were there detained, in part, because of the previous arrival of other vessels awaiting discharge of cargoes, but principally for want of facilities for unloading, until the fifth of September, when the last of the fleet was unloaded.- The entire cargoes were placed upon the docks of the railroad company, but a portion of the coal was unloaded under an assertion of a lien for demurrage, and a special custodian thereof was placed in charge by one of the libelants, and continued in charge until the coal was seized by the marshal upon monition issued in the present suit. The libelants’ right to recover is contested upon every ground of defense set up in the answer, but the only question that will be considered in this opinion is that of the right of the libelants to maintain this suit in rem upon their claim for demurrage. The contention of counsel for the claimant is that, in the absence of any stipulation in the bills of lading limiting the time within which the cargoes should be unloaded, or providing for the payment of demurrage in ease of unreasonable detention, the libelants can assert no lien upon the cargo for loss or damage occasioned by such detention; and therefore that in such case a suit in rem is not maintainable in admiralty, but that the remedy of the owners of the vessels, if any, is one exclusively in personam against the consignee of the cargoes. From quite an early period there has been a good deal of controversy in the common-law courts, and later in some of the admiralty courts, upon the subject of the rights of shipowners and other carriers with reference to claims for demurrage. The question seems to have most frequently come up in suits between ship-owner and consignee, and hence direct authority is not abundant upon the precise point here in judgment.

Two English cases (Phillips v. Rodie, 15 East, 547, and Birley v. [683]*683Gladstone, 3 Maule & S. 205) aro much relied on in argument by counsel for the claimant, who insists that they declare to this day the law governing a case like the present. Both were common-law actions. Phillips v. Eodie was a suit in trover, brought by the assignee in bankruptcy of the charterer of a vessel and consignee of the cargo for 179 bales of cotton which wore in the possession of the ship-owner, and held by him on a claim for dead freight and demurrage. It was decided that where the freighter of a ship covenanted that if she should not he fully laden he would not only pay for the goods on board, hut also for so much in addition as the ship would have carried for which lie had stipulated to pay freight according to different rates, the ship-owner had no lien upon the goods actually on hoard for the amount of the dead freight; in other words, for the compensation in damages which he was entitled to for the freighter’s breach of contract in not putting a full loading on board. The ground on which the judgment of the court proceeded seems to have been that there was nothing to which a lien could attach. The claim was for freight not earned, and which it was claimed the ship-owner ought to have earned, or unliquidated compensation for the loss of freight recoverable in the absence and place of freight. Nothing was said about demurrage, apart from the question of dead freight; but, as the ship-owner’s claim included demurrage, and as it was held that the plaintiff could maintain his action, it must be implied that the judgment of the court was that there was no lien upon the goods, either for dead freight or demurrage. Birley v. Gladstone was an action by the assignee of the freighter to recover money paid by him to the ship-owners under protest, which money was demanded by the ship-owners in respect of goods which were put on board the vessel at the loading port, but were afterwards relanded and restored to the agent of the freighter, under jiroeess of law, at the loading port, and for dead freight and demurrage. The action was assumpsit. By the charter-party the ship-owner covenanted to receive a full cargo, and the freighter to load the same, and to pay so much for every ton of freight which should be delivered at the King's beams, at Liverpool, and so much per diem for demurrage. The parlies mutually hound themselves—the ship-owners the ship, and the freighter the goods to be laden on board—in a penal sum for the performance of every article contained in the charter-party; and it was adjudged that the ship-owners had no lien upon the goods actually brought home to Liverpool for the sum of money claimed to be duo on account of goods which wore put on board at the loading port, but afterwards relanded and restored to the freighter’s agent, under process of law, at such port, nor for the sum claimed for dead freight and demurrage; and Phillips v. Eodie was cited in the judgment as decisive authority upon the points.

It would, perhaps, be enough to say of those cases that as tfiey were suits at common law, requiring judgments upon the common-law [684]*684rights of the parties, they are not to be regarded as declaratory of the principles of law which now govern courts of admiralty in determining questions like the present. In this connection the remarks of Judge Lowell in the case of The Hyperion’s Cargo, 2 Low. 94, are very pertinent. He says :

“When the common law of England was modified by the introduction of many rules from the law-merchant, the former law had no process for enforcing this reciprocal privilege of the ship and the goods, [that is, the privilege which has its origin in the rule that the ship is bound to the merchandise and the merchandise to the ship,] and had succeeded in repressing the only court that had the requisite modes of action, and was therefore obliged to say that it could not recognize the maxim even when embodied in express contract, as it usually is in English charter-parties. Birley v. Gladstone, 3 Maule & S. 205; Gladstone v. Birley, 2 Mer. 401. Erom the time of those decisions to that of Gray v. Carr, L. R. 6 Q. B.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. 681, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawgood-v-one-thousand-three-hundred-ten-tons-of-coal-wied-1884.