Hoffschlaeger Co. v. The German Bark Paul Isenberg

4 D. Haw. 360
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedOctober 7, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 4 D. Haw. 360 (Hoffschlaeger Co. v. The German Bark Paul Isenberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffschlaeger Co. v. The German Bark Paul Isenberg, 4 D. Haw. 360 (D. Haw. 1913).

Opinion

Dole, J.

It is established in this case that the libellee, [362]*362lying at the port of London, about the 20th day of July 1905, shipped on board merchandise received in good order, well conditioned, and free from damage, to be carried to the port of Honolulu and there delivered to the libelant, the bill of lading therefor making exceptions for all and every damage and accident of the seas and navigation of whatsoever nature and kind, — one exception among others being for any loss or damage caused by the prolongation of the voyage. The libellee arrived in Honolulu May 6, 1906, and delivered to the libelant the said packages of merchandise, which upon delivery were discovered to be damaged, such merchandise consisting of galvanized tubs and buckets packed in nests, and bales of school bags made of some kind of vegetable fiber.

The libelant complained that such damage was due to the unseaworthiness of the libellee, bad stowage, the want of proper dunnage and to the negligence, carelessness, improper conduct and want of attention of the master and crew, and claims damages to the amount of $968.06.

It is alleged by the libellee that the ship was at the beginning of the voyage tight, staunch, strong, seaworthy, and in every way properly fitted, equipped, manned and found in every requisite for the voyage, and that in the stowage of the cargo every precaution was taken for the protection of the same, it being properly dunnaged and matted and after it was taken on board, the hatches were battened down and covered with tarpaulins and properly secured and fastened. The libellee further alleges that after leaving London and reaching the open sea she met incessant stormy weather during September and October, with occasional short periods of fair weather; that such stormy weather was of unusual violence, heavy seas swept the ship and constantly filling the upper deck with sea water caused great injury to the upper works, such as the deck house, the rail and the hatches; that the tarpaulins of the hatches were torn away, the hatch coamings wrenched and bent out of [363]*363their proper shape and many of the hatches broken with the violence.of the waves and the weight of sea water; that during this stoimy weather several of the seams of the deck were sprung and became leaky in consequence thereof, and because thereof and the injury to the hatches and hatch coamings considerable water leaked through and around the hatches into the hold; the rigging was damaged, a large and considerable portion of the sails blown away; that on at least two occasions when the weather was good, the hatches were opened and the cargo examined and found to be damaged by sea water. The evidence shows that the ship was in such a damaged condition from such stormy weather that upon passing the Falkland Islands, it was considered necessary to proceed to Port Stanley, on such islands, for repairs, where she arrived about November 1st. An official survey was at once made and repairs were proceeded with according to the recommendations of such survey. The delay at Port Stanley occupied three and a half months, during which period the cargo was left intact and the hatches, after having been opened and the cargo examined by the board of survey, were shut down and remained so for the rest of the stay.

[1] The burden of proof as to the seaworthiness of the ship and good stowage of the cargo is upon the libellee and I consider from the testimony that it has satisfactorily demonstrated that the ship was in reasonably seaworthy condition at the time the cargo was shipped in London. The testimony of the officers and of the log showed that the stormy weather experienced by the libellee was of unusual violence and that the leakage of sea water into the hold as a result therof was such as would be likely to happen to any sailing ship in good order under the circumstances.

There is one feature of the testimony, however, which might point to some defective construction of the vessel whereby sea water reached the hold in consequence of such construction. I refer to the stanchions of the ship’s rail [364]*364which were made of iron and were so connected with the interior of the ship and a runway of cement along, the edge of the deck a§ to open a way to the hold upon being bent and wrenched by the violence of the seas which swept over the ship. There is very little evidence on this point except as to the fact, and it is not easy under the circumstances to pass upon the question of defective construction, but it appears to the court that no such intrusion of sea water into the hold should have been possible from any injury to the said stanchions. For want of more definite testimony on this point, however, I will not consider that these facts point to an unseaworthiness of the ship due to a defect in its construction. Moreover it does not appear that the sea water that reached the hold in this way caused the damage complained of.

[2] [3] As to the libelant’s allegation of defective stowage, it appears from the evidence that the cargo in the main was ammonaic, or sulphate of ammonia, between 1400 and 1600 tons of that material being stowed between decks and in the lower hold “pretty near” up to the fore hatch; that the general merchandise including the galvanized ware and cases of liquor were stowed under and forward of the fore hatch, — that being the driest part of the ship, and were separated from the ammoniac by a bulkhead which reached as high as the goods, and by two feet of open space. This does not include the school bags which were placed on the ammoniac in the same hold and separated therefrom by dunnage. There was no shifting of the cargo occasioned by the stormy weather. With so large a proportion of ammoniac in the cargo, it may have been, and probably was, impracticable to stow it all in the lower hold or all between decks, both for want of space and for the proper and safe trimming of the ship.

There is some evidence as to the propriety of stowing some of the tubs and buckets right side up whereby they were in a position to catch the sea water that leaked through [365]*365the deck and the hatches, and did receive a considerable quantity. The testimony,- — what there is of it on this point, supports the practice. Of course the decks are supposed not to leak, and it is obvious that in stowing parcels of an irregular shape such as packages of tubs and buckets would be, in order to have them fit each other firmly so that there would be no movement or sliding with the motions of the vessel, some would be stowed right side up, some bottom side up and some on the side.

I am of the opinion that the libellee has shown the stowage of the cargo to have been reasonably free from defect.

[4] One ground of the claim of the libelant for damages is based on the testimony that there was defective stowage of its goods, in that they were stowed in the same hold with sulphate of ammonia, which exposed them to the corrosive effect of the gases which would arise from the sulphate of ammonia in a close hold even though no water reached them, the point evidently being that even though the greater injury caused by the presence of the sea water should be allowed by the court as an exception due to the perils of the sea, yet there was injury without the presence of the sea water and in spite of it, due to stowage of the goods in the same hold adjacent to the sulphate of ammonia.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
4 D. Haw. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffschlaeger-co-v-the-german-bark-paul-isenberg-hid-1913.