Hurlbut v. Turnure

76 F. 587, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 29, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 76 F. 587 (Hurlbut v. Turnure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurlbut v. Turnure, 76 F. 587, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128 (S.D.N.Y. 1896).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The above libel was filed upon a general average bond to recover the defendant’s share of a general average [588]*588assessment made upon the steamship Dunedin and her cargo, for ship’s materials and cargo consumed as fuel, and also for port of refuge expenses in putting in to Newport News for additional coal, upon a voyage from Cienfuegos, Cuba, to New York, in October, 1891, under the following circumstances:

The steamer left Cuba on the 3d of October with a cargo of merchandise, including sugar of the respondent and others. An ordinary passage with her cargo, and in the probable condition of her bottom, (not newly scraped) would have been eight days, or a few hours over, excluding any specially unfavorable weather. Her consumption of coal was 12 tons per day; and the evidence does not warrant my finding that on leaving Cienfuegos she had over 115 tons, a supply for say 9\ days. She was 12 days, however, in reaching Newport News, still one day’s sail from New York. On the 4th of October, the second day out, on rounding St. Antonio, she met head winds and seas, and on the 9th and 10th a northeast gale. This, on the 11th, became a hurricane, which continued through the 12th and 13th, and carried her back on her course, so that she was unable to reach Newport News until the 15th of October. On the morning of the 11th, with only 18 tons of coal left, the engineer began to use ashes and ship’s material along with the coal; and on the 12th, with but 12 tons of coal remaining, the use of sugar as fuel along with coal began. During the last half day, on tl}e 15th, before reaching Newport News, only sugar fuel, according to the Captain’s testimony, was used.

. If 115 tons of coal was 8, reasonable supply for the voyage to New York, then the consumption of the ship’s material and cargo that became necessary from the prolongation of the voyage through extraordinarily long-continued heavy weather, and the putting into Newport News for additional coal, were general average expenses, and the charges as assessed should be sustained. The defendant contends that 115 tons of coal on leaving Cienfuegos was not a reasonable supply for a voyage to New York at that season; that the consumption of ship’s material and cargo were the result of the ship’s fault in not taking a reasonably sufficient supply, and that the general average assessment should, therefore, be disallowed.

The weight of testimony is that for the ordinary contingencies of the voyage, there should have been at least 10 days’ supply of coal or upwards; whereas the steamer took only 9-£ days’ supply. I cannot sustain the contention, however, that a mere deficiency of five or ten tons below the customary supply makes the ship an insurer against all subsequent events, or against damages not arising from the short supply, so as to exempt the cargo from a general average charge not arising from this deficiency. No authorities to that effect have been cited. The analogies are to the contrary. An insurance policy, indeed, does not attach if the vessel is unseaworthy at the commencement of the voyage insured; because seaworthiness is a part of the contract, and a condition precedent. But seaworthiness is not a condition precedent of the obligation of the shipper to pay freight. ' Though the shipper may for [589]*589unseaworthiness refuse to load, yet if he ships his goods, and the voyage is performed, he must pay the stipulated freight, less any damages arising from the breach of the implied covenant of seaworthiness. 1 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 285, 320-322, and note. A c.harge on cargo for a general average expense, is of the same nature, in this regard, as freight; and so far as that charge arises from causes clearly independent of the ship’s defects, the general average should be upheld. The proper legal consequence of the ship’s default, therefore, is that she shall stand chargeable with the full performance of her duty to make good the customary supply of coal, and bear all the proximate consequences of her neglect to do so at the start. This involves two obligations on her part in this case; (1) to bear the charges and expenses of putting in to Newport News to get additional coal; (2) to bear as particular average so much of the consumption of material and cargo, and of the damage to cargo, as arose during the period for which the supply she ought to have taken would have lasted. If these charges are put upon her, she is made to bear the wdiole consequences of her neglect.

1. Not having fulfilled her duty to take the usual supply, she must be deemed to have voluntarily taken the risk of putting into some port of call in order to make that supply good, should the voyage be so prolonged as to require it. This became by implication a part of her original provision for the performance of her duty to procure coal necessary for the voyage, and hence was one of the ship’s liabilities from the start, of which she took the chances, at her own charge. It is true that even the full customary amount would not have enabled her to reach Newport News, and she would have been compelled to put in there just as she did, even had she taken the full supply of 320 tons; and in that cast' the cost of putting in would have been a general average item, because having performed her duty at the start, she did not assume any further risk in that regard. .Rut by her short supply at the start, having voluntarily, in effect, agreed to go into Newport News at her own expense for more coal, if it should be needed, she cannot be allowed to escape that implied agreement, and throw the cost of that item into general average, i. e., in part upon the cargo, merely because the necessity for more coal, as it turned out, was greater, and arose earlier, than was to be anticipated. Had the coal which she took on board been just sufficient to enable her to reach Newport News, she must have put in there for more coal, and she could not have made any general average charge for the item of putting in there; because it was by her own neglect that she failed to take the customary amount, and because, in effect, she thereby agreed to stand the charge of putting in there, if necessary.

2. The ship must further make good the consumption of material and cargo for fuel, and the damage to cargo incident thereto, for such period as the deficit, if taken on board, would have supplied; that is to say, for one half day out of the 2} days, which was the whole short supply necessary to reach Newport News; that is one fifth of the wdiole item of loss.

[590]*590The adjustment of general average given in evidence shows that the value of the sugar consumed and the damage to .other hags incident to getting fuel out of the hold during the hurricane, amount to $3,293; while the value of ship’s material, oil, See., consumed for fuel, exclusive of the expenses of putting into Newport News, amounts to about $900. One-fifth of these two items amounts to $839.60, which should therefore be charged against the ship alone, representing as nearly as can be ascertained the damages resulting from her failure to take in ten days’ supply. The residue, equivalent to two days’ consumption of fuel, with the incidental damage to other bags, remains a proper subject of general average, to which are to be added such incidental expenses and items as are embraced in the general average account, unless some exception thereto be taken, excluding however, the expenses of putting into Newport News, as above stated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 F. 587, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurlbut-v-turnure-nysd-1896.