Knox v. The Ninetta

14 F. Cas. 827
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 827 (Knox v. The Ninetta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knox v. The Ninetta, 14 F. Cas. 827 (E.D. Pa. 1844).

Opinion

On the 19th of January, 1S44,

RANDALL, District Judge,

delivered the following opinion on the question of jurisdiction.

This is a libel for the damage suffered by an invoice of wheat, consisting of over four thousand bushels, shipped by the libellant on board the Ninetta, in October, 1842, and consigned to Philadelphia; this shipment being made under an agreement that no other freight should be taken, and- that the voyage to Philadelphia should be made without deviation. The master of the Ninetta deviated from his course, however, and took additional cargo, and the wheat was damaged on the voyage. When she arrived at Philadelphia, the consignee received the wheat, and, after remaining more than ten days in port, she sailed on another voyage, on returning from which she was proceeded against by this libel. A plea has been put in to the jurisdiction, resting on two grounds: First,that the libellant’s lien, if it ever existed, has been lost by reason of the subsequent voyage; and, second, that the breach of contract complained of is not a case within the jurisdiction of this court

If this were a proceeding, under the state law, for materials or repairs furnished to the vessel for her outfit the first ground of objection to the jurisdiction would be a good one, as the statute expressly limits the lien to the time when the vessel first proceeds to sea. But if the libellant have a lien at all, it is under the general admiralty law, and is not extinguished by the delay; more especially as the same parties who now own the vessel did so when the injury, was sustained.

In the case of The Rebecca [Case No. 11,-619], which was a libel for damages similar to this one, the vessel had made several voyages, and had been twice sold before the libel was filed, and was then owned by a third person, but the court held that, unless there was gross negligence on the part of the libellant, the vessel remained liable in the hands of the purchaser. So in the case of The Mary [Id. 9,186], which was a libel for seaman’s wages. The crew had been discharged at New Orleans, in August, 1819; in October following, the ship was sold to a bona fide purchaser, and sent on a voyage to Liverpool and New York, at which last port she arrived in July, 1S20, and was then libelled for the wages due to the men at New Orleans. It was in evidence that they had threatened to libel the vessel at New Orleans, but forbore to do so on the promise of the captain to pay them at New York. The court held that this amounted to nothing more than a forbearance on the part of the libellants to libel at that time, but not to a waiver of any remedy they might have if they were not paid by the captain; and the decree of the district court sustaining the libel was affirmed. Numerous other authorities might be adduced to the same point, but these are deemed sufficient.

The other objection is one of more difficulty, and has not, I think, been formally decided in this district In how many of the other districts the question has arisen I am unable to say, for, since the publication of Mr. Peters’ collection, with the exception of the districts in the First and Second circuits, very few decisions of the courts of admiralty have been published. I have been unable to find more than two cases in print in which the direct question has been decided. The first of these is that of The Rebecca, [supra]. In that case the libellants had shipped at New York ten hogsheads of spirits, to be safely delivered at Portland, the dangers of the sea only excepted, and alleged that in consequence of careless and improper stowage they had been lost, and prayed process against the vessel, &c., for the damage. The claimants denied the liability of the vessel, under any circumstances, to answer the libellant’s demand. After, hearing the argument of counsel, a very able and elaborate opinion was delivered by Judge Ware, in which he reviewed the various authorities bearing on the question, and concluded by affirming the liability of the vessel to answer the claim, and the jurisdiction of the court to enforce it. The other case is .that of House v. The Lexington [Case No. 6,767a], decided in January, 1843. In that case, the libellant had shipped on board the Lexington, at Philadelphia, a quantity of clover seed, to be delivered in New York, but not being able to obtain a full freight for his vessel, the captain sent the seed by the transportation company across New Jersey. The agents of the company, not finding the consignee, after three or four days, stored the seed and before- it was offered to the consignee, it had fallen in price; he refused to receive it, on the ground that it had not been forwarded according to contract, and prosecuted his libel against the vessel, for damages. This case appears to me to be a much stronger one for the state courts, than that of The Rebecca [supra]; yet the learned and experienced judge of that commercial district, in the course of his opinion, says: “The doctrine, that the shipment of goods, or freight, creates an obligation maritime in its character, and which may be enforced, in rem, against the vessel, I shall consider so far settled by our own courts as to furnish the rule of decision in this case;” and he refers to the case of The Rebecca [supra], and also to the cases Maisonnaire v. Keating [Case No. 8,978], and The Volunteer [Id. 16,991], and in 1 Sumn. 595, Append.

The only case cited and supposed to be de[829]*829cided against the jurisdiction in this direct question, is that of Swaim v. The Franklin [supra], as quoted in Thompson v. Lyle, 3 Watts & S. 160. The decision in that case was made by my learned and venerable predecessor, Judge Hopkinson, and, if it had been correctly quoted in that book. I would, without hesitation, follow the precedent of so distinguished a jurist, and consider the law as settled in this district; although opposed to the decision of other learned judges, but which are not of binding authority here. I have, however, examined the record and been furnished with Judge Hopkinson’s notes of the argument in that case, and I find it entirely different from what it is supposed to have been. It was somewhat similar to the case of The Lexington. The libellants had shipped a quantity of merchandise in the Franklin, at Philadelphia, to be delivered to certain persons in New Orleans, and intended to be by them forwarded to one Rhea, the ultimate consignee, at Dayton, Ohio; by some mistake, the goods were not delivered at New Orleans to the parties named in the bill of lading, but to another person, who finding the margin of the bill marked “John S. Rhea, Decatur, Ala.,” forwarded the goods to Alabama. After several transportations they reached the consignee, Rhea, in Ohio; and it was for the expense of these transportations, and the damage caused by the delay, that the action was commenced. In the course of the argument, the counsel for the respondent admitted that a bill of lading is a maritime contract, and that if the damage had happened at sea the vessel would have been liable, but contended that, inasmuch as she arrived in safety, and the goods were landed at New Orleans, she was not liable for any mistake or error committed on shore.

The learned judge did not decide the question, but said that, as the decision either way would decide nothing finally, and would be only preliminary to carrying the case to the circuit court, he would give a decree, pro forma, in favor of the plea to the jurisdiction, as that would be a final judgment and allow an immediate appeal, while a judgment in favor of the jurisdiction would be followed by a further hearing on the merits, and be attended with delay. No appeal was however taken. See Swaim v. The Franklin [Case No.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-the-ninetta-paed-1844.