Lamborn v. American Ship & Commerce Navigation Corp.

76 F.2d 363, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2549, 1935 A.M.C. 571
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketNo. 7582
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 76 F.2d 363 (Lamborn v. American Ship & Commerce Navigation Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamborn v. American Ship & Commerce Navigation Corp., 76 F.2d 363, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2549, 1935 A.M.C. 571 (9th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

This case is before this court on appeal and cross-appeal from a' decree in an action ■ in rem in admiralty.

The original libel by appellants and cross-appellees against the steamship Kermit was an ordinary libel for cargo damage. It alleged that the respondent vessel was a common carrier; that there were shipped on board her at Hamburg, June 15 and 17, 1920, 16,780 cases of refined sugar for carriage to New York; that clean bills of lading were issued therefor; and that the sugar was delivered in New York on July 6, 1920, in a damaged condition. Damages in the sum of $57,150 were claimed. The libel was filed in Los An-geles, Cal., on December 16, 1924, four years and six months after the shipment was made.

. An answer was filed admitting the shipment -and denying the other material allegations of the libel, and, in- addition, set forth various defenses, including, first, that by the terms of the bill of lading the carrier was expressly exempted from liability for damage due to weak or insufficient cases, which admittedly had caused all the asserted damage, and, second, that the cause of action arose more than four years preceding the filing of the libel, and that the libel-ants were therefore barred under the general maritime law and under the laws of the state of California for laches and delay.

Two amended libels were thereafter filed, the first added an allegation that the Kermit had not been within the jurisdiction of the District Court for the Southern District of California for a total aggregate period of four years since June 15, 1920. A second amendment alleged fraud on the part of the respondent, her agents, etc., in that, notwithstanding the frailty of the cases in which the sugar was packed had been noted by the carrier, the shippers were issued clean bills of lading against a letter of indemnity. These allegations were denied by claimant, appellee, upon the ground that it had “no personal knowledge or information sufficient to enable it to form a belief” with regard thereto, and it further alleged that, if any such arrangements had been made, this was done by the Hamburg-American Line without claimant’s knowledge or consent.

In the spring of 1920 there was an acute shortage of sugar in the United States. Dealers, therefore, began to buy and import sugar from countries that were not normally sources of supply for this country. In April, 1920, the libelants, sugar brokers and importers of New York, learned that the Czecho-Slovak Sugar Export Company, Limited, of Prague, had a large quantity of Czecho-Slovakian sugar that it wished to dispose of in the world mart. As a result of negotiations had by libelants through Czecho Slovak & American Corporation, a New York corporation, with offices at Prague, in which corporation libelants owned 50 per cent, of the stock, and of which corporation Arthur H. Lamborn was president, libelants " purchased from the •Czecho-Slovak Sugar Export Company, Limited,' 1,500 tons of tablet sugar in wooden cases of 50 kilos each; the purchase price being a sum in the neighborhood of $583,000. Arrangements for payment were made by Lamborn opening a letter of credit in favor of the sellers for the sum named ■through the Irving National Bank. The •letter specified,' among other things, that the bills of lading were to bear the clause": [365]*365“Notify Lamborn & Company, New York. Negotiable ship’s receipt may be attached to your draft instead of a bill of lading.”

In the early part of June, 1920, 16,780 cases of sugar were delivered to the Hamburg-American Line at Hamburg, Germany, for carriage to New York on the steamship Kermit. While the sugar was being loaded, the chief officer of the Kermit called the attention of the master, Capt. Strong, to the fact that “the cases were frail considering the weight that was in the boxes.” The master, fearing that there would be a claim on delivery, told Capt. Roede, the loading agent for the Hamburg-American Line, about the condition of the cases, and that afternoon wrote a letter to the Hamburg-American Line calling its attention thereto. Concerning this matter, in the evidence the master testified in response to interrogatories as follows:

“Q. Did you see some of these cases coming on the ship? A. Yes.
“Q. Did you point out the bad condition to him? A. Yes.
“Q. Do you know whether he saw any broken cases? A. He saw the same condition that I did.
“O. Did you see broken cases ? A. The trouble was for men to walk on, they were not quite strong enough.
“Q. Did you see broken cases? A. I can’t say. I don’t want to commit myself; there must have been something the matter that I called attention to.”

The American Ship & Commerce Navigation Corporation, claimant and appellee, was the owner of the Kermit. The Kerr Steamship Company was the agent of the appellee, and the Hamburg-American Line were subagents for the ship and her owner at Hamburg under arrangement with the Kerr Steamship Company.

This shipment of sugar was moved under two bills, of lading, the first dated June 15, 1920, was for 6,430 cases, the shipper being Schneider & Co., the second, for 10,-350 cases, dated June 17, 1920, the shipper being Cohrs & Amme. The master testified that it was on the afternoon of June 17, 1920, that he first noticed the frail cases before being placed on board the ship, and that on that day he wrote the letter calling the agent’s attention to that fact. The testimony discloses that a letter of indemnity was received by the Hamburg-American Line from Cohrs & Amme covering 10,-350 cases; that the acceptance of this letter of indemnity and the issuance of the clean bill of lading for the shipment for these 10,350 cases was done without the master’s knowledge, and he testified that he had no authority from his owners to accept the letter of indemnity and issue a clean bill of lading.

The Kermit arrived in New York on July 3, 1920, and berthed at Pier 4, Army Base, Brooklyn, where the Mar Mediter-ráneo was already discharging 30,000 cases of sugar, a balance of the 1,500 tons purchased at the same time from the Czechoslovak Sugar Export Company, Limited. Five days later, on July 8th, the documents not having arrived, Lamborn paid $240,000 to the Irving National Bank on account; filed with the collector of customs a letter of authorization from the bank and a bond to produce the bills of lading; and, on July 9th, paid the custom charges of $25,155.-36, and obtained release of the cargo from customs. On the same day Lamborn paid the Kerr Steamship Company’s bill for freight, amounting to $9,292.84. On the 10th the documents arrived, and the bank billed Lamborn for the amount remaining due on account, which bill was paid the same day, and the Irving National Bank indorsed the bills of lading and delivered them to Lamborn.

There is testimony that cases containing the sugar came out of the ship broken; that others too weak to sustain the pressure of the sling ropes were crushed and the contents strewn about the dock; that work was necessary in repacking and reconditioning the cases; and that certain of the spilled sugar was gathered up into bags and sold as sweepings.

The District Court, while holding the libelant was damaged, dismissed the case for laches.

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Bluebook (online)
76 F.2d 363, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2549, 1935 A.M.C. 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamborn-v-american-ship-commerce-navigation-corp-ca9-1935.