Luckenbach v. Pierson

168 F. 403, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 353
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 F. 403 (Luckenbach v. Pierson) 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
Luckenbach v. Pierson, 168 F. 403, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 353 (S.D.N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

This action was brought by Edgar F. Euckenbach and the Kings County Trust Company as executors of the estate of Lewis Euckenbach, deceased, and others interested in the matter, against Ralph Pierson & Company of St. Eouis, Missouri, to recover the charter hire of the steamer Harry Euckenbach from June 11, 1906, to July 18, 1906, at the rate of $5,500 per month, amounting to $6,600. or more correctly to $6,711.95. The owners were, on the expiration of the contract, to pay for coal left in the bunkers at the current market rate at the place of redelivery, which according to the libel, entitled the charterers to a credit of $207.90 for 60 tons of coal, and a further credit of $37.92 for disbursements made by them amounting altogether to the sum of $215.82. The whole amount claimed to be due on the trial was 6, instead of 7, days’ hire, from July 12th to July 18th, reducing the claim in that respect from $1,24Í.93 to $1,064.51, leaving a total claim, including interest, of $6,318.69, which the libellants insisted they were entitled to recover.

The controversy arose out of the construction of a contract between the parties, dated the 9th of November, 1905, for the charter of the steamer, for a period of ten months. This contract contained the following provisions:

“4. That the charterer shall pay for the use and hire of said vessel $5500.00 per calendar month, commencing on and from the date of her delivery as aforesaid, and at and after the same rate for any part of a month; hire to continue until her delivery in like good order and condition to the owner (unless lost) at New York, or Baltimore, Md.”
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“Payment of said hire to be made in cash semi-monthly in advance, or as agreed.”
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“And in default of such payment the owners shall have the faculty of withdrawing said steamer from the service of the charterer, without prejudice to any claim they (the owners) may otherwise have on the charterers in pursuance of this Charter.”
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“It is understood that $5500 is to be deposited in the German-American Bank of New York on December 20, 1905, and monthly thereafter to the joint account of Lewis Euckenbach and Lind & Co.”

[404]*404The libel alleges, and such allegations are admitted by the answer, as follows:

“That said $5500.00 was deposited, but thereafter, on or about the 28th day of March, 1906, an agreement was executed by Lewis Luckenbach, on behalf of the libellants, and by Ralph Pierson & Co., on behalf of the respondents, amending the former agreement as to the deposit of $5500, and substituting in the place and stead of said deposit one hundred (100) shares of common stock of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, to be held subject to the terms and conditions mentioned in said Charter Party. That said shares of common stock were to be held as a continuing and permanent security or deposit until the termination or cancellation of the said Charter Party. * * * ”

The libel further alleged, in the 6th paragraph, as follows:

“That the respondents as charterers, failed, and refused on the request of the owners, of the steamer, the libellants herein, to make the semi-monthly payments in advance when due, and on account of the non-payment of the charter hire the owners of the steamer, in accordance with the conditions above quoted, elected to cancel the said charter party, which they did by giving notice to the respondents on or about the 27th day of June, 1906. That the said steamer, at the time of cancelling said Charter Party, was on ,a voyage under said charter, but she was immediately withdrawn when unloaded, and her time is figured up to the time she arrived in New Pork, in accordance with the terms of Section 4 above quoted.”

The respondents’ answer to the last allegations was as follows:

“ * * * And allege with respect to the balance of said Sixth article of ■the libel, that the libellants or their representatives without authority, arbitrarily withdrew the steamer mentioned in said libel from the said respondents, although the libellants were amply secured for any charter hire or indebtedness if any, of the said respondents, to the libellants as hereinafter alleged.”

The respondents for a further answer alleged as follows:

“Fourteenth: And for further answer to said libel, respondents aver, that In addition to the security hereinbefore mentioned, of the Common Stock of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company as substituted for the deposit of Fifty-five hundred dollars, these respondents, on or about the 5th day of July, 3906 forwarded a certified check to the said libellants for Fifty-five hundred dollars which would be to cover all hire of the steamer to July 12th, leaving intact the said stock of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, but that said libellants, insisted upon the withdrawal of said steamer from said respondents, and refused to accept the said check, unless the said respondents would consent to a termination or cancellation of said charter of said steamer, and that said check has always been held at the command and order of the said libellants. That also on July 12th, 1906, a certified check was sent to the said libellants by the respondents for the charter hire of said vessel, covering a period from July 11th to July 27th amounting to Twenty-seven hundred and fifty dollars, which the said libellants would only accept, if said respondents would agree, as before mentioned, to the termination and cancellation of the said charter party.
Respondents further allege that on or about the 16th day of July, 1906, and when the said steamer was at Frenchman’s Bay, Maine, the said libel-lants withdrew the said vessel from the said respondents and refused to continue the said charter until its termination, although the said respondents were ready and willing to amply secure them, which they did, and that on account of the premises the said respondents have been put to a great expense in the transportation of cargoes that said respondents had agreed to carry, and which would have been carried by the said chartered steamer during the charter term; and they have sustained serious loss on account •of outstanding contracts then existing during the term of the said charter and [405]*405before its unwarranted cancellation by the said libellants, and that they are still suffering loss and damage because of their inability to perform their said contracts; and respondents allege that up to the present time their said loss amounts to a sum in excess of the amount claimed by the libel-lants herein, and all as a result of the withdrawal of the said steamer from the service of the said respondents by the said libellants, and that said respondents claim that they are emitted to off-set and recoup their said losses against the said 'alleged claim of the said respondents.”

November 13, 1903, Bind & Co. of New York were appointed agents of the respondents by the following letter to Mr. Buckenbach:

"With reference to chartering of Steamship ‘Harry Luckenbach.’ This will advise that Messrs. Lind & Co., No. 1 Broadway, New York will act as agents for us in the handling and disbursement and will pay all hire and transact all other charterers business for our account.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 F. 403, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luckenbach-v-pierson-nysd-1909.