Marwick v. Rogers

39 N.E. 780, 163 Mass. 50, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 35
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 780 (Marwick v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marwick v. Rogers, 39 N.E. 780, 163 Mass. 50, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 35 (Mass. 1895).

Opinion

Barker, J.

This suit is brought by the owners of a barque to recover of the defendant, who was the charterer of the vessel and also owner of her cargo, his share of general average expenses. The declaration alleges, in substance, that the plaintiffs are owners of the vessel, that they made a contract of charter-party with the defendant to carry a general cargo of merchandise from Boston to Talcahuano; that in pursuance thereof the vessel was duly laden with a cargo owned by the defendant and sailed from port; that upon her voyage she sustained, from bad weather, heavy gales and a heavy sea, damages by which it be[51]*51came necessary to put into a port of distress, where there were general average expenses amounting to the sum of $1,695.95, of which the cargo should bear its proportional part; that a certain proportion of this sum, but not the full amount, was thereafter paid by the owner of the cargo, which amount so paid the plaintiffs refused to receive in full settlement of the cargo’s proportion of general average; that upon the arrival home of the vessel general average adjustments were duly made, in which the contribution of the cargo to the general average expenses amounted to the sum named, which sum was duly demanded of the defendant, who refused payment; and that at the time of the accident, and while the expenses were thus incurred, the defendant was the owner of the cargo. The charter-party was not set out in the declaration, but at the request of the defendant a copy of it was subsequently filed, and it thus appeared that it contained the following stipulation or cesser clause : “ It is further agreed that all liability of charterers under the agreement shall cease as soon as the cargo is shipped on board. All questions, whether of demurrage or otherwise, to be settled with the consignees, the owner and captain looking to their lien on cargo for this purpose.” Thereafter the defendant demurred, on the ground that it appeared in the charter-party that all his liability thereunder ceased as soon as the cargo was on board, and that all questions must be settled with the consignees, the owners and captain looking to their lien on cargo for this purpose, and that it appeared from the declaration that the alleged cause of action arose after the cargo had been shipped. This demurrer was sustained, and judgment ordered for the defendant, and the plaintiffs appealed to this court.

Upon the hearing of the appeal, the defendant, besides contending that he was freed by the clause quoted from any obligation to contribute personally to general average expenses, as the owner of the cargo or otherwise, also contended that it was implied by the declaration that there was an adjustment of the general average expenses at the port of distress, by which adjustment the plaintiffs were bound. But there is no allegation of such an adjustment, and the questions which might be raised if it had been pleaded are not open upon this demurrer. Nor is the question whether the clause quoted exonerates the defendant [52]*52from his obligation as owner of the cargo to contribute to general average expenses raised in due course of pleading. The declaration, while alleging that the plaintiffs made a contract of charter-party with the defendant, in pursuance of which the vessel was duly laden and sailed upon the voyage agreed upon, is not on the charter-party, but is on an obligation imposed by law upon the defendant as owner of the cargo. The proper course for the defendant was not to crave oyer of the contract; but, if he relied upon its provisions in defence, to plead the charter-party in his answer. If a correct course of pleading had been followed, the question of the effect of the stipulation upon the plaintiffs claim to contribution from the defendant as owner of the cargo would not have arisen until a later stage of the cause. But as the plaintiffs are content to accept and to argue the issue upon the pleadings as they stand, and as the decision of the question must be the same whether it is now dealt with or at a later stage of the cause, we have thought best now to dispose of it.

The obligation to contribute to a general average loss, or to general average expenses, springs from the law itself, and not from any contract between the parties concerned. See Gage v. Libby, 14 Allen, 261, 267, in which, after defining the obligation, Mr. Justice Gray says that those who are liable must contribute “in equity and justice, and by the express rule of the Rhodian law, preserved in the Pandects, from which the maritime law of all civilized nations on this subject is derived.” See also Burton v. English, 12 Q. B. D. 218, 220, where Lord Brett says of the obligation, “I do not think that it forms any part of the contract to carry, and that it does not arise from any contract at all, but from the old Rhodian laws, and has become incorporated into the law of England as the law of the ocean. It is not osa matter of contract, but in consequence of a common danger, where natural justice requires that all should contribute to indemnify for the loss of property which is sacrificed by one in order that the whole adventure may be saved. If this be so, the liability to contribute does not arise out of any contract at all.” See also Sturgis v. Cary, 2 Curtis, C. C. 382, 384; Anderson v. Ocean Steamship Co. 10 App. Cas. 107, 114; Abbott, Shipping, (13th ed.) 626.

[53]*53The obligation rests upon the vessel, the cargo, and the freight, in proportion to their respective values, and upon the owners of each in proportion to the value of their property at risk; and it may be enforced by resorting to a lien upon the property saved from the common peril, or by action against the persons bound to contribute. . See Abbott, Shipping, (13th ed.) 657; Anderson v. Ocean Steamship Co. 10 App. Cas. 107, 115.

The declaration taken by itself, therefore, states a good cause of action, springing from the duty cast upon the defendant by the law to contribute in payment of general average expenses in proportion to the value of his cargo; and the question for decision is, whether the stipulation of the charter-party frees him. from this obligation. In the opinion of a majority of the court it does not.

It is to be observed that no explicit agreement of this charter-party placed the defendant or his property in such a relation to the vessel or to the adventure that he was thereby rendered liable to general average contributions. Under no circumstances could the plaintiffs recover of him such a contribution by an action upon the charter-party as a written agreement the terms of which bound him to make such a contribution. He agreed to furnish the vessel a full cargo of lawful merchandise, to pay a stipulated sum for the charter or freight of the vessel during the voyage on the proper delivery of the cargo at the port of destination, and to pay demurrage at a stipulated rate in case the vessel should be detained longer than the agreed lay days, either in loading or discharging. But he made no advance payment of freight, and so did not become its owner in part or in whole, and he was not required to be the owner of any part of the cargo. There was nothing in his agreements which constituted him an owner either of cargo or of freight, or which required him to become such an owner, or which placed him in such a position as to make him liable to general average charges. As charterer he was not so liable. The duty rests only upon the owners of vessel, cargo, and freight; and he could perform all his agreements without incurring that obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 780, 163 Mass. 50, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marwick-v-rogers-mass-1895.