Marx v. Natl. Steam-ship Co.

22 F. 680, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 195
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 29, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 F. 680 (Marx v. Natl. Steam-ship Co.) 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
Marx v. Natl. Steam-ship Co., 22 F. 680, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 195 (S.D.N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

This libel in personam was filed to recover for the damages done to 35 drams of glycerine in the course of transportation from Marseilles to New York, for which .the respondents had issued a through bill of lading. The goods were shipped at Marseilles on board the steamer Euphrate. The bills of lading, dated February 17 and February 23, 1881, provided that the goods should “be forwarded by the steamer Euphrate to London, and to be then transhipped in and upon the steam-ship called the Canada, whereof is master, for the [681]*681present voyage, Robinson, or whoever else may go as master, in said ship lying in the port of London, and bound for New York, * * * and failing shipment by said steamer, then by other steamer, or following steamer of this lino, for which the goods shall arrive in time, *- ;.<• an(j aro bo delivered subject to the following exceptions and conditions, viz.: * * * The National Steam-sliip Company, limited, or its agents, or any of its servants, are not to be liable * * *' for any claims for loss, damage, or detention to goods under through bills of lading, when the loss or detention occurs, or damage is done, while the goods are not actually in the possession of the National Bteam-ship Company, limited, or shipped on board the National Bteam-ship Company’s, limited, steamers. * * In the event of said steamer being prevented from any cause from commencing or pursuing this voyage, or putting back to London or into any port, or otherwise being prevented, from any cause, from proceeding-in the ordinary course of her voyage, to have liberty to tranship the goods by any other steamer.”

On the margin of the bill of lading was a statement that a vessel sailed every Wednesday from London to New York. Six steamers were usually employed in the respondents’ line, sailing from London, as the proof shows, not with entire regularity at specified intervals, but usually one in every week or 10 days. About this time, however, three of the respondents’ vessels, the Queen, the Prance, and the Holland, were chartered to the British government for the transportation of troops, to-wit: on December 29, 1880; February 15, 1881; and March 8, 1881, respectively. The Euphrate arrived in London on March 7th. The steamer Greece, of the respondent’s line, had loft London for New York on March 3d. The Canada was absent on her voyage to New York; she subsequently arrived, and sailed from London to New York on March 29th. The respondents, after the charter to the government of the three vessels above specified, had no other steamer that they could dispatch between the third of March and the sailing of the Canada on the 29th. The evidence on the trial showed that it was usual and customary, when goods were received at London, to bo dispatched under a through bill of lading, to forward them by a steamer of some other line in case the goods were likely to be detained upwards of a week beyond the next usual sailing day. The respondents, accordingly, finding that they would have no vessel of their own for some three weeks after the Euphrate arrived, tran-shipped the goods in question on the thirteenth of March to the steamship City of London, belonging to another line, on board of which it is conceded that the negligence complained of and the loss in question arose. The City of London -was not immediately libeled for the recovery of the damage to the glycerine; .and upon her return trip she is supposed to have been lost, as she has never since been heard from. In seaworthy qualities and in her rating she was superior to the steamers of the respondents’ line.

[682]*682The case turns wholly on the question of the authority of the respondents, under the circumstances stated, to tranship the goods in question on board any other steamer than one of their own line. This question depends upon the proper construction of the bill of lading. The exception that the respondents’ company should not -jbe liable for any damage done while the goods were not actually in its possession, or shipped on board its steamers, is a valid exception, and absolves the respondents from liability for this loss, provided the goods were lawfully transhipped on board the City of London. The libelant contends, however, that the conditions specified in the bill of lading, under which alone the respondents were authorized to put the goods upon the steamer of any other, line, did not arise. If that contention is correct, then the respondents were bound by the contract of the bill of lading to retain the goods and to transport them to New York upon one of their own steamers; and for their violation of this contract, in shipping them on the City of London, they would be responsible for the loss. Bazin v. Steamship Co. 3 Wall, Jr., 229; 5 Meyers, Fed. Dec. 521; Goddard, v. Mallory, 52 Barb. 87; Goodrich v. Thompson, 4 Robt. (N. Y.) 75; Trott v. Wood, 1 Gall. 443.

The libelant’s counsel, in support of this contention, relies upon the fact that the Canada was the first steamer that sailed after the arrival of these goods in London; that she is the only steamer referred to by the words, “in the event of said steamer being prevented, ” etc.,in the last clause of the bill of lading above quoted; and that the Canada was not “prevented, from any cause, from commencing or pursuing her voyage; ” that the respondents were therefore bound to retain the goods in London for the 22 days that elapsed between their arrival by the Euphrate and the usual sailing of the Canada; and, consequently, that the transhipment on the City of London, on the 13th, a week after their arrival, was unauthorized, and at the respondents’ risk. This reading of the bill of lading is not, I think, justified by a comparison of its various parts with one another, and still less, when interpreted in the light of the prevailing usage in regard to transhipment by other lines, established by the evidence. The general object designed to be secured by the various provisions of this bill of lading is obviously the dispatch of the goods to their destination, without unnecessary or unreasonable delay in the transhipment. Upon a bill of lading like this, given at Marseilles, and containing various clauses, providing for the substitution of some other vessel for the Canada in London, there is no reason to suppose the parties contracted with any special reference to transportation upon the Canada. Her name was doubtless put in the bill of lading at Marseilles, simply as one of the vessels of the respondents’ line, without any intent to limit the transportation to her. The words following the Canada’s name in the bill of lading clearly show the general intention to promote dispatch, by the express provision, that “failing shipment by said steamer, [i. e., the Canada,] then [to be transhipped] by other [683]*683steamer, or following steamer of this line, for which the goods shall arrive in time.” The same purpose is further shown in the last clause above quoted from the bill of lading, to-wit, “in the event of said steamer being prevented, from any cause, from proceeding in the ordinary course of her voyage, to have liberty to tranship the goods by .any other steamer.”

The words “said steamer,” in the clause just quoted, cannot reasonably be construed as referring to the steamer Canada alone; for, upon that construction, if, when these goods arrived in London, the Canada had just sailed, the goods would be obliged to wait until she had reached New York and returned to London and was ready to sail again.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 F. 680, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marx-v-natl-steam-ship-co-nysd-1884.