Mexican Petroleum Corp. of Louisiana, Inc. v. North German Lloyd

17 F.2d 113, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1645, 1927 A.M.C. 645
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
DocketNo. 18552
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 F.2d 113 (Mexican Petroleum Corp. of Louisiana, Inc. v. North German Lloyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Mexican Petroleum Corp. of Louisiana, Inc. v. North German Lloyd, 17 F.2d 113, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1645, 1927 A.M.C. 645 (E.D. La. 1926).

Opinion

BURNS, District Judge.

An exception of no cause of action was filed by respondent to the libel herein, upon the ground that the contract of affreightment, sued upon for damages for a breach, is a nudum pactum for want of consideration or mutuality appearing upon the face of the instrument.

The pertinent parts of the contract are:

“New Orleans, June 29, 1926.
“Mexican Petroleum Corp. of La., Inc., Shipper.
“Farrell Shipping Company, Inc., Broker.
“We confirm engagement to-day of (see reverse side) per S. S. of the North German Lloyd and/or Roland Line, A. G. for Hamburg, Germany, at $4.50 per ton of 2,240 lbs. Freight prepaid. Steamer assuming Hamburg quay dues.
“Delivery as required by steamer. Steamer to give shippers 15 days’ notice of expected date ready to load Destrehan, at which time shippers are to declare quantity. Barrels and/or drums to be stowed so much as possible in steamers between decks and not over 4 tiers in height.”

The reverse side referred to reads as follows:

“Shipper agrees to deliver all asphalt available for a period of ninety (90) days, beginning when the S. S. Raimund is ready to load at Destrehan, to each steamer who agrees to load same, but shall not be obligated to load more than 1,250 tons per steamer nor to shift to Destrehan for less than 1,000 tons. However, the S. S. Raimund will not be obligated to load more than 1,000 tons.”

It is conceded that, in order to constitute a contract, there must be a measurable and absolute undertaking to do or not to do some express and definite thing.

Respondent contends that this contract furnishes a twofold example of want of mutuality arising out of:

(a) The first phrase in the stipulation on the reverse of the contract, “Shipper agrees to deliver all asphalt available for a period of 90 days. * * * ”

(b) The third phrase of the same sentence, “ * * * to each steamer who agrees to load same. * * * ”

It is argued that the use of the word “available,” upon a fair construction of phrase (a), leaves the shipper with power to ship asphalt at its option; that, in a hypothetical suit for specific performance under the contract, with the libelant as respondent, a successful defense could be presented upon these grounds:

(1) It is true we produced large amounts of asphalt during the period, but we shipped it to better advantage on other ships; therefore none was available.

(2) We produced during the time, but sold it at home; hence there was none available.

(3) We produced during the time, but [114]*114preferred to store until a better market; hence none was available.

As to the phrase (b), the argument is that the use of the present tense “agrees” in no wise affects the construction; that the present is often used for the future, so often that it is sometimes classed as one form of the future tense; that the use of the formal future frequently, sounds stilted.

Proceeding, the argument is that the carrier was not bound to accept asphalt tendered by the shipper because the ship to which it was offered might not agree to load same; that therefore the instrument merely evidenced a state of mind, a present willingness to do thus and so, without obligation to do it; that the contract was in the nature of a gentlemen’s agreement, to the effect that, if libelant had some cargo it wanted to ship and the respondent had a ship it was willing to carry it in, then they might will to do so, but legally neither was bound.

On the other hand, libelant contends that the whole of the contract must be considered together; that its words and phrases must be considered together with the context, and the whole together with the allegations of the libel and the supplemental libel, which sets out in detail all of the correspondence preceding and succeeding the execution of the formal document, particularly since this cause is before a court of admiralty, which administers justice upon the highest and most liberal principles; that the word “available,” as used, meant all of the asphalt produced by it to be shipped to Hamburg during, the period; that the contract specifically recites, “this contract is for freight room required by the shipper herein,” and is conditional only on the continuance of itself and the steamship company in business, the one producing and selling asphalt and the other sailing its steamers; that it covered all asphalt of libelant, required and suitable or capable of being used, or sold for shipment to Hamburg; that the whole clause, “shipper- agrees to deliver all asphalt available for a period, etc., to each steamer who agrees to load same, but shall not be obligated to load more than 1,250 tons,” etc., clearly obligated both itself and the steamship company to perform, during the period of contract and their continuance in business; that the phrase, “who agrees to load same but shall not be obligated,” etc., evidenced a present agreement of the steamship company for each of its available steamers to load the cargo delivered at shipside; that the negotiations between the parties, as shown by the letters of negotiation quoted in the supplemental libel, and which the respondent did not move to strike out as irrelevant, impertinent, or foreign to the matter in controversy, must be considered together with the formal contract in determining -whether a cause of action is shown; and that these allegations and letters show specifically that in soliciting the carriage of its product the respondent knew the approximate tonnage shipped by libelant to Hamburg for several years preceding, just as it knew the respondent’s schedules of sailing for that port.

My conclusion is that the contract is enforceable on both sides; th^at the shipper was bound to deliver at shipside of each steamer belonging to the carrier all available asphalt destined for Hamburg during the period of 90 days following the sailing of its steamship Raimund — such steamers being bound to take such shipments not in excess of 1,250 tons nor less than 1,000 tons.

By shipping the contemplated cargo on the steamers of any other carrier, the shipper would have certainly been liable in damage for the breach, and correspondingly, by refusing available cargo, the carrier is liable.

An admiralty court, having to determine a controversy over a maritime contract ambiguous in terms, is not bound within the narrow limits of a court of law. Evidence ordinarily inadmissible in a case at law might be admitted upon equitable principles in a court of admiralty to explain an ambiguity in a maritime contract. To this effect libelant aptly cites a decision by the late Circuit Judge Pardee (Downs v. Wall [C. C. A.] 176 F. 657), and Justice Gray in Watts v. Camors, 115 U. S. 353, 6 S. Ct. 91, 29 L. Ed. 406.

From the face of the contract, and the allegations of .the libel, the contract is not dependent on mere expectation, nor is it in the category of unilateral contracts, nor does it depend upon a potestative condition, nor is it bad for want of mutuality. The contract is one that anticipates a requirement.

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17 F.2d 113, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1645, 1927 A.M.C. 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mexican-petroleum-corp-of-louisiana-inc-v-north-german-lloyd-laed-1926.