Mina v. I. & V. Florio S. S. Co.

23 F. 915, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMay 25, 1885
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F. 915 (Mina v. I. & V. Florio S. S. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mina v. I. & V. Florio S. S. Co., 23 F. 915, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60 (D.N.J. 1885).

Opinion

Nixon, J.

The libel in this case is filed against a foreign company, claiming damages for negligence and want of care in the tranship[916]*916ment of 600 casks'of prunes from Trieste to New York, and praying for process against the goods and chattels of the company within this district, if the respondent could not be found. The return of the marshal on the monition shows that not finding the respondents, he attached certain property, belonging to them; to-wit: the steamship Yicenzo Florio, her tackle, etc., in obedience to the clause of foreign attachment contained in the process. A general appearance was entered for the respondents by Lorenzo Ullo, Esq., a claim for the property seized put in by the I. & Y. Florio Steam-ship Company of Palermo, satisfactory security given, and an answer filed to the merits ■of the libel, acknowledging the reception and transhipment of the prunes in the attached steamer, but denying the negligence and want of care complained of. A reference was made to a commissioner to take testimony. Commissions issued to the respondents for the examination of witnesses in foreign countries, and very voluminous evidence, has been returned and filed. When the case came up for final hearing, the proctor for respondents, before the argument, moved the court to vacate the attachment and dismiss the suit, as to the respondents, on the ground of a misnomer in the libel and monition. The motion comes too late; the general appearance to the suit by the respondents and an answer upon the merits, without objection, are always regarded as a waiver of such irregularities.

Expressing no opinion respecting the action of the court, if the respondents had put in a special appearance for the purpose of entering a motion to vacate, or had filed answer, which raised the question now suggested, I have no hesitation in holding that the respondents‘cannot be permitted to waive such defects at the beginning of the proceedings, and afterwards urge them at the conclusion of the case.

The libel alleges that on March 23, 1881, at Trieste, one Liedxnann shipped on board the steamer Cariddi, owned by respondents, 200 casks of prunes, to be carried from that port to the port in New York; that on the thirtieth of the same month,.he shipped on the Taormina, another steamer of the respondents, 200 other casks of prunes, to be delivered to the port in New York; that on the thirty-first of the same month he shipped 200 other casks, on. board the last-named steamer, for the same destination; that said casks were to be delivered in New York, unto order, and that the agents of the respondents at Trieste signed bills of lading therefor, in which they stipulated that the, said steamers were bound to New York, and reserved the right to tranship any part of said cargo to another steamer; that the said steamers Cariddi and Taormina proceeded from Trieste to the port of Palermo, Sicily, where they discharged said prunes, and the same remained at Palermo an unreasonable length of time, to-wit, for a period of 55 days; that they were afterwards shipped upon the steamer Yicenzo Florio, another vessel of respondents, and brought by her to New York, and delivered to the libelant in a dam[917]*917aged and deteriorated condition, owing to the delay which ensued in their transportation, and the want of proper care in their handling and stowage at Palermo; that the respondents neglected to transfer said prunes from Palermo for the long period above stated, although they had a number of opportunities so to do; that after their shipment Leidmann indorsed the bills of lading in blank, and forwarded them to libelant for value; that libelant is the true and lawful owner of the merchandise therein described, and by reason of the negligence and want of care and diligence of respondents in the transportation and custody of said merchandise he has sustained damages to the amount of $6,000, which has been duly demanded, and not paid.

The I. & Y. Plorio Steam-ship Company of Palermo, Sicily, alleging itself to he a corporation duly organized under the laws of Italy, files its answer admitting the shipment of the prunes by Leidmann on the said steamer at Trieste, but denying that the steamers were bound for New York. The answer avers that the respondent corporation owns and manages two certain lines of steam-ships, of a different class and capacity; one of which carries merchandise along the east coast of Italy from Trieste to ports in Sicily, and back again to Trieste; and the other plies along the west coast of Italy to Palermo, in Sicily, and thence to the port of New York, and back again; and that, in the regular course of management of said two lines, all merchandise shipped on the east coast of Italy, intended to be delivered in New York, is transhipped at the port of Palermo on one of respondent’s steamers bound to New York, and that such course of management is a matter of general notoriety among merchants in the ports whore the steamers pass, and was also known to Leidmann, the shipper oí the prunes ; that when the prunes were put on respondent’s steamers at Trieste, as alleged in the libel, the said Leidmann, with full knowledge of the usual mode of transportation, accepted bills of lading containing a stipulation that the respondents should have the liberty of transhipping the same upon any other of their steamers leaving the ports of Sicily for the port of Now York; that the steam-ships Oariddi and Taormina proceeded, with the prunes on board, from Trieste to Palermo, where they were discharged, and remained for a certain time, awaiting an opportunity to tranship on one of the steam-ships of respondent leaving that port for New York; that they were, in fact, transhipped on the steam-ship Yicenzo Plorio, one of the steamers of the respondent on the line between the ports of Italy and New York, with due dispatch, and in the proper and customary manner, and were carried to New York and duly delivered to the libelant; and that said transhipment was made without unreasonable delay and in the regular course of their business, and at the first opportunity which respondent had to forward the merchandise to the port of New York.

The bills of lading, which are made exhibits in the case, reveal the contract between the parties at the time of the shipment. Prom them [918]*918I learn that 600 casks were shipped at Trieste for New York on the steamers of respondent, as follows: On March 23, 1881, 200 casks on the Cariddi; on March 30th, 200 casks on the Taormina; and on March 31st, 200 other casks on the last-named steamer. That they -were all shipped in good order and condition, to be delivered in the port of New York; “the liberty to tranship any part of said cargo by steamer” being reserved in the said bills of lading. The undertaking of the respondent was that the merchandise thus committed to its charge for delivery in New York would be transported there with reasonable care and dispatch,—not necessarily in the steamer selected for the voyage at Trieste, but in some steamer belonging to and under the control of the company -with which the contract was made. I agree with the learned advocate for the respondent that a transhipment into steamers other than the respondent’s was not in contemplation, or obligatory, under the above clause, in the bills of lading. But, nevertheless, they were obliged to use diligence and cane that adequate facilities were furnished to comply with their agreement to transport without unreasonable delay.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. 915, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mina-v-i-v-florio-s-s-co-njd-1885.