Murphy v. Paine

15 F.2d 570, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1515
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 20, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 570 (Murphy v. Paine) 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
Murphy v. Paine, 15 F.2d 570, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1515 (S.D.N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

WINSLOW, District Judge.

These suits in admiralty involve a time charter for 12 months of the steamship Melrose, dated May 2, 1919, between the New England Fuel & Transportation. Company and American Products Sales Corporation from which through a' series of assignments, the respondent-libelant, Paine, as assignee, acquired such time charter. Thereafter a sub-charter, or trip charter, dated May 14, 1919, was given by Paine to Caston, Williams & Wigmore Steamship Corporation.

Gaston, Williams & Wigmore, under their trip charter, loaded a eargo for Archangel, in the Arctic Ocean. It is contended that the original charter prohibited such voyage. The trip charter apparently did not prohibit a voyage to Archangel. The owner (New England Fuel & Transportation Company) forbade the master to go to Archangel, and the cargo was unloaded and dispatched on another vessel.

The question involved in this. suit is whether either Paine, the time charterer, or the New England Fuel & Transportation Company, can be held liable to Gaston, Williams & Wigmore Steamship Corporation for failure of the ship to clear for Archangel, and whether the New England Fuel & Transportation Company, owner, can be held liable to Paine (owner of time charter) by reason of the steamship Melrose not being permitted to make the voyage to Archangel, as demanded by Gaston, Williams & Wigmore, the subcharterer.

For convenience, the New England Fuel & Transportation Company will be referred to as the shipowner; Paine, assignee of the time charter, will be referred to as the time charterer, or Paine, and Gaston, Williams [571]*571& Wigmore Steamship Corporation will be referred to as the subeharterer from Paine, or Gaston.

In the first libel, the subcharterer (Gas-ton) sets forth the subeharter of May 14, 1919, whereby there was chartered “the whole of said vessel [certain spaee excepted] * * * for a voyage from New York to Archangel. * * * ” The basis of the subcharterer’s claim against the shipowner is on the theory that the shipowner, by accepting payments with knowledge of the contemplated Archangel voyage, was es-topped from preventing said voyage, even though such voyage were actually prohibited by the original charter.

It is contended, however, that the original charter did not prohibit the Archangel voyage. There was no privity between the shipowner and the subeharterer until after the alleged cause of action accrued. Therefore no contractual liability existed between the shipowner and the subeharterer.

The' fifteenth article of the libel alleges that the shipowner had “estopped itself from setting up or acting upon any claim or right to prevent said voyage or withdraw the ship therefrom, and waived the provisions, if any, of the original charter party from said New England Fuel & Transportation Company to the assignors of the respondent, William E. Paine, affecting the voyage to Archangel.” The question of estoppel in maritime actions will be passed over for the moment.

The second libel of Paine, the time charterer, against the shipowner, has a double aspect, claiming to recover damages for which ho may possibly be held liable to the subcharterer by reason of the forbidding of the Archangel voyage, and also to recover for profits lost to him for the use of certain space alleged to have been reserved to .him from the subcharterer.

The claim of Paine for indemnity against liability to the subcharterer may be dismissed from consideration at the outset, for the reason that the allegation of the twenty-first article of his answer to the first libel, duly verified, sets forth, in substance, that the respondent Paine entered into an adjustment with Gaston, Williams & Wigmore Steamship Corporation, whereby he duly assigned to that corporation the entire charter, which had been derived through mesne assignments from the New England Fuel & Transportation Company, and whereby the said Gaston, Williams & Wigmore Steamship Corporation was substituted for Paine in respect to the operation of the vessel under the charter, and that said adjustment was in full settlement and discharge of all obligations of Paine to Gaston, Williams & Wig-more, “and in discharge of all damages claimed in the libel from this respondent, and constituted an accord and satisfaction.”

This allegation is supported by the record evidence herein, documentary and oral. This assignment of charter was dated June 27, 1919, after abandonment of the Archangel voyage. The evidence shows that, at that time, the time charter was valuable, as the rate of hire under the charter was considerably less then the going market rate for spaee. At the time of the assignment of the entire charter (which assignment was not prohibited by the original instrument), Gas-ton, Williams & Wigmore became the entire owners of what, presumably, was a valuable time charter, notwithstanding the cancellation of the Archangel trip. The Melrose was then “an $8 vessel in a $10 market.”

The libels were not filed until 1923, upwards of four years after the several transactions. In the interim, no claim had ever been presented to the shipowner by either the time charterer or the subeharterer. For the moment, the question of laches will be passed. The terms of the original or time charter will first be considered.

The libels assert that the time charter, by its terms, permitted a voyage to Archangel. This document has two clauses, seemingly in conflict. On the first page is a typewritten clause, stating the limits, concluding with these words: “And/or Europe and/or Australia, excluding White or Black Sea and the Baltic out of season, the Magdalena river and all unsafe ports.” Thereafter the language continues, in printed form, as follows: “As the charterers, or their agents, shall direct, on the following conditions.”

Thereafter are 33 numbered paragraphs. Nos. 29 to 33, inclusive, are on the reverse side of the document and are typewritten. Both sides of this single sheet bear the signatures of the parties. Paragraph 31 (on the second or reverse side) provides for the payment of $150,000 charter hire to cover the last 2 months of the 12 months’ service, to be paid within 7 days after delivery of the vessel. The final paragraph (number 33) contains various warranties by the charterer, which the record shows are in the same language as the “institute warranties” in force at that time. Included in paragraph 33, is the following: “Also warrant not to sail for or from any port or place on the north coast of Europe between North Cape and Cape Kanin, and not to proceed east of Cape Kanin in the Arctic Ocean.”

[572]*572An examination of the map shows that Archangel is on the north coast of Europe and is between North. Cape and Cape Kanin. Marine insurance men and shipbrokers of long experience testified that this warranty was understood in the shipping and insurance world as excluding the port of Archangel, although the map itself would seem to be conclusive, without the necessity of such testimony. This examination of the map is satisfying of the fact, whether the limit be determined by following the coast line around between the two capes, or whether it be determined by longitude. I am satisfied that the language quoted from paragraph 33 prohibits a voyage to Archangel. What, if any, is the effect, however, of the provision on the face of the charter, reading “and/or Europe and/or Australia, excluding White or Black Sea and the Baltic out of season, the Magdalena river and all unsafe ports” ?

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Related

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22 F.2d 568 (D. Rhode Island, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
15 F.2d 570, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-paine-nysd-1926.