O'BRIEN v. Miller

168 U.S. 287, 18 S. Ct. 140, 42 L. Ed. 469, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1726
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1897
Docket40
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 168 U.S. 287 (O'BRIEN v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'BRIEN v. Miller, 168 U.S. 287, 18 S. Ct. 140, 42 L. Ed. 469, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1726 (1897).

Opinion

MR. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

By a charter party executed at Yalparaiso, Chili, on April 5, 1884, Gibbs & Company, of the place named,, chartered the ship' Andrew Johnson to carry a cargo of nitrate of soda from Iquique and Caleta “ to any safe port in the United Kingdom or on the continent between Havre and Hamburg, both included, as ordered.” After loading at the places named, the Andrew Johnson, pursuant to orders, sailed on July 15, 1884, for Hamburg, the cargo on' board being consigned to the order of Antony Gibbs & Sons, a firm doing business in London. On the 4th of August following, the vessel, being in distress, put into Callao. Certain necessary repairs, which were advised by a duly appointed board of survey, were made, and, upon the recommendation of the board, 8449 bags, or about' 1200 tons, of the nitrate of soda were transhipped to the British bark Mary J. Leslie, to be conveyed, by that vessel, to Hamburg.'

To defray the expenses incurred in the port of refuge, the master of the Andrew Johnson executed a bottomry and re-spondentia bond to the firm of Grace Brothers & Company. This bond not only bound the ship Andrew Johnson and her cargo and freight, but also, in express terms, hypothecated the cargo transhipped to the Mary J. Leslie. Although both cargoes were thus bound, the bond, in its defeasance clause, provided that it should be void “ if during the said voyage an utter loss of the said vessel by fire, enemies, pirates, the perils *289 of the sea or navigation, or any other, casualty shall unavoidably happen.” A copy of the bond is found in the margin. 1

The two vessels sailed for Hamburg. The Leslie arrived, *290 but the Johnson perished at sea as the result of a collision with the British ship Thirlmere. After the arrival of the Leslie at Hamburg, demand was made upon the representa *291 tives of Antony Gibbs & Sons, the consignees of the nitrate of soda, which had been shipped on the Leslie, for payment in full of the amount of the bond, and, in order to obtain possession of the cargo, the consignees entered into an agreement by which the question of the liability of the nitrate of soda on .the Leslie for the entire amount of the bond was to be determined - by arbitration, the arbitrators to be selected by and their decision to be binding upon the respective parties. It is to be inferred that the only question controverted before the arbitrators was whether the use of the words “said vessel” in the defeasance clause of the bond operated to avoid the bond in consequence of the wreck of the Andrew Johnson and the loss of her cargo. The German lawyers who were selected as arbitrators found that the nitrate of soda on board the Leslie was bound for the whole amount of the bond, and that, therefore, the consignees were not entitled to the cargo unless they paid the bond. Their awai’d was as follows:

“¥e formulate the question which you, in the names of Messrs. Antony Gibbs & Sons and Messrs. Baring Brothers & Co., have submitted to our judgment as follows:
“Whetherthe portion of the cargo of nitrate of soda of the *292 Andrew Johnson, brought home per Mary J. Leslie, is liable for the whole amount of the bottomry bond, which was signed in Callao, and whether, consequently, the receiver of this portion of the cargo has to pay the whole of the bottomry bond, provided the value of this portion of the cargo is not less than the amount of the bottomry debt ?
“ This question we must answer in the affirmative, because, according to the law here, ship, freight and cargo of the Andrew Johnson, as well as the portion of the cargo which was transhipped into the Mary J. Leslie, are jointly liable for the whole amount raised on bottomry at Callao, and, there- ' fore, the Andrew Johnson and her cargo having become a total loss, the holder of the bottomry bond can come upon that portion of the cargo which was shipped by the Mary J. Leslie for the whole amount of his claim.
Some doubt might be raised as to whether, according to the wording of the bottomry bond, the money was not lent or appear to be lent contingent upon the safety of the Andrew Johnson, and becoming due only after her arrival at her port of destination, but becoming null and void in the event of her non-arrival. We are of opinion, however, that this interpretation is not consistent with the real intention of the contracting parties, and that the wording referred to has originated in the not sufficiently careful use and employment of a form of bond which happened to be at hand. This seems the less doubtful to us for this reason, that if the bottomry bond were interpreted in this manner, the cargo of the Mary J. Leslie would be entirely liberated, after the loss of the Andrew Johnson occurred, and would not even bear a portion of the bottomry debt, which nevertheless has arisen out of a case of general average. Manifestly this cannot have been the intention of the parties interested.”

Antony Gibbs & Sons paid the amount of the bond for account of Gibbs & Company, the consignors. Subsequently, the owners of the Andrew Johnson commenced legal proceedings against the Thirlmere to hold that vessel responsible for the collision by which the Johnson and her cargo were lost. The Thirlmere availed herself of the statute-' of'Great Britain *293 limiting the liability of shipowners, and the result was an award finding the Thirlmere to be wholly at fault, and condemning her to pay the loss caused by the sinking of the Johnson. As their proportion of the ascertained value of the Thirlmere, the owners of the Johnson for ship and freight were allowed the sum of £6557 9s. 6A, but from this amount there was deducted about £1500 for certain expenses. In the proceedings in question, the owners of the nitrate of soda which was on the Johnson also recovered their proportion of the value of the Thirlmere. On account of the loss of the Andrew Johnson, the Boston Marine Insurance Company paid to her owner the sum of $30,000 less $2825.49, the amount of a premium note with interest, and out of the. sum received by the owner of the Andrew Johnson for the ship and freight from' the value of the Thirlmere, the owner of the Andrew Johnson, in April, 1896, remitted to the insurance company as its share thereof the sum of $11,456.05, and to correct some mistake in calculation the sum of $35.60 was also subsequently paid by the shipowner to the insurance company.

The present suit was commenced on July 20, 1887, by a libel in 'personam against the owner of the Andrew Johnson to recover the due proportion of the sum paid on the bond. Those joined as libellants were eleven in number; that is, all ,the members composing the firm of G-ibbs & Company, the consignors of the nitrate, of soda, and the members of the firm of Antony Gibbs & Sons, the consignees. The original libel is not in the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 U.S. 287, 18 S. Ct. 140, 42 L. Ed. 469, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-miller-scotus-1897.