Owners of Steamboat Wenonah v. Bragdon

21 Va. 685
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 7, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. 685 (Owners of Steamboat Wenonah v. Bragdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owners of Steamboat Wenonah v. Bragdon, 21 Va. 685 (Va. 1872).

Opinion

Moncure, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a supersedeas to a judgment of the corpora-^on ccmrt Fredericksburg, obtained by the plaintiff in error, Bragdon, against the defendants in error, Taylor and others, owners of the steamboat "Wenonah, for the amount of certain fees claimed to be due by the said owners to the said Bragdon, as harbor master of the port-of Fredericksburg.. The action in which the said judgment was obtained, was an action of assumpsit. The declaration.contained only the common counts. In the first count, after setting out the considerations of work and labor done, goods sold and delivered, money lent and advanced, and money had and,received,.in the common form, a special consideration is set out thus : “And also in the further sum of $444, due on the day and year aforesaid, to the said Bragdon, as harbor master’s fees, from the said owners of the steamboat ‘Wenonab,’ as by statute and act of assembly made and provided, and enacted February 16tb, 1867 ; said Bragdon being the legally appointed and qualified harbor master of the port of Fredericksburg, and performing all the duties of the same during the time for which said fees are charged, and said steamer being, during the time for which said fees are charged, a steamer plying regularly between the port of Fredericksburg, Va., and the port of Baltimore city, Md., and of 500. tons or more burden ; on which account said defendants are liable to pay to the plaintiff the said sum of $444.” Such was the amount, and such the consideration of the claim, as specially stated in the declaration. The only plea to the action was the general issue of non-assumpsit, on which there were verdict and judgment for the amount of the claim, $444, with interest thereon from the 31st day of August 1870, until paid and costs. During the progress of the trial, the court refused to give several instructions asked for by the defendants in the action ; and after the vei’dict was rendered, the court overruled the motion of the defend[687]*687ants to set it aside. To these rulings of the court a bill of exceptions was taken, in which the facts proved on the trial were certified. The purport of which certificate, so far as it is deemed material to state the same, is substantially as follows :

The plaintiff, to support the issue joined, proved that he was the harbor master, duly appointed by the corpo-, ration court for the town of Fredericksburg ; that he had qualified under the acts of the Virginia Legislature, and had discharged the duties of that office for the period covered by his bill of particulars filed with his declaration, to wit: from the 16th day of March 1867, to the 20th day of March 1869, and from the 16th day of March 1870, to the 81st day of August 1870 ; that the steamer Wenonah, owned by the defendants, plied regularly, during that period, between the city of Baltimore in the State of Maryland, and the town of Fredericksburg in the State of Virginia, and was of more than 500 tons burden ; that all the wharves at Fredericksburg, on the Kappahannock river, which is navigable at the port of said town, belong to individuals, and it has always been the 'universal custom, within the memory of the witnesses, for vessels to land at any wharf they might choose, paying the owner wharfage therefor ; that prior to the purchase -by the defendants of the wharf where the steamer Wenonah landed in 1865, this custom had prevailed at that wharf; that since the late war very few vessels have come to Fredericksburg, the trade having been done principally by two steamboats, one of which was the Wenonah ; each of said boats arriving weekly at said port; that the plaintiff had always kept the approach to the wharf open, rendering it unnecessary to be called upon to do so; that he had demanded of one of the owners of said steamer his legal fees, soon after the passage of the act of the Legislature hereafter mentioned, and payment was refused; that the said stéamer arrived at the port of Fredericksburg from Bal[688]*688timore, the'number of times set out in the bill of particu^ara > ^iat the said steamer was a common carrier of fright an(^ passengers to and from Baltimore andFredericksburg ; its owners owning several wharves on the r jyei,} for except ’the one at Fredericksburg, they charged wharfage, the wharfage of that one having gone •to the . account of freight; that ’the plaintiff had petitioned the Legislature" to pass the act of March 1867, because the trade with Virginia, which was, prior to the war, carried on by vessels, was now almost entirely carried on" by steamers ; that some time during the year 1867 he notified the master of the Wenonah that he would claim harbor master’s fees, and at the same time sent by said master a letter to that effect to Robert A. Taylor, one of the owners of said steamer.

The defendants, to maintain the issue on their part, proved, that in 1865, they, in conjunction with one Mason Weems, purchased, and had conveyed to them by deed from A. K. Phillips, a wharf in the town of Fredericksburg, which they have continued to own from that date, and still owned at" the trial of the cause, on which they have spent a large amount in improvements, •including a buildiug erected thereon; that during the entire period for which harbor master’s fees are charged in this cause, said steamer Wenonah was moored and made fast to said wharf, and to no other, at the town of Fredericksburg ; that during the same period,-and their ■entire ownership of the same, they have exercised complete and exclusive control of said wharf; that no other steamboats, vessels or craft of any kind, could or did occupy said wharf without their special permission, and no charge was ever made, or anything received, for such occupation, and but one instance proven at the trial in W'hich it was ever so occupied ; that no charge was ever, made, or amount received, as wharfage, on any goods .at said wharf, landed from or shipped by said steamer Wenonah, or any other steamboat, vessel or otherwise, [689]*689and that said owners claimed said wharf as their private property, over which they exercised exclusive ownership ; that no demand was ever made by the plaintiff for the fees named in his bill of particulars upon the master of the Wenonah, nor upon any of the other agents of said defendants, nor upon the defendants, save upon one of them, Robert A. Taylor, in the year 1867, who refused to pay the same, on the ground that the plaintiff' had no right to them under the law ; that one Dawes had been captain and master of said steamer from the year 1865 to the date of the trial, and that neither he nor the agent of the said defendants at Fredericksburg, nor any other agent or owner of said steamer, had ever called on said plaintiff' to render any service as harbor master; and that, within the knowledge of said defendants and their agents, no services had ever been rendered to them by said harbor master as such.

The foregoing being all the material facts proved, the defendants prayed the court to instruct the jury as follows:

1. If the jury believe that the wharf to which the steamer Wenonah went and was made fast, during the time at which harbor master’s fees are charged by the plaintiff', was during that time a private wharf, the said steamer is not liable to pay said fees, and the jury should find for the defendants.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Va. 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owners-of-steamboat-wenonah-v-bragdon-va-1872.