Pensacola, Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Seaboard Transportation & Shipping Co.

263 F. 661, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 2078
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 1920
DocketNo. 3442
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 263 F. 661 (Pensacola, Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Seaboard Transportation & Shipping Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pensacola, Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Seaboard Transportation & Shipping Co., 263 F. 661, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 2078 (5th Cir. 1920).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

The individuals composing a partnership doing business under the name of ‘ Seaboard Transportation & Shipping Company (herein referred to as the Seaboard Company), owners of the steam tug Leopold Adler, filed a libel against the dredge-boat Pensacola, claiming an amount alleged to be due under a time charter party between the Seaboard Company and the Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Company (herein called the Atlantic Company), for the hire of the tug for a round trip to Mobile, Ala., and return, the libel alleging that 11 days and fractions of days elapsed between the time the tug was delivered on March 20, 1918, to the Atlantic Company and the time it was redelivered to the Seaboard Company. A copy of the charter party, the date of which-was March 11, 1918, was made an exhibit to the libel. Among the provisions were the following:

“Tug to be placed at the disposal of the charterers at Galveston, Texas, in such dock or at such wharf or place (where she may always safely lie afloat, at all times of tide), as the charterers may direct, and being, on her delivery, ready for service and tight, staunch, strong and in every way fitted for the service (and with full complement of officers, seamen, engineers, and firemen for a vessel of her tonnage), and to be so maintained during the continuation of this charter party, to be employed in towing dredge Pensacola from a point of sufficient depth of water on the Houston Ship Channel for the tug to safely float, to Mobile, Alabama. * * * That the charterers shall pay for use and hire of the said vessel six hundred dollars ($600.00) per day or fraction thereof, commencing on and from the day of her delivery, as aforesaid, and at and after the same rate for any part of a day; hire to continue until her delivery, with clean holds to the owners, at Galveston, Texas. Payment of said hire to be ma(le in cash, at the office of the Seaboard Transportation & Shipping Company, Galveston, Texas, upon due delivery of the' tug at her berth at the Galveston docks. * * * That the captain shall prosecute his voyage with the utmost dispatch. * * * That time is to commence immediately after midnight March 16, 1918.”

The charter party, as drawn hy the Seaboard Company, was sent with a letter of the same date which expressed an agreement that $492' [663]*663per <lay was to Be charged for lay days, comprising the time the tug might actually wait for the dredge to be ready. The Atlantic Company resisted the claim asserted by the libel, and by a cross-libel claimed $2,628.12 as damages occasioned by the tug’s delay of 3 days and 15 hours in reporting for service, and $2,175 as damages for delay occasioned by the alleged defective condition of the tug or its equipment. There was a decree in favor of the Seaboard Company for 9 days’ time at the charter rate, with interest. The case is in this court on an appeal by the Atlantic Company and on a cross-appeal by the Seaboard Company; the former complaining of the failure of the court to allow the claims asserted in the cross-libel, and the complaint of the latter being that the court did not decree in its favor for eleven days service of the tug.

[1] The tug reported for the service for which it was hired in the afternoon of March 20th. In behalf of the Atlantic Company it is contended that, under an above-quoted provision of the charter party, the service of the tug was due to begin “immediately after midnight March 16, 1918.” In behalf of the Seaboard Company it is contended that the charter party did not obligate it to furnish the tug sooner than it was furnished for the service provided for. Each of the parties, by introducing in evidence letters and telegrams which passed between them, treated that correspondence as proper to be considered in determining the meaning of provisions contained in the charter party. A letter of the Seaboard Company, dated March 4th, and addressed to the Atlantic Company, contained the following:

“Tug Leopold Adler — Your Dredge Pensacola.
“The writer confirms conversation with your Mr. Walsh to-day. The above tug is now under charter to the Texas Company, and we anticipate the trip to last all the way from 5 to 10 days, depending whether or not the tug is required to await the unloading of the barge towed down or to return here light. If she returns light, she will be here by Monday at least.”

The following is the body of a telegram sent by the Seaboard Company on March 9th:

“This confirms your acceptance tug Leopold Adler at rate six hundred dollars per day effective Friday March fifteenth when tug subject your Instructions this date must be definitely agreed upon otherwise could not hold tug for your information tug now Tampico expects leave soon presumably returning here midweek next must have confirmation to-day.”

A letter of the Seaboard Company of the same date confirmed the telegram, and contained the following:

“We anticipate that the tug should reasonably return to Galveston by the middle of the coming week, about the 13th instant. You estimate that your dredge will be ready by Friday, the 15th instant. While we are figuring on other tows and reserve the right to close with them, if we do not receive an answer finally closing the deal from you this afternoon, we aro ready to fore-go any day’s intervening between the arrival of our tug here and the date of departure of your dredge by Friday. It is necessary, of course, for us to insist upon a definite date when the tug’s time is to begin in view of the reasons above staled. On the other hand, it will pay your principals to stand to lose a day or two of the tug’s time in view of the assurance of having the towboat firm in hand.”

[664]*664On March 11th the Atlantic Company, in reply to the Seaboard Company’s letter accompanying the charter party signed by it, telegraphed :

“We accept your offer for charter of the, Leopold Adler at $600 per day, and lay days, if any before starting, at $490, tug to be alongside dredge at Harrisburg Saturday morning the 16th, subject to our orders.”

The following is the body of a letter of the Seaboard Company, dated March 14th:,

“This acknowledges receipt of your letter of the 12th instant with duplicate signed charter party, all of which is now in order. There appears to be no hitch in regard to the tug reporting in time at Harrisburg, as she is due to arrive here Friday night, at which time immediate steps will be taken to turn her over to you.”

A letter of the Seaboard Company, dated March 18th, and written after it learned of the delay by bad weather of the tug’s return to Galveston, and had telephoned the Atlantic Company-on the subject,, contained the following:

“It is with sincere disappointment that the weather has interfered with our plans so seriously. We are, of course, even more so disappointed in view of the fact that we had hoped to move your dredge on schedule time. Certainly the government cannot hold you responsible for circumstances as they have presented themselves, as neither you nor we have control of the weather situation.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 F. 661, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 2078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pensacola-atlantic-gulf-pacific-co-v-seaboard-transportation-ca5-1920.