Pool Shipping Co. v. Samuel
This text of 192 F. 57 (Pool Shipping Co. v. Samuel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.
“Tlie act of God, * * * unavoidable accidents, and all causes beyond the control of the shipper, the consignee, or the charterer, which may prevent or delay the loading or discharging during the said voyage, always mutually excepted.”
This hearing is on libel and answer, and the answer must be accepted as true. It. therefore appears that the delay in discharging was caused solely by the refusal of the Reading Railroad Company (at whose pier the vessel was lying) to furnish the necessary, cars. The cargo had, been bought by a manufacturer whose plant is about 35 miles distant from Philadelphia, and could not be carried directly to him except over the Reading’s road. The company, however, had quarreled with the manufacturer, and refused to accept the cargo until the quarrel should be settled. There was no other reason for refusing the cars. The respondent made every effort to induce the railroad company to recede from its position, even applying, but without sucCeSs, to a court of Philadelphia county for equitable relief, but it was January 19 before the company changed its mind.
Was this a cause of delay beyond the respondent’s control? The answer, I think, should be in the affirmative. He had nothing to do with the quarrel, either as a party or as a person directly interested, and could not compel the company to furnish the cars. He could only do what he did — ask the courts for relief, and try the arts of persuasion, and in my opinion he is protected by the clause last quoted.
I agree that the ship could not be detained indefinitely, but a problem so unusual may be left for solution until the occasion shall arise. I am dealing now with a. different'situation, naniely, where only a brief and reasonable delay is .involved — a period well within the lay days which the ship expressly agreed to allow — and with reference to such a delay I think the conclusion just announced is correct. The decision depends 'on the proper application of the clause in question, and is not decisively ruled by any case that has been cited. The parties expressly agreed that some delays were to be excused, and the question simply is whether this particular delay was beyond the respondent’s control.
A decree may be entered dismissing the libel, with costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
192 F. 57, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pool-shipping-co-v-samuel-paed-1911.