R. T. Jones Lumber Company, Inc., Libelant-Appellee v. Roen Steamship Company

270 F.2d 456, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5065
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 22, 1959
Docket307, Docket 25498
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 270 F.2d 456 (R. T. Jones Lumber Company, Inc., Libelant-Appellee v. Roen Steamship Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. T. Jones Lumber Company, Inc., Libelant-Appellee v. Roen Steamship Company, 270 F.2d 456, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5065 (2d Cir. 1959).

Opinion

HINCKS, Circuit Judge.

The appellee, R. T. Jones Lumber Company, brought a libel to recover damages occasioned by the failure of the appellant, Roen Steamship Company, to deliver part of a lumber cargo shipped on its barge Hilda. Judge Burke found the appellant liable on the ground that the unseaworthiness of the Hilda, rather than a “peril of the sea,” directly caused the cargo to fall and be lost into the seas during a severe storm. His final decree of December 2, 1958, awarding appellee the damages reported by a Commissioner, is here challenged because of alleged errors in the Commissioner’s basis of computing damages as well as in the basic finding of liability.

Since the facts are amply set forth at D.C., 158 F.Supp. 304, 306, they need be only briefly stated here. For clarity, the parties will be referred to by their relationship to the litigation below.

The Hilda, owned and operated by the respondent, was a converted car ferry with facilities for only on-deek cargo. In November, 1955 she took aboard 1,-944,531 feet of lumber at Blind River, Ontario, and on November 18, 1955 proceeded down Lake Erie on her usual course for Tonawanda, New York, as her destination. Suddenly and without the benefit of prior weather reports she met shifting and increasing winds at 7:3Q p. m. on November 20, but although the seas were 12 to 15 feet high and the winds reached gale velocities of 50 miles an hour, she continued her journey without mishap for three hours. It was only after she had turned 30 degrees to port in order to negotiate Buffalo Harbor that the wind caught her port side causing her to roll so hard that part of her cargo was lost.

The trial court concluded that the loss was not due to a “peril of the sea” on the basis of findings that the storm was not an unusual event for Lake Erie in November but one which could reasonably be anticipated and provided against. Instead, the Court attributed the loss to the fact that the respondent, who controlled the quantity and height of the load, had loaded the barge to such a height that she was top-heavy, unstable and unseaworthy for the cargo she carried at the beginning of her voyage. This, it was held, rendered the respondent liable under its original contract of affreightment and bill of lading. 1

*458 We accept the Court’s findings as to the weather conditions encountered and the fact that such conditions were not unusual and beyond reasonable expectation. Such findings could be reversed only if clearly erroneous, McAllister v. United States, 348 U.S. 19, 75 S.Ct. 6, 99 L.Ed. 20. Here even the respondent’s evidence sufficiently supported these findings. The real thrust of respondent’s argument is that less vicious storms in numerous cases have been held to be “perils of the sea” and that the trial court thus erred as a matter of law in concluding that no “peril of the sea” was involved. Although courts have occasionally said that the question whether any given conditions constitute “perils of the sea” is purely one of fact, The Frey, 2 Cir., 106 F. 319; The Governor Powers, D.C.D.Mass., 243 F. 961, it is clearly our province to determine whether such conditions meet the requirements of a legally sound definition. As we said in Duche v. Thomas & John Brocklebank, 2 Cir., 40 F.2d 418, 420:

“The difficult task is not to define in general terms a peril of the sea, but to determine whether some established facts and circumstances, like those proved in this case, fall within a sound definition.”

The proved facts in this case do not amount to a “peril of the sea” as thus defined. In The Rappahannoch, 2 Cir., 184 F. 291, in which we considered admitted weather conditions on these same Great Lakes which were more severe than in the present litigation, we reversed a decree for the carrier because it failed to sustain its burden of proving a “peril of the sea” exception.

Turning next to the question of seaworthiness, it is clear tha't that term means not only the reasonable ability of a ship to meet the anticipated conditions of the sea but its ability to carry safely the cargo which it has accepted for shipment. The Silvia, 171 U.S. 462, 19 S.Ct. 7, 43 L.Ed. 241; The Southwark, 191 U.S. 1, 24 S.Ct. 1, 48 L.Ed. 65. The respondent, however, challenges the Court’s conclusion that the loss was caused by the unseaworthiness of the Hilda at the commencement of her voyage rather than by an accident beyond the control of the respondent. The trial court based this conclusion on direct expert testimony and reasonable inferences from other evidence presented, which led it to find that the Hilda, which had never undergone stability tests since her conversion from a car ferry, was unstable and topheavy at least when laden as she was for this voyage. We think that the preponderance of the evidence demonstrates the correctness of this finding: certainly it was not clearly erroneous. The conclusion is supported by the fact that the Hilda pro *459 ceeded for three hours without mishap under the same weather conditions and lost her cargo only when she turned to port and exposed the vessel with its high-piled cargo broadside to the wind. The conclusion is no less sound because of the fact that the Hilda was not loaded below her Plimsoll marks, which would only indicate she was not overloaded weight-wise, not that as loaded she was free from dangerous vulnerability to wind. Moreover, the respondent’s argument that the finding must fall because the Hilda had often carried like loads without mishap cuts equally hard the other way: given the additional fact that such storms were not unusual it is reasonable to infer that on this particular trip she was un-seaworthy with respect to her cargo. The Colima, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 82 F. 665.

The respondent contends that the libelant’s consent to stowage on deck precludes recovery, relying for this proposition on the case of Lawrence v. Minturn, 17 How. 100, at pages 114-115, 15 L.Ed. 58. That was a case in which the Court meticulously restricted its holding to a situation in which “the vessel was seaworthy to carry a cargo under deck, and there was no general custom to carry such goods on deck in such a voyage.” But that is not the situation here. The Hilda was not equipped to carry the cargo below deck and these very parties had long participated in a custom to carry the cargo on deck. In Olsen v. United States Shipping Co., 2 Cir., 213 F. 18, 21, we refused to extend the Lawrence v. Min-turn holding “to such a loading as makes the ship herself unseaworthy when no sea peril is encountered.” We still adhere to the view expressed in that opinion that it would “be unwise and dangerous to impair the implied warranty of seaworthiness of the ship herself.” See also Pioneer Import Corporation v. The Lafcomo, 2 Cir., 138 F.2d 907; The Royal Sceptre, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 187 F. 224.

Finally, we find no basis in fact for the respondent’s argument that the libelant controlled the amount of lumber loaded and therefore must suffer the loss.

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Bluebook (online)
270 F.2d 456, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 5065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-t-jones-lumber-company-inc-libelant-appellee-v-roen-steamship-ca2-1959.