Reliance Marine Ins. v. New York & C. Mail Steamship Co.

70 F. 262, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 4, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 F. 262 (Reliance Marine Ins. v. New York & C. Mail Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reliance Marine Ins. v. New York & C. Mail Steamship Co., 70 F. 262, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69 (S.D.N.Y. 1895).

Opinions

BROWN, District Judge.

The libelant having, as insurer, settled a loss on 221 hales of tobacco, arising from fire discovered on the steamship Seneca, when one day out upon a voyage from Havana, claims to recover compensation in general average, through subrogation to the rights of J.,W. Fortier, the owner, on the ground that the damage to the tobacco was caused by the voluntary acts of the master in the effort to extinguish the fire. Upon a general average adjustment an allowance was made for damage to Mr. Fortier’s consignment by water to the amount of $2,987.55 upon 64 bales; and this is so far satisfactory. But tbe libelant contends that all the rest of the bales were also damaged by smoke driven into the after compartment by the live steam let into the ’tween decks for the purpose of extinguishing the fire; and that the "stigma” upon the reputation of the tobacco, from being more or less tainted with the fumes of smoke,.or from association with a consignment suffering in that way, was such that its marketable .value was impossible to be ascertained except by an auction sale of the whole lot; and that the whole loss, as 'thus ascertained, amounting to $12,766.44, should be allowed to the libelant, though it settled with the owner for $8,000. The respondents contend that there was no damage from smoke; and that if there was, such damage, as well as that arising from “stigma” upon the reputation of such hales as were not physically damaged, is not recoverable in general average.

There is little dispute as to any of the facts, except as to the question whether the bales were damaged by smoke. Six witnesses engaged more or less in the tobacco business, who tided the tobacco by smoking it, testify that it was all so tainted with a smoky flavor [264]*264that its marketable value was greatly diminished. Three official experts of very large and long experience, who also carefully examined the tobacco, deny that there was any such taint or damage.

The fire was among bales of hemp stowed in the forward compartment of the hold. The tobacco in question was stowed with other bales of tobacco, to the number of 1,668 bales in all, in the upper ’tween decks aft of the after bulkhead. When the fire was discovered, the first attempts to extinguish it being unavailing, and the men being driven away by the heat and smoke, the hatches were closed, live steam from the boilers was let into the ’tween decks for about seven hours, and the ship put back for Cuba, where the tobacco was removed by lighters, and the ship then submerged. The after bulkhead was of wood, and proved to be not water-tight. It was about 100 feet aft of the place of the fire, and the intervening spaces along the sides of the engine room were stowed with hemp. Ventilators from these spaces ran up through the decks above. The general average allowance to the 64 bales was made for damage to those bales by water arising while lightering the cargo ashore for the purpose of flooding the ship. The other bales for which the additional damage is here claimed, showed no external signs of damage. They were covered with white canvas. When the hatches were opened to discharge the bales, no smoke or odor of smoke, or steam, or dampness was found in the after compartment; nor did the bales when discharged show any signs of wet or dampness, or any stains or discoloration upon the white canvas from either water or smoke. The libelant argues that the continuous pressure of 100 pounds to the square inch from the boiler for seven hours must necessarily have forced the steam and creosote into the after compartment, so as to affect the taste of so sensitive a substance as tobacco. The respondents contend that any such pressure would be infinitesimal against the bulkhead, as the steam was discharged through numerous small holes in the steam pipes into the large spaces of the ’tween decks, from which the ample open ventilators afforded instant relief for any pressure of steam; and that no steam combined with smoke could possibly have passed through the white canvas covering of the tobacco bales so as to affect the tobacco within, without leaving the smell of smoke in that compartment, and marks of smoke discoloration upon the white canvas, as well as marks of dampness from the condensation of steam; none of which were found.

In order to establish a claim to general average in this case, it is not enough to show that the tobacco was affected by smoke; the damage must also be clearly traced to the voluntary act of man, as its true and proper cause. For as damage from fire is particular and not general average, so damage from smoke, as the effect and incident of fire, is also particular average only, unless, indeed, the fire or the smoke and the damage from it, were voluntarily produced for the common safety, or were caused solely by acts done for the common good. Here not only is there very great doubt whether the tobacco was tainted by smoke at all, but if it was, the smoke was an incident of the fire, and caused by the fire, and not by the act of man. No damage, I mean no direct damage, arose from the steam, [265]*265oven R any steam penetrated to tlie after compartment; there were not even any signs of the presence of steam there at all. The damage, if there was any, was (lone by smoke alone; and the smoke was not produced by the steam, but by the fire in the hold; and neither the fire, nor the smoke, nor the presence of smoke in the after compartment, if any got there, was the voluntary act of man. If the smothering of the fire by closing the ship’s hat dies, or by forcing water or steam upon the fire, temporarily increased the smoke, the lire was none the less the true and original cause of all the smoke, and hence of all the damage it may have done; and this damage, if there was, any such damage, must he classed with fire damage, as particular average and not as general average, because done by smoke; alone, as an incident of the fire, and not by the steam voluntarily employed to extinguish it.

In this respect the case is wholly different from damage done by water used in extinguishing a fire. There the damage is done directly and wholly by the new agency voluntarily employed to put out the fire for the common benefit. Here the steam, the new agency employed, of itself did no damage.

Xor do I think that the circumstance that the steam may have contributed to the penetration of the smoke into the after compartment, if it did penetrate, as the libelant claims, is sufficient to make the smoke damage, if there was any, a voluntary sacrifice for the common benefit, like damage by water in the cases just referred to.

No analogous case has been cited in which damage from smoke alone, or from fire alone, has been made general average, merely because the voluntary act of man iu endeavoring to extinguish the fire may have temporarily contributed to the spread of either fire or smoke, and thereby have given rise to some incidental damage. "Yet often in fires on shipboard, these results, I apprehend, must to some extent arise. Often the first efforts to extinguish a fire give it breath and extend the flames or smoke to articles before untouched. That is an unavoidable result of the endeavor to put out the fire. But damage thus arising is not a voluntary sacrifice giving rise to a general average claim. And similar is the damage arising from any unavoidable spread of smoke; by the use of steam.

The measures taken to extinguish a fire are to be looked at as a whole;, and in all their relations.

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Bluebook (online)
70 F. 262, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reliance-marine-ins-v-new-york-c-mail-steamship-co-nysd-1895.