Richards v. Hansen

1 F. 54, 23 F. Cas. 480, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1718
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 24, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 F. 54 (Richards v. Hansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. Hansen, 1 F. 54, 23 F. Cas. 480, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1718 (circtdma 1879).

Opinion

Clifford, J.

Carriers of goods, if common carriers, contract for the safe custody, due transport and right delivery of the same, and, in the absence of any legislative regulation prescribing a different rule, are insurers of the goods, and are liable at all events and for every loss or damage, unless it happened by the act of God, or the public enemy, or the fault of the shipper, or by some other cause or accident expressly excepted in the bill of lading, and without any fault or negligence on the part of the carrier. The Cordes, 21 How. 23. Ship-owners and masters of ships employed as general ships in the coasting or foreign trade, or in general freighting business, are deemed common carriers by water, and as such are as mueh insurers of the goods they transport as common carriers by land, unless it is otherwise provided in the bill of lading. Story on Bailments, (7th Ed.) 501. . Such a carrier’s first duty, and one implied by law, is to provide a seaworthy vessel, tight and staunch, and well [55]*55furnished with suitable tackle, sails or other motive power, as the case may ho, and furniture necessary for the voyage. Yessels so employed must also be provided with a crew adequate in number, and sufficient and competent to perform the required duty, and with a competent and skilful master of sound judgment and discretion. Owners in such cases must see to it that the master is well qualified for his situation, as they are directly responsible for his negligences and unskilfulnoss in the performance of his duty. In the absence of any special agreement to the contrary, the duty of the master extends to all that relates to the lading and stowage’ of the cargo, as well as to the transportation and delivery of the goods, and for the performance of all those duties the ship is liable, as well as the master and owners. Elliott v. Russell, 10 John. 7; King v. Shepherd, 3 Story, C. C. 349; Abbott on Ship. (8th Ed.) 478. Goods of great value, consisting of sheet iron in bundles, were shipped by the libellants in the steamer Svend, bound on a voyage from the port of Liverpool to the port of Boston. By the manifest it appears that the steamer was an iron propeller, carrying general cargo for freight, and that the shipments belonged to various persons, which, of itself, is sufficient to show that the master and owners were common carriers in the strictest sense. Sufficient also appears to show that the goods, when shipped, were in good order and condition, and that the covenant of the bill of lading is that they shall be delivered in like good order and condition. One thousand bundles of the shipment, stowed in the forward part of the aft lower hold, wore badly wet with salt water to such an extent that, when the bundles were hoisted out to be delivered, the water dripped out of the same and appeared muddy with rust. Damages are claimed by the libellants, in the libel as amended, for breach of the contract to deliver the goods in the condition specified in the bill of lading in the sum of four thousand dollars, and the evidence shows that the goods shipped wore injured in the manner charged to an amount even greater than that alleged in the libel. Compensation for the injury is claimed by the libellants upon the following grounds:

[56]*56First. Because the evidence proves to a demonstration that the goods were shipped in good order and condition, and that the respondents have failed to show that the injuries to the goods resulted from the excepted perils, or any of them, or from the fault of the shipper.

Second. Because the steamer was unseaworthy in that she was not of a construction suitable to carry such a cargo on such a voyage at that season of the year.

Third. Because the ceiling of the steamer was not of a suitable character, nor fit to protect such cargo from salt water on the described voyage.

Fourth. That the goods injured were not properly stowed or dunnaged for their protection against injuries of the kind on such a voyage.

Two points are not controverted in argument by the respondents :

First. That the goods were in good order and condition when shipped.

Second. That the quantity mentioned in the libel was injured in the course of the voyage, and that it was not in good order and condition when delivered.

Conceded or not, the evidence to that effect is satisfactory and conclusive, but the respondents explicitly deny every other proposition submitted by the lib.ellants, and insist as follows:

First. That the burden of proof is upon the libellants to prove that the injury to the goods did not result from the excepted perils.

Second,. That the steamer was in all respects seaworthy, and of suitable construction and equipment to transport such a cargo on such a voyage at that season of the year.

Third. That the ceiling of the ship was sufficient, and that the goods were properly stowed and dunnaged.

Hearing was had in the district court, and the district court entered a decree dismissing the libel, from which decree the libellants appealed to this court. Since the appeal was entered here more than sixty witnesses have been examined by the parties, which renders it necessary to review all the [57]*57findings of the court below, as well as the legal principles applied in disposing of the case.

Due shipment of the goods is not denied, nor is it controverted that the steamer sailed from Liverpool, March 24, 1873, and that slie arrived at Boston, her port of destination, April 14, in the same year. Certain exceptions are contained in the bill of lading. At the time of the voyage the steamer was comparatively a now vessel, it appearing that she was built in October of the previous year. Competent expert witnesses in groat numbers describe the construction of the steamer under deck as low-waisted forward of the poop, and express the opinion that she was unfit to make such a voyage during the winter months. They were asked to give the reasons for that conclusion, and answered to the effect that in such a construction as that described the tendency in rough weather would bo to fill the waist with water, and to cause the vessel to strain and roll deep and heavy. When asked what effect the straining of the vessel would have upon her ceiling in the lower hold, the answer was that if the vessel labored heavily it would cause her to blow; that the deeper the ship rolls the higher she will blow the water in her bilge, particularly if her ceiling is not water-tight. Sheet iron, all agere, is quite susceptible to damage from being wet, and some of the expert witnesses testify that a drop of sea water will damage a sheet of the iron, and that it would take very little water to go through a whole package of such merchandise. Apart from the construction of the steamer, including her ceiling, no attempt is made to show that she was un seaworthy. Beyond doubt, she was comparatively now, and was staunch and strong. Nor is it pretended that the damage to the cargo resulted from any defects in the hull of the vessel or in her equipment, beyond what is embraced in the charge that her construction in the particulars mentioned exposed the vessel to unusual strain in bad weather, and tended to make her roll unusually deep and heavy.

A rgument to show that the vessel, when she rolls deep and heavy, is more likely to blow and expose cargo stowed in her aft lower hold to wet, is quite unnecessary, as the conclu[58]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. 54, 23 F. Cas. 480, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-hansen-circtdma-1879.