Robinson v. Hinckley

20 F. Cas. 1013, 2 Paine 457

This text of 20 F. Cas. 1013 (Robinson v. Hinckley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Hinckley, 20 F. Cas. 1013, 2 Paine 457 (circtsdny 1879).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Justice.

The voyage in this case was certainly a very disastrous one to the ship-owner, and clearly with respect to many things the respondent does not entirely exonerate himself from blame. There is pretty strong evidence to show his [1014]*1014Mbits of intoxication occasioned negligence and delay, attended with injurious consequences. But all grounds of complaint on this account have been waived on the argument. The three principal grounds of complaint which are set up on the part of the respondent against the claims for wages, are: 1. Disobedience of orders in not pursuing the voyage directed by the letter of instructions. 2. Overloading the vessel. 3. In not rendering an account of the moneys received.

1st. By his letter of instructions he was directed to proceed to Antwerp and discharge his cargo, and if any return freight offered at that port, to take it in and return to New York. If none offered there, then to make inquiry if any could be obtained at London or Newcastle; and if not, then to proceed direct to Cadiz and address himself to the correspondent of the ship-owner there, and take in a cargo of salt, and return to New York. But instead of pursuing these instructions, the master, whilst at Antwerp, chartered the vessel for a voyage from Newport, in Wales, to take a cargo of iron for New York. If the master had thus changed his voyage and departed so much from his instructions, without acting under the advice and sanction of the respondent’s correspondents, I should incline to think it would have been such a violation of his orders that it would have incurred a forfeiture of his wages. But the charter party was entered into through the agency of the correspondents of the ship-owner, which affords reasonable ground to conclude that it was thought, under all circumstances, to be best for the interest of the shipowner.3 The evidence is somewhat at variance as to the overloading of the vessel, and the injury she sustained; and being obliged to put back to Bristol and repair, and then leaving there fifty tons of her cargo, are circumstances corroborating the opinion of those witnesses who considered her overloaded. The tonnage of the ship, by measurement, was two [1015]*1015hundred and ninety-eight tons, and she took on board five hundred and thirty-five or forty tons of iron — and her repairs cost upwards of $6,000. Although these eireumstan ees strongly fortify the charge of misconduct on the part of her master, I should not, however, be disposed to disturb the decree of the district court on these grounds. But I cannot satisfy myself that injustice has not been done by the master in not accounting for the advances he has received on account of the ship-owner. The accounts, as exhibited on the hearing, are so irregular, and unaccompanied by vouchers, that to allow the master to receive the full amount of his wages, ($556.86,) with interest, without requir[1016]*1016ing from him a full and satisfactory account of the moneys received, and of the disbursements and expenditures of the ship during the voyage, would not only be doing injustice to the respondents, but would be sanctioning a laxity of conduct on the part of the master, in matters entirely within his own control and duty, that would be unsound in principle and injurious in practice. But to guard against any injustice being done to the master, I shall reverse the decree of the district court, and dismiss the libel without prejudice, and without costs on either side; thereby giving to the libellant an opportunity of filing another libel, and rendering a full account of his receipts and expenditures.

See The Grand Turk [Case No. 5,683]: The Mary [Id. 9,180]; Murray v. Lazarus [Id. 9,962.]

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Towle v. Stevenson
1 Johns. Cas. 110 (New York Supreme Court, 1799)

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20 F. Cas. 1013, 2 Paine 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-hinckley-circtsdny-1879.