Spang Chalfant & Co. v. Dimon SS Corporation

57 F.2d 965, 1932 A.M.C. 738, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4097
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1932
Docket312, 313
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 965 (Spang Chalfant & Co. v. Dimon SS Corporation) 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
Spang Chalfant & Co. v. Dimon SS Corporation, 57 F.2d 965, 1932 A.M.C. 738, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4097 (2d Cir. 1932).

Opinion

*966 L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The libelants libeled the claimant’s ship Pacific Pir for damage to parcels of the cargo of that ship, on a voyage from Baltimore to Los Angeles; the claimant countered with a cross-libel in general average. The damage was incidental to putting out .a fire which started in charcoal stowed in the same hold with the libelants’ goods. Under section 182 of title 46, U. S. Code (46 USCA § 182), the ship would have a defense if the fire was not caused by “design or neglect,” and that would be a preliminary issue. But it is not material to the cross-libel. Under The Irrawaddy, 171 U. S. 187, 18 S. Ct. 831, 43 L. Ed. 130, the ship cannot recover in general average, unless she be without fault, though she be excused under the Harter Act (46 USCA §§ 190-195). Not so, if she provides in the bill of lading for general average in, that event. The Jason, 225 U. S. 32, 32 S. Ct. 560, 56 L. Ed. 969. The bill of lading did have such a clause; that is, the ship stipulated for general average in the case of any “damage or disaster resulting from * * * unseaworthiness,” if due diligence had been used to make her seaworthy and properly to equip her. The bill did not, however, reserve the same right in the case of fire which was not the result of the neglect of the owner, and the cross-libel cannot therefore succeed, merely upon showing that in this ease the fire was so caused. Whether a’ clause worded to cover such a ease would be equally valid we need not say. Nor can the cross-libel succeed under the clause just quoted so far as the fire was the result of unseaworthiness, for that, if it existed at all, was due to the ship’s design and known to the owner. Therefore at least as regards the cross-libel, the bills of lading may be disregarded, and the ease is open on the merits. Since in our opinion it must succeed, it carries with it an affirmance of the decree so far as it also dismissed the libels.

The fire started in hold 4, just abaft the engine room. In this the ship had stowed a quantity of charcoal at Norfolk, the ’tween decks being already full. The whole stow of this hold was in four blocks; the first, abaft the bulkhead which separated off the engine room, contained a part of the charcoal. Next came a block of baled cotton waste and general cargo, stowed up to within three feet of the ’tween decks, the after end'of which came under the square of the hatch. Three feet abaft this, the rest of the charcoal was stowed in the' third block, under the square of the hatch; and the after end .of the hold was filled by a fourth block which may be disregarded, for the fire started in the charcoal of the third. At the bottom of this were “grinding balls,” above which were eases of copper sheets, and on top of these barrels of soda ash, stowed on end, coming up to a point a little above the level of the tunnel shaft. The charcoal, in particles of about the size of a pea, was packed in paper bags covered with jute, and stowed upon dunnage,' laid fore and aft upon the top of the barrels. It filled the ship from wing to wing, five bags high amidships, and twelve at the wings; leaving a space of three feet above the top of the stow at the wings, and seven feet amidships. There was a space of some sixteen inches between the skin of the ship and the sides of the stow. The fire started in the center of the stow, in the first or second tier from the surface.

The block of cotton waste was protected at its after end by two tarpaulins, meant to keep off charcoal dust. The libelants bear heavily upon the master’s direct testimony that these ran across the hold from batten to batten, close up to the ’tween decks, effectively cutting off ventilation through the top' of the hold. It is, however, entirely plain that this was not the ease, but that at the center the lapped ends of the tarpaulins lay upon the top of the block, being held in plaee by some boilers. Indeed, the master’s direct testimony is consonant with this conclusion. They did not therefore substantially obstruct the ventilation. Charcoal is a substance subject, somewhat rarely to spontaneous combustion. Its chief period of danger is within three days after it is made, when it absorbs gases and generates heat, especially if in powdered form. The larger the pieces, the less the danger. It did not appear how old this charcoal was when shipped, except that it had come to Norfolk by rail; or whether it had been wet en route, which makes it more combustible; but it had been on board for ten days before the fire broke out in the Pacific.

The first fault charged is that it should not have been shipped in the hold at all, but in the ’tween decks. Master mariners testified both ways as experts, but the judge who saw. them was not convinced by those who said that the hold was worse; and the record does not show that he should so- have found. It is indeed doubtful a priori whether the hold is not the better place, at least in the tropics, though there are indeed sub *967 stantial authorities who maintain that the ’tween decks is always better ventilated, particularly because the hatches can be. taken off. Perhaps so, but, on the other hand, being immediately under the shelter deck, the ’tween deck was exposed to the full force of the tropical sun and its heat was not moderated by the water which covers tho sides of tho hold. Indeed, in the case at bar the temperatures within the hold wen: the same as those of the sea. The eross-seciion of that part of the ventilators leading to the hold is substantially greater than that left for the ’tween decks, though this is in some measure balanced by tlie. longer' carry to the hold, and presumably by a greater resulting friction. While the cubic capacity of the hold is greater, the draft will depend upon the spaces kept unfilled, since it is through these alone that the air can pass. It is impossible to know whether the volume of these was greater in the hold as stowed than in the ’tween deck. As wo cannot tell what the resultant; of all these factors was, we must depend upon those whose greater experience gives their estimates, even if no better than honest guesses, more weight than our speculations. We see no reason to suppose the claimant was wrong in choosing the hold, even if the ’tween dock was better ventilated, as perhaps it was.

The stowage, as such, was proper. Much is made of the fact that the bags were cross-piled at the wings, but nothing followed from that. Tho fire started, not there, but amidships, as we have said, and that too at the surface or only one tier below. Any defect in the stowage due to close packing, or indeed to too great a mass without interior ventilation, must therefore be put aside. Had the fire begun deep within the block, it would perhaps be plausible to argue that had channels (“rice ventilators”) been run through, the ventilation would hove been better. But oven so, there would almost certainly have been at least two tiers without channels, and the fire would have been as likely to start as with things as they were. Moreover, the necessity of such ventilators was disputed and not proved. Beneath the block and between the soda ash barrels there was a -course for the air; the thickness of the stow in the middle was scarcely more than three feet (five bags); at each wing was a passage at the sides of at least a foot, .and above the center, as we have said, seven feet.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 965, 1932 A.M.C. 738, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spang-chalfant-co-v-dimon-ss-corporation-ca2-1932.