Spinette v. Atlas Steamship Co.

21 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 100
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 21 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 100 (Spinette v. Atlas Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spinette v. Atlas Steamship Co., 21 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 100 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

Brady, J.:

This action was commenced on the 2d of November, 1874, to recover the value of a bag of American gold coin, containing five thousand dollars, belonging to the plaintiff, shipped on board the defendant’s steamship Corinth on the loth of May, 1874, through' Messrs. Ribon & Munoz, plaintiff’s agents in New York, to bo carried to Maracaibo by Avay of Curacoa, and there delivered to the plaintiff.

The complaint alleged that the plaintiff caused to be delivered to the defendant a certain box, containing ten thousand dollars in gold coin, and that somewhere between Ncav York and Maracaibo one bag containing the five thousand dollars in question disappeared from said box, so that on arrival at the latter port the box Avas found to contain only one-half the quantity shipped in it.

The defendant, by its ansAver, denies that the box, when delivered to the defendant, contained ten thousand dollars in gold, and averred that it contained only five thousand dollars, and that if any part of the contents of the box were lost while in the custody of the defendant, the loss was occasioned by one of the following causes mentioned in the bill of lading, namely: theft on land or afloat, barratry of master or mariners, or by some act, neglect or default of the pilot, master, mariners, engineers, servants or agents of the defendant, and not by the negligence of the defendant itself.

It Avas admitted that the defendant is a corporation created and organized under the laAvs of Great Britain, and is a common carrier of goods for hire from NeAv York to Maracaibo in Venezuela.

The plaintiff proved the delivery of the box containing the ten thousand dollars, properly screwed up, strapped and sealed, on board the A'essel, in the cabin, to the purser, and that he gave a [102]*102ship’s receipt for it. On the same day the receipt was surrendered upon the delivery of a bill of lading, which recites among other things as follows: “ The company is not liable for any loss or detention of or damage or injury to the goods or the consequences thereof, occasioned by any or several of the following causes, namely: * # * theft on land or afloat; * * * barratry of master or mariners; * * * interruption to , navigation by ice, transshipment; any act, neglect or default of the pilot, master, mariners, engineers, servants or agents of the company.”

The vessel sailed from New York for Curagoa on the 15th of May, 1874. It arrived at Curagoa in about twelve days. The box containing the gold was, all the time, in the personal custody of the purser, being deposited in the specie locker of which he alone had the key, to which no one else had access, such locker opening only in to the purser’s room.

The plaintiff proved that, shortly before the saili.ig of the vessel from New York, there, was delivered to the purser another parcel of pencils and penholders wrapped in brown paper, which was addressed in the handwriting of Victor W. Brundage, a clerk of LeRoy W. Fairchild & Co., and sealed with their seals, and bearing a printed label of that Arm pasted upon it, all directed to Mr. J. C. Rodrigues, which was a private adventure of the purser, and that, on the arrival of the wooden box at Maracaibo, which was opened at the custom house in the presence of the plaintiff and the agent of the defendant at that port, it was found to contain .only five thousand dollars in gold, which was inclosed in one specie bag, and that the remaining space in that box contained various papers, among which was the brown paper wrapping of the pencil package, which was identified with that which had been upon it on its delivery to the purser in New York. The plaintiff having rested, the defendant moved that the complaint be dismissed, on the ground that the evidence tended to show that the loss-of the gold had happened by one of the perils excepted in the bill of lading, and that there was no proof of negligence on the part of the defendant.

The defendant’s principal witness was the purser, who denied having taken the gold, but his cross-examination greatly impaired [103]*103the effect of his denial, and showed him to be a suspicious character. He admitted having taken and kept in his stateroom the paper wrapping from the package of pencils, but could give no satisfactory or consistent reason for so doing, claiming to-have opened it at Porto Cabello after the steamer had landed the box at Curagoa, and sailed from that port to Porto Cabello. The agent of the defendant testified that the purser had been in their employ for two or three years, and that they had had no fault to find with him; that they had taken him upon written recommendation of a merchant who was known to them; that they had heard nothing, except the charge in this case, to his detriment, and retained him in their employ still; that trading by the purser on his own account was contrary to the regulations of the company, and that, if they knew of a purser trading for himself or his brother, they would discharge him at once.

It appeared that the box was delivered by the purser at Curagoa to the house of Jesurum & Zoon, defendant’s agents at Curagoa. The captain of the Pico, by which steamer it was conveyed from Curagoa to Maracaibo, testified that it lay in the counting-house of Jesurum & Zoon for several days waiting for the Pico, and that he received it there, and it looked as if the seals were then intact, but that Jesurum’s clerk took it for granted there was an error in the New York invoice, because he said it fell short of the weight of the New York invoice.

At the defendant’s request, the court submitted to the jury the two questions, whether the plaintiff delivered to the defendant two bags of five thousand dollars each or only one bag, and whether the missing bag of gold was taken from the box while it was in the defendant’s custody? . The court charged that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to satisfy the jury on the whole case, that two bags of five thousand dollars each were delivered to the defendant, and that the defendant was liable for the gold, if the jury found that it was delivered to the purser on board and lost through negligence of the company or its agents, or by any other means not excepted in the bill of lading; to this proposition the defendant did not except; that theft by the purser is not barratry, and, if lost by such means, defendant is liable; and that the defendant is liable for diligence in keeping [104]*104the gold while in charge of its agents at Curagoa before shipment on the Pico, and, if there lost by negligence of the company, defendant is liable; and that, the delivery of the gold being shown, the defendant is bound to account for it, and that, if they fail to show the loss by any one of the excepted perils, the defendant is liable.

The defendant excepted to . the refusal of the court to order a verdict for the defendant, and to the refusal of the court to charge that the defendant is not liable for any loss of the gold at Curagoa, unless negligence is shown on the part of itself or its agents, and that there was no proof of such negligence, and to the charge that theft by the purser is not barratry, and to the charge that the defendant was liable for theft by the purser: this is adopted as a correct statement of the facts.

4 Two points are presented for our consideration by this appeal, which are thus stated by the appellant’s counsel:

First■

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spinette-v-atlas-steamship-co-nysupct-1878.