Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. The Yacht Nautilus

166 F. Supp. 187, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2870
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 31, 1958
DocketCiv. A. No. 6436
StatusPublished

This text of 166 F. Supp. 187 (Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. The Yacht Nautilus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. The Yacht Nautilus, 166 F. Supp. 187, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2870 (E.D. Wis. 1958).

Opinion

TEH AN, Chief Judge.

This contract action in admiralty was brought originally by the libelant Sturgeon Bay Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company, of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, against both the Yacht Nautilus, her engine, tackle, apparel and furniture, and Roger McCormick, resident of Chicago, Illinois, and owner of the yacht, respondents ; however, in the same month of the commencement of the suit, the respondent yacht, a 65-foot houseboat Diesel type, sank in the Monroe Street Harbor in Chicago, Illinois, and the process of this Court did not attach it in rem. This action therefore is one for a personal judgment against Roger McCormick, (hereinafter sometimes referred to as. the respondent) for the recovery of the sum of $6,463.35 allegedly due and owing-for services, repairs and materials furnished monthly per itemized invoice accounts attached to the libel, stated over the period of October, 1952 through July,. 1953.

The nature of the claims and the defenses thereto can be better appreciated if the libelant’s claim of $6,463.35 is apportioned with relation to June 24, 1953, the date of a significant transaction as will hereafter appear. So divided, it appears that libelant demands $3,098.34 as the balance due it for services performed prior to and including June 24, 1953, and the sum of $3,365.01 for work performed thereafter.

The respondent’s position on the preJune 24th claim is that an unconditional1 agreement between himself and the officers of the libelant was entered into settling that claim for the sum of $15,800, of which he paid that day, $15,000. He admits owing the balance of $800, but nothing more. For reasons hereinafter set out, we hold for the respondent on this issue.

In respect of the post-June 24th billings, the respondent admits owing $268.-05 of the claimed $3,365.01, but denies liability for the $3,096.96 balance, upon the grounds that the work was not only unauthorized but that he gave express instructions that no further work was to be done on the yacht. On this issue we hold against the respondent and for the libelant.

The facts preceding the June 24th transactions are uncontroverted. The [189]*189respondent, Roger McCormick, was a resident of Chicago, Illinois, engaged in the insurance business as the President of Universal Mutual Casualty Company.

Sometime in 1947 he purchased the then 17 year old Yacht Nautilus for the sum of $35,000. For several years preceding 1952 he had engaged Captain Clell Baker as the Master thereof, and had been well pleased by his services. In October, 1952, Captain Baker brought the yacht to the libelant’s yards for the winter layup and repairs.

Only one invoice was sent to McCormick during the remaining period of 1952 for services and materials rendered upon Captain Baker’s authorization, and that was under date of October 31, in the sum of $407.80. However, somewhere around the first of the year 1953, the Captain ordered, among other things, the installation of an expensive teakwood deck. As a consequence, on January 31, 1953, McCormick was billed in the sum of $2,072.95; on February 28, 1953, in the additional sum of $3,507.19; and on March 31, a further sum of $1,602.89. Respondent neither paid nor acknowledged receipt of these invoices which by April totalled $7,590.83. That he received them in due course appears from a letter of his secretary advising that Mr. McCormick had left for Europe in April and would not return until the latter part of May, and assuring the libel-ant that Mr. McCormick had not overlooked the invoices. Furthermore, McCormick himself admits that he was aware of the amount of the charges up to March 31st, and that he had observed to Captain Baker, whom he saw with some frequency, on the fact that the repairs were more extensive than he had expected. Despite his concern with the already substantial expenditures he failed to place any limitations on the authority of the Captain. He excused his failure to so do on the grounds that he was extremely busy with other affairs and was getting off to a trip to Europe. During his absence on the European trip he was billed for $3,794.21 for the period ending April 30th, and for $3,474.81 as of May 31st. When he returned to Chicago around the middle of June, he was therefore confronted with billings total-ling $14,859.85.

Approximately ten days later, and on the 24th of June, 1953, he made a trip to Sturgeon Bay to the shipyards of libelant in the company of a friend who was in the marine insurance business. The conference which resulted from the Sturgeon Bay trip involves the controverted element of this case. The respondent recites that upon arriving at the shipyard, he immediately went to his yacht and spent a couple of hours inspecting it. He conceded he found the work done completely satisfactory; in fact he admits that the yacht was in far superior condition to what it had ever been before. His concern and his complaint, however, was that he felt that too much had already been expended considering the value of the hull. After the inspection, he went to the libelant’s shipyard office where he had a conference with Mr. Floyd B. Knuth, its assistant secretary and comptroller, and Mr. Lloyd Spude, its yard superintendent.

It is the respondent’s contention that that conference had two results: (1) That a final and unconditional settlement of the shipyard’s charges to date of June 24, 1953, was made at the price of $15,800, and (2) That the shipyard officers were instructed to do no further work on the vessel, excepting only in express and minor respects, not here in issue.

That there was a final settlement of all the pre-June 24th claims of the libelant for the sum of $15,800, is overwhelmingly established by the evidence. On June 24th the billings from the period of June 1st to June 24th were not available. In negotiating a settlement to date, it appears that the libelant’s officers stated that they estimated that the amount due was somewhere between $16,000 and $17,-000. They agreed to take $15,800 in satisfaction of all claims to date. The respondent agreed, and thereupon wrote out his check for $15,000. He told them that the remaining $800 would be forth[190]*190■coming after he had an opportunity to look over the billings for the period of June 1st to June 24th to learn what actually had been done.

Six months later, by letter of January ■6, 1954, libelant for the first time suggested that the settlement agreement of June 24th was conditioned upon the payment of the balance of $800 as soon as -respondent returned to Chicago, that the condition was breached, and that the libelant would assert its right to declare due and payable the unpaid balance of the billings to June 24th, which had since been computed as being $18,098.34, unless the respondent’s check were received by the 15th of January. Libelant returned respondent’s check for $800 because it bore the notation “Paid in Full”, but advised him that it would extend the time to February 5th, to consummate the ■settlement agreement.

We are entirely satisfied that a final .and unconditional agreement was made •on June 24th settling all of libelant’s claim through that date for the sum of $15,800. Neither of libelant’s officers were able to testify that they had stated that the balance of $800 had to be paid by any specific date, or the libelant would ■ declare the entire amount due.

The relative insubstantiality of the amount withheld, being a token 5%, would argue against the need or justice •of imposing a condition, the more so in view of the fact that it still had possession of the yacht.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F. Supp. 187, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturgeon-bay-shipbuilding-dry-dock-co-v-the-yacht-nautilus-wied-1958.