Talge Mahogany Co. v. Nicklas

277 F. 674, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2818
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 3, 1922
DocketNo. 3660
StatusPublished

This text of 277 F. 674 (Talge Mahogany Co. v. Nicklas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talge Mahogany Co. v. Nicklas, 277 F. 674, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2818 (5th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

WARNER, Circuit Judge.

On February 19, 1919, tlie appellee, Charles Nicklas, master and agent of the American schooner Rosemary, filed a libel against the appellant, Talge Mahogany Company, and 324 mahogany logs, claiming 814,080 for dead freight on 320 tons at the rate stated in the charter of t.he vessel, $44 per ton, the amount of two days’ demurrage, and the amount of an insurance premium paid on freight by the libelant. That libel was amended, as hereinafter stated. On February 21, 1919, tlie appellant, Talge Mahogany Company, filed its libel against the Rosemary, claiming damages which were attributed to the failure of the vessel to arrive at the port of loading selected by the appellant until several months aft.er the dale indicated in a telegram, sent by J. W. Somerville to the ap[676]*676pellant prior to the making of the charter party, which contained the statement, “Vessel should make about June nineteen eighteen loading.”

Pursuant to an agreement of the parties, the two cases were consolidated, after the libeled logs had been released with the consent of the appellee. The court rendered a decree dismissing the appellant’s libel, disallowing the appellee’s claims for demurrage and insurance premium on freight, and awarding the appellee $22,478.95, that sum being the amount of dead freight on 487 tons of mahogany logs at $44 per ton, less the ascertained cost of loading and unloading that amount of mahogany logs, with interest from the date of the completion of the discharge at Gulfport of the Rosemary’s cargo. The appellant complains of the dismissal of its libel, and of the amount awarded against it on the appellee’s libel, claiming that the award of that amount was not warranted by the pleadings or the evidence.

By the charter party, which was made at Gulfport, Miss., and was dated December 4, 1917, the owner of the Rosemary agreed “on the freighting and chartering of the whole of said vessel (with the exception of the cabin, and necessary room for the crew and storage of provisions,. sails, and cables), or sufficient room for the cargo hereinafter mentioned, unto” the appellant “for a voyage from the port of Secondee or Axim, Africa, to Mobile or Gulfport, one port only for loading and chartering, at charterer’s option. Orders for loading port to be given when asked for by owners or master.” The instrument referred to the Rosemary as “now Mobile, due here Saturday 8th to load for Durban, South Africa,” and contained the provision that the charterer “doth engage to provide and furnish said vessel a 'full and complete cargo of mahogany logs under and on deck, no log to weigh over three (3) tons.”

The making of the charter party was the result of telegraphic negotiations between J. W. Somerville, a shipbroker at Gulfport, and the appellant, whose place of business is Indianapolis. The beginning of that' correspondence was a telegram from Somerville to the appellant, dated November 23, 1917, and stating:

“Understand you are in the market for tonnage west coast Africa to Gulf with mahogany can probably close with prompt advice new schooner Rosemary capacity about fifteen hundred to sixteen hundred tons dead weight now about to load for South Africa. Wire if interested.”

Appellant replied by a telegram of the same date, stating:

“Will consider firm offer Secondee or Axim to Gulfport. State approximate arrival date.”

Somerville replied by a telegram of the same date containing the following:

“Vessel should make about June- nineteen eighteen loading.”

[1] The charter party contained no express provision on the subject of the time when the vessel was to be at-the one of the two mentioned loading ports to be chosen by the charterer. The owner of the Rosemary was not, prior to the making of the charter party, informed of the above-mentioned telegrams. Somerville was without authority to [677]*677bind the shipowner by a statement' as to the time when the vessel should be at the proposed place of loading. The charter party was the sole evidence of* the obligations incurred by the owner of the Rosemary. The Addison E. Bullard, 258 Fed. 180, 169 C. C. A. 248.

[2] The terms of the charter party show that it was contemplated by the‘parties that the vessel, which was chartered to carry a cargo of mahogany logs from Secondee or Axim, Africa, to Mobile or Gulfport, was, before entering upon that service, to carry a cargo from Gulfport to Durban, Africa. As the charter party fixed no definite time for the vessel to he at Secondee or Axim ready to receive the cargo, the shipowner’s obligation in that regard was complied with if there was no delay which was unreasonable under the circumstances. Culliford v. Gomila, 128 U. S. 135, 9 Sup. Ct. 50, 32 L. Ed. 381; Lovell v. Davis, 101 U. S. 541, 25 L. Ed. 944.

[3] There was no evidence furnishing any support for a claim that there was any lack of diligence in making the voyage to Durban, which is on the east coast of Africa. The vessel arrived at Durban on June 2, 1918, and finished discharging its cargo about June 18th. The claim is made that there was unreasonable delay as a result of the use made of the vessel after it reached Durban, in that it went to Delagoa Bay, 270 miles north of Durban, for a cargo of coal, which it carried to Eobita, there took on another cargo, which it carried to St. Thome, and went from St. Thome to Secondee; Eobita and St. Thome being places on the west coast of Africa in the route the vessel would have taken in a voyage from Durban to Secondee or Axim. The evidence adduced was such as to support findings to the following effect:

The Rosemary, a sailing vessel, had to have ballast or a cargo to make the voyage from Durban around the Cape of Good Hope to the west coast of Africa. Under the circumstances which existed, it did not lose time by going to Delagoa Bay, there getting a cargo of coal and going loaded to Eobita, and there taking on a cargo to be carried to St. Thome. The vessel could not get a cargo at Durban for a point between that place pnd Secondee or Axim, which are on the west coast of Africa, about 42 miles apart. It would have taken it a longer time to get sufficient ballast delivered and loaded at Durban than was consumed in going to Delagoa Bay, taking oil the cargo of coal, and getting hack to a point off the coast opposite Durban. By going loaded with cargo, instead of going light with ballast, in a voyage around the Cape, such as the Rosemary made, a sailing vessel can make the voyage in much less time, as it can keep close to shore when loaded with cargo, and by doing so is enabled to take advantage of favorable currents and winds and to save more than 1,000 miles in distance. It is customary for vessels going around the Cape from the east to the west coast of Africa to go with cargo, instead of in ballast. It is safer to follow that custom, and by doing so the vessel makes better time.

Though the appellant was informed several times of the movements of the Rosemary after it left Delagoa Bay, and on August 8 and September 6, 1918, was asked for instructions as to the place, Secón[678]*678dee or Axim, at which the vessel was to be loaded, it gave no such instructions until September 8th, the day the vessel left Dobita for St. Thome.

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Related

Lovell v. Davis
101 U.S. 541 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Culliford v. Gomila
128 U.S. 135 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Culliford v. Gomila
128 U.S. 135 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Allen v. Turner
258 F. 180 (Fifth Circuit, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
277 F. 674, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2818, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talge-mahogany-co-v-nicklas-ca5-1922.