The Alonzo

1 F. Cas. 552
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished

This text of 1 F. Cas. 552 (The Alonzo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Alonzo, 1 F. Cas. 552 (D. Me. 1869).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This is a libel instituted by the owner of the barque Alonzo of Halifax, to recover from the Montreal Ocean Steamship Co. the freight on 1,034 tons of coal, brought for said respondent from Pictou to Portland, in Oct. last, at the rate of three dollars per ton, and also for ten days’ illegal detention of the vessel at Portland, at the rate of fifty dollars per day. The answer admits the delivery of 955 tons of coal and the price per ton for the freight as set forth in the libel, but alleges that the quantity was to be estimated by the weight as shipped from the mines at Pictou, and that only 955 tons were so delivered, according to the mines’ weight, and that they paid for no greater quantity: The evidence, as to the agreement made at Pictou for the transportation of the cargo, is nearly all in depositions, and having carefully read the same, I do not find that any such agreement was made as is stated in the answer, and the owners are. not by any contract restricted to the quantity as estimated at the mines. The broker, who effected the' charter of the barque on the part of the respondent, states that at the time of the contract nothing was said about the mines’ weight. The general rule is, that the carrier is entitled to pay for the quantity received on board and delivered, and that rule must govern in the present case.

It does appear that the coal company at Pictou charged the steamship company for only 955 tons as put on board the Alonzo, but there is no positive testimony from any witness as to the exact quantity in fact shipped. No account is produced of the quantity delivered from day to day to the ship, nor has any one testified positively of his own knowledge of the quantity so put on board, but admitting that the agents of the coal company charged the respondents with only 955 tons, the manner, in which the quantity was arrived at, is not very certain and satisfactory. The agent of the coal company says, there were uo large scales for weighing coals at the mines, but that the government furnished the cars for transportation of the coal from the mines to Pic-tou over the government road, receiving a certain rate per ton for transportation, and also a royalty for the coal per ton. The cars were estimated to contain each five gross tons of coal, when loaded even with the top, and as a test of their capacity, the agent states that he once weighed out on a small scale five tons of coal at the mines, which just filled one of the cars level with the top; that the company is now building a scale for the purpose of weighing coal and other matters; that he saw a large number of the cars loaded with the coal, which was part of the. Alonzo’s cargo, and that the same were only filled even with the top of the car, and not heaped. There were sixty-one cars employed in transporting the coal from the mines to Pictou. The libellant states in his testimony, that he saw many of the cars so loaded, and that the same were heaped up with coal above the top of the ear. It appears that the price of'coal was only $2.25 per ton, and that one of the owners of the steamship company is a director in the coal company. Under these circumstances I do not apprehend the agents of the coal company would be very particular and exact in their loading of the cars. At best, this mode of ascertaining the quantity is a mere approximation, and should not be conclusive upon the libel-lant, but must be weighed in connection with the other evidence in the case, and it is in testimony, that before the barque left Pic-tou, this estimate was not satisfactory to the libellant, but was disputed by him, he claiming' that there was a larger quantity on board, and this claim was admitted to be correct by some of those acting there in behalf of the respondents. The vessel, when she left Pictou, drew IS 1-12 feet of water. On a previous voyage, as testified by the master, he had carried a cargo of this same coal to Boston, the vessel being in the same condition and then drawing only 17 9-12 feet. That cargo, he swears, was all weighed out in Boston, and the vessel delivered 1,050 tons, and there is no contradiction of this testimony.

The Alonzo arrived in Portland on the 25th of October, but did not commence discharging until the 4th of November. The customs officers took an account of the coal as it was delivered, weighing every day sixteen tubs'. The whole number of tubs according to the inspector’s returns was 7,389, of which 160 were weighed, giving an average of 31314 pounds per tub, making an aggregate of 1,034 [554]*554tons; and for this amount the libellant claims to recover the freight at $3.00 per ton.

It is claimed by the respondents that this mode of determining the quantity is alilce uncertain, and but a mere approximation to the truth. To a certain extent this is so, but after all, it is the mode the government has adopted for ascertaining its duties on articles such as coal, salt, &c. The whole of such cargoes are never weighed by the government officers, but from time to time, tubs full of these articles are weighed, and an average taken, a sufficient number being weighed to insure substantial accuracy. In the present case double the usual number of tubs was weighed. It is well understood, that by this course the importer at least is not defrauded. The customs weigher in this case states, that he always makes a liberal allowance to the importer, deducting from five to ten pounds from the actual weight per tub as indicated by the scale, on account of what may adhere to the tub. The government favors the importer, and does not receive the entire duty on any single pound. I believe no one in purchasing foreign coal would for a moment hesitate to take it at the government weight, rather than have it weighed over by a city weigher.

The minute book kept by the weigher of this and other cargoes of coal received that season by the respondent from Pictou is in evidence; and although the tubs vary in weight, as some tubs were in themselves heavier than others, yet, on the whole, there is not a greater difference than was to be expected, and on looking at the returns of various other cargoes of this coal in this book, I find that the average weight per tub of nine cargoes was 312 1-5 pounds, and of the present cargo was 313%, showing that the weight and account must have been extremely accurate. This mode of determining the quantity of such cargoes, having been thus adopted by the government without any complaint from importers, so far as appears, is to my mind much more satisfactory than that resorted to at Pictou, and when considered in connection with the amount of the other cargo weighed out at Boston, and also the offer proved to have been made by the libel-lant to the agents of the respondent, to have this cargo of coal all weighed by a city weigher, the respondent to pay the expense if the quantity overrun 955 tons, and the libellant if it fell short, which was declined by the respondent I can have no doubt that the quantity was in excess of that amount, and well-known to be so by the agent of the respondent. The burden of proof is on the libellant to establish the quantity, and upon a careful examination of all the evidence, I am satisfied that at least 1,034 tons of 2,240 lbs. were delivered to the respondent.

After the vessel was loaded at Pictou, the agents of the respondent proposed'bills of lading and presented them to the master for his signature, and he declined to sign them, for the reason that the quantity of coal on board was stated at 955 tons, the words “more or less,” which immediately followed in the printed form, being erased.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-alonzo-med-1869.