The Boskenna Bay

22 F. 662, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 192
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 12, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 F. 662 (The Boskenna Bay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Boskenna Bay, 22 F. 662, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 192 (S.D.N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Bhown, J.

The libel in this case was hied to recover $1,688 damages to 2,288 boxes of oranges and lemons, through their alleged improper discharge from the steam-ship Boskenna Bay, on the twenty-first of March, 1883, in frosty weather.

1. The fruit in question was part of a cargo of about 22,000 boxes of oranges, lemons, etc., brought by the Boskenna Bay to New York from the Mediterranean. She arrived in this city about the eighteenth of March, 1883. On Monday, the 19th, she obtained a berth at pier 44, North river. Oranges and lemons are perishable cargo. Lemons will not bear, without injury, exposure to a temperature below freezing; oranges, not more than two or three degrees below thjat. The established usage requires a vessel arriving in cold weather to wait for weather mild enough to admit of a discharge and removal of ilie fruit from the wharf without injury from frost. The usual practice is to leave this matter largely to the head stevedore, who has the care of discharging the cargo. He usually obtains information from tiie weather bureau as to the probabilities of the weather for the next 24 hours, and acts partly upon the information thus obtained. The great bulk of oranges and lemons imported hero is sold to jobbers at public auction. The business is managed by a single firm of auctioneers, whose sales are at their down-town office at 12 o’clock noon. The practice is for the fruit, or so much of it as will be sufficient samples, to he put upon the wharf in the forenoon. Buyers examine it there during the forenoon preceding the sale at auciion, and buy at their own risk. Bach purchaser thereafter removes what he has purchased from the wharf on the same day. By this means the discharge and removal of such fruit are ordinarily accomplished without injury in weather that is mild enough in the day-time, but which would be destructive to the fruit if it were allowed to remain upon the wharf over night. On Monday and Tuesday, the nineteenth and twentieth of March, the weather was too cold to admit of discharging; and, though the vessel was otherwise ready, the unloading was accordingly deferred. The stevedore in charge testified that on Tuesday afternoon the information received by messenger from the weather bureau at the Equitable building was favorable, and he accordingly directed the discharge to commence the next morning. On Wednesday, the 21st, the discharge was begun some time before 11 o’clock, and continued until 5. Bier 44 wras covered by a shed closed upon the southern side, but with doors upon the northern side, through which the fruit was put upon the pier beneath the shed. 'The sale of the cargo at auction was publicly advertised for the 22d, at 12 o’clock. On the morning and during the forenoon of that day the libelant and other persons went to the pier to examine the fruit discharged, when the boxes in question were found injured by frost. One of the reasons assigned for unloading the fruit the day before the sale, was that the cargo wras so large that it could not possibly be all discharged during the forenoon of the day of the sale. The evidence is conflict[664]*664ing upon the question whether any boxes were discharged from the ship on Thursday forenoon. There is no doubt, however, that all the libelant’s boxes were discharged on Wednesday, and remained on the pier during the night. The stevedore testified that it came on cold during Wednesday night, and was cold in the forenoon of Thursday, and that none was discharged at that time.

The testimony shows that on Wednesday, the 21st, the temperature was as follows: At 7 a.m., 22 deg.; at 11, 30 deg.; at 3 p. m., 38 deg.; at 7, 29 deg.; at 11 p. m., 24 deg.; on Thursday, the 22d, at 7 a. m., 19 deg.; at 11, 33.5 deg.; at 3 p. m., 33 deg.; evening, lowest, 18 deg. From this proof of the temperature it'is obvious that the weather was not fit for the discharge of -fruit before 11 a.,m. of the 21st. The report received from the weather bureau was not introduced in evidence; the messenger who brought it was not identified, nor the terms of his report; the stevedore could only testify that it was favorable, promising milder weather. The report, however, only professes to be that of Tuesday afternoon, nearly 24 hours before the weather was suitable to commence discharge on the following day. No inquiry appears to have been made during the cool weather of Wednesday forenoon as to the further probabilities. The published reports on the morning of that day refer to the probable temperature as “stationary or rising.” The claimants offered no evidence of the official announcement of the probable weather for the next 24 hours; and in the absence of any such testimony, and of proof of the specific report made in answer to the stevedore’s inquiries, they are entitled to no inferences more favorable than those warranted by the published reports, or by the actual state of the weather in the forenoon of the 21st. These evidently furnished no warrant for a discharge of the fruit on that day; for not only was there no provision for its removal from the wharf before the frosty weather that was to be expected during the night, but it was in fact contemplated that the fruit should remain there overnight. No notice was given to the libelants that the fruit was to be discharged on t.hat day; they had no knowledge or notice that it was designed to discharge it then, or that it was discharged, until the following morning, after it had been injured. Under the usage proved, and in the ordinary course of business, the libelants had no reason to suppose that the fruit would be discharged until the morning of Thursday, the 22d, for which day the sale was advertised; and having received no express notice of its discharge on Wednesday, they are not chargeable with any laches,, therefore, for not removing it on Wednesday. The case of Liverpool, etc., v. Suitter, 17 Fed. Rep. 605, is therefore inapplicable. The notice of discharge published in the Journal of Commerce on March 21st was not seen by the libelants, and was not legal notice to them.

2. The bill of lading provides that “simultaneously with the ship’s being ready to unload, * * * the consignee is hereby bound to be ready to receive the same from the ship’s side.” The respondents [665]*665claim that this clause exempts them from liability. The effect of a similar clause is considered and commented on by Benedict, J., in tiie case of The Aline, 19 Fed. Rep. 875. He there says, (p. 876:)

“This provision cannot; relieve the steamer, for she was not 1 ready lo discharge,’ within the meaning- of this provision, when it was impossible for her to discharge without destroying the cargo. Ready to discharge means ready to make' a proper discharge. And a discharge of oranges when the weather is so cold as to freeze them before they can be removed from the wliiuT is not a proper discharge.”

The construction of such stipulations must be reasonable, and according to the presumed intention of the parties. It is not to be imagined that such a clause could authorize a ship reaching her berth at night to discharge her cargo at once on the wharf, in rain, snow, or frost, without notice to the consignee, or opportunity to him to save the cargo from destruction; and if the stipulation does not authorize this, then it is, by implication of law, subject to the condition that reasonable notice of intended discharge be given, or that any existing usage serving in lieu of such a notice must be observed by the ship; and any stipulation to the contrary of this would, 1 think, be void as against public policy, upon the same grounds as stipulations against negligence.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. 662, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-boskenna-bay-nysd-1884.