The Cardiganshire

9 F.2d 416, 1926 A.M.C. 352, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 16, 1925
DocketNo. 1451
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 416 (The Cardiganshire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Cardiganshire, 9 F.2d 416, 1926 A.M.C. 352, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347 (S.D. Cal. 1925).

Opinion

JAMES, District Judge.

In June, 1923, there was shipped at the port of London, England, by Balfour, Williamson & Co., aboard the Cardiganshire, 47,800 bags of cement, consigned to Balfour, Guthrie & Co., at Portland, Or., with consignee’s option to take delivery at Astoria or Longview. While [417]*417the cargo was in transit, the consignee sold the cement to libelant herein. With the consent of the ship, libelant diverted the cement to the port of Los Angeles. From the same port of origin there had been shipped in the Cardiganshire by a different consignor another lot of cement, amounting to approximately 59,985 sacks, which was consigned to Geo. L. Eastman Company at the port of Los Angeles. At the time of the arrival of the ship, libelant, being resident at Portland, sent its representative from that city to Los Angeles. This representative made a sale of the cement to several purchasers, who were to take delivery at the dock.

The ship’s agent at the port of Los Angeles employed stevedores to discharge the cement, both that consigned to libelant and that consigned to the Geo. L. Eastman Company. The cement intended for Eastman was known as the “Hand” brand, while that intended for libelant was “Pyramid” brand. Libelant contracted with its purchasers to deliver “Pyramid” brand. It appeared by the evidence that the “Hand” brand cement was inferior to the “Pyramid.” Handlers engaged in unloading the cargo mixed the two brands. Throe of libelant’s purchasers complained when they found that “Hand” brand was mixed with “Pyramid.” The “Hand” brand, mixed in the deliveries made to libelant’s customers, amounted to 13,564 sacks; in addition to this there was an admitted short delivery at the dock of 53 sacks, mailing a total of 13,617 sacks, or 1,762.25 barrels, for the value of which libelant is suing.

Libelant’s representative, who went to the port to arrange for the sale and delivery of the cement, testified that upon the arrival of the Cardiganshire he visited the ship and talked with the chief officer, stating: “I told Mm I had so much K., B. & S. Pyramid brand cement on board. * * I told Mm that I had so many barrels of cement on the ship, and I also told him to be careful; that all I wished was my own cement; that I understood there was another brand of cement in the ship’s hold, and I did not want to get them mixed.” He stated, further, that the chief officer said that he would “look after it very carefully and follow the general procedure.”

The witness Thomson, representative in Los Angeles of Balfour, Guthrie & Co., libelant’s vendor, assisted in communicating libelant’s wishes -as to the discharge of the cement cargo. He testified that, before the cement was discharged by the ship, he called the office of the ship’s agent on the telephone and talked with a man connected therewith. This witness testified that in that conversation he advised the agent’s office that he had heard that there was some “Hand” brand cement on the vessel, and that Ms brand was the “Pyramid” brand; that he wanted the ship’s agent to be “very careful with regard to the discharge of the Pyramid, and see that the two brands were not in any way mixed up.”

The bags containing the “Pyramid” brand cement bore the stenciled mark in large letters, covering two-thirds of the height of the bag: “B., G. & Co. Portland, O. 94 lbs. net. Made in England.” The “Hand” brand cement was plainly stenciled. At the top there was a large “A” within a diamond, and below appeared the lettering: “Los An- , geles, 94 lbs. net. Made in England.” There was testimony indicating that tin tags were tied into the wire that bound the top of the bags. To illustrate the kind, two tags were filed under stipulation of counsel, to supplement the testimony of witness Maeleay, libelant’s agent. The tags presented are quite different in their appearance. Each bears the name of the manufacturer and, in the center of the tag, on one is the figure of a pyramid, and on the other the figure of an open hand. The stevedore foreman, who was immediately in charge of the unloading of the cement, testified that he had received no instructions to keep brands of cement separate, and that the stevedores did not make any separation as between brands.

The firm acting as ship’s agent accepted instructions from the libelant’s representative to have the cement loaded on ears at the dock and billed to several purchasers by the names and at places designated. A portion of the lot of cement which remained after the sales orders had been filled was, under these instructions, piled on the dock. The ship’s tackle landed the cement on trucks alongside the cars, and it was wheeled into the cars on the plasterboard carriers on which it was lifted from the hold. The stevedores performed all of the work of discharging the cement and. loading it into the cars, although the agent firm furnished evidence to show that it made a charge on its own account against the consignee for the work of loading the cars, and a corresponding deduction' from the stevedore charge against the ship. This feature of the evidence is noticed because of the claim made by respondent that, if the cement was mixed in the cars, it was not the fault of the ship, but the separate fault of those engaged in performing the additional service of load[418]*418ing after the ship had completed its duty of discharging the cement at the delivery tackle; and the added point that the mixed condition, of the lot of necessity was discoverable and discovered at the moment of loading on the ears, and that this condition would prevent any claim being prosecuted for damages beyond the precise period of limitation fixed in the bill, of lading. That matter will be again referred to.

A checker of the railway company called the attention of an assistant of the ship’s agent to the fact- that there were different brands of cement being brought out, but the agent responded: “What the- is the difference? This is all cement, isn’t it?” The fact was, as was clearly established, that the cement, whether mixed in the hold of the ship or not, was brought out on the plasterboard carriers in a mixed condition, and was so delivered by the ship to the cars as the cement belonging to libelant. Libelant’s agent, having made sale of the cement, and having made arrangement for its shipment by the agent firm, had returned to Portland before the cement was discharged, and was not advised that any mixing of brands had occurred until he received word to that effect from purchasers to. whom cement had come. He then returned to Los Angeles and endeavored to'adjust the matter-with the agent firm.

It can hardly be; said to admit of question that the respective consignors at the port of London shipped distinct and unmixed lots of “Pyramid” and “Hand” cement. On the bill of lading issued at the London office of the ship, the consignment purchased by libelant is described as “47,800 bags Pyramid brand cement.” In the left-hand column, under the heading “Declared Marks and Numbers,”- there appeared the words and letters: “C. P. C. Co. Portland, O. 94 lbs. net. Made in England.” No such lettering appeared in either stenciling on the bags of either lot of cement, but it does appear on the tags submitted that the manufacturer of the “Hand” brand cement was (Jilingham Portland Cement Company, while the maker of the “Pyramid” brand was Knight, Bevan & Sturge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 416, 1926 A.M.C. 352, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cardiganshire-casd-1925.