The Delaware

81 U.S. 579, 20 L. Ed. 779, 14 Wall. 579, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1025
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 29, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by139 cases

This text of 81 U.S. 579 (The Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Delaware, 81 U.S. 579, 20 L. Ed. 779, 14 Wall. 579, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1025 (1872).

Opinion

*596 Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ship-owners, as carriers of merchandise, contract for the safe custody, due transport and right delivery of the goods; and the shipper, consignee, or owner of the cargo contracts to pay the freight and charges; and by the maritime law, as expounded by the decisions of this court, the obligations of the ship-owner and the shipper are reciprocal, and it is equally well settled that the maritime law creates reciprocal liens for the enforcement of those obligations, unless the lien is waived by some express stipulation, or is displaced by some inconsistent and. irreconcilable prevision in the charter-party or bill of lading. * Shippers should in all cases require a bill of lading, which is to be signed by the master, whether the contract of affreightment is by charter-party or without any such customary written instrument. Where the goods of a consignment are not all sent on board at the same time, it is usual for the master, mate, or other person in charge of the deck, and acting for the carrier, to give a receipt ior the parcels as they are received, and when the whole consignment is delivered, the master, upon those receipts being given up, will sign two or three, or, if requested, even four bills of lading in the usual form, one being for the ship and the others for the shipper. More than one is required by the shipper, as he usually sends one by mail to the consignee or vendee, and if four are sigued he sends one to his agent or factor, and he should always retain one for his own use. Such an instrument acknowledges the bailment of the goods, and is evidence of á contract for the safe custody, due transport, and right delivery of the same, upon the terms, as to freight, therein described, the extent of the obligation being specified in the instrument. Where no exceptions are made in the bill of lading, and in the absence of any legislative provisions prescribing a different rule, the carrier is bound to keep and transport the goods safely, and to make right delivery of the same at the port of destination, *597 unless he can prove that the loss happenéd from the act of God or the public enemy, or by the act of the shipper or owner of the goods. Stipulations in the nature of exceptions may be made limiting the extent, of the obligation of the carrier, and in that event the bill of lading is evidence of the ordinary contract of affreightment, subject, of course, to the exceptions specified in the instrument; and in view of that fact the better description of the obligation of such a carrier is that, in the absence of any Congressional legislation upon the subject, he is in the nature of an insurer, and liable in all events and for every loss or damage, however occasioned, unless it happened by the act of God or the public enemy, or by some other cause or accident, without any fault or negligence on the part of the carrier, and expressly excepted in the bill of lading. *

Seventy-five tons of pig-iron were shipped by the libellants, on the eighth of May, 1868, on board the bark Delaware, then lying in the port of Portland, Oregop,'to be transported from that port to the port of San Francisco, for the freight of four dollars and fifty cents per ton, to be delivered to the shippers or their assigns at the port of destination, they paying freight as therein stipulated, before delivery if required, with five per cent, primage and average accustomed. Dangers of the seas, fire, and collision were Pxcepted in the bill of lading, and the statement at the close of the instrument was, “ vessel not accountable for breakage, ealcage, or rust.”

Process was served and the claimant appeared and filed ah answer, in -which he admits the shipment of the iron and the execution of the bill of lading exhibited in the record. Sufficient also appears in the record to show'.that the voyage was performed and that but a small portion of the iron shipped, to wit, some thirteen or fourteen thousand pounds, was ever delivered to the consignees, and that all the residue of the shipment was thrown overboard as a jettison *598 during the voyage, which became necessary by a peril of the sea, for the safety of the other associated interests and for the preservation of the lives of those on board. Sacrificed as all that portion of the shipment was as a jettison in consequence of a peril of the sea, excepted in-the bill of lading, the-claimant insists that the libellants have no claim against the ship, and that the libellants as 'the shippers of the iron must bear their own loss.

Evidence was exhibited by the claimant sufficient to show that the allegations of the answer that the iron, not delivered, was sacrificed during the voyage as a jettison in consequence of a peril of the sea are true, but the. libellants allege that the iron was improperly stowed upon the deck of the vessel, and that the necessity of sacrificing it as a jettison arose solely from that fact, and that no such necessity would have arisen if it had been properly stowed under deck, as it should have been by the terms- of the contract specified in the bill of lading. That the iron not delivered was stowed on deck is admitted, and it is also conceded that where goods are stowed in that way without the consent of'the shipper the carrier is -liable in all events if the goods- are not delivered, unless he-can show, that the goods were of that description, which, by the usage of the .particular trade, are properly stowed in that way, or that the delivery was prevented by the act of God or the public enemy, or .by some other cause or accident, without any fault or negligence on the part of the carrier and expressly excepted in the bill of lading. '

Goods, though lost by perils of the sea, if they weie stowed on deck without the consent of the shipper, are not regarded as goods lost by the act of God within the mean-' ing of the maritime law, nor are such losses regarded as losses by perils of the sea which will excuse the carrier -from delivering the goods shipped to the consignee unless it appears that the manner in which the goods were stowed is sanctioned by-commercial usage, or unless it affirmatively appears that the manner of. stowage did not, in any degree, contribute to the disaster; that the loss happened without *599 any fault or negligence on the part of the carrier, and that it could not have been prevented by human skill and prudence, even if the goods had been stowed under deck, as required by the general rules of the maritime law. *

Enough appears in the record to show that all the iron not delivered to tire consignees was stowed on deck, and there is no proof in the case to show that the usage of the trade sanctioned such a stowage in this case, or that the manner in which it was stowed did not contribute both to the disaster and to the loss of the goods.

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Bluebook (online)
81 U.S. 579, 20 L. Ed. 779, 14 Wall. 579, 1871 U.S. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-delaware-scotus-1872.