The Edwin v. Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.

8 F. Cas. 361, 1 Cliff. 322
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
DocketCase No. 4,301
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 361 (The Edwin v. Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Edwin v. Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co., 8 F. Cas. 361, 1 Cliff. 322 (circtdma 1859).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

It is insisted by the libellant that the liability of the vessel is commensurate with that of the owners, and that the extent of it in regard to both must be ascertained and measured by the terms of the contract made by the master. On the part of the respondent, it is insisted, that the ship is not bound to the merchandise, or the merchandise to the ship, until it is actually placed on board, and that the liability, both of the ship and the owners, notwith•standing the terms of the contract, must be narrowed to the service actually performed by the vessel. It must be admitted that the question is not free of difficulty, and perhaps is involved in some doubt. Much must depend in its solution upon the view taken of the authority of the master, and the real nature and character of the service performed. Something also will depend upon the circumstances attending the making of the contract, and the situation and acts of the parties at the time it was made, and when the loss occurred, as furnishing the key to unlock and unfold its real- intent and meaning. Seafaring men are known to be well acquainted with the port of Mobile, and the usual and ordinary course of business in lading vessels in that harbor. Small vessels go up to the wharves to take in cargo; but large vessels cannot approach the wharves at all, on account of the shoalness of the water over the bar, but anchor below and have their cargoes brought down in lighters. Vessels of an intermediate size generally go up to the wharves, and take in what cargo they can safely carry over the bar, and return to the anchorage below, either by their own means of sailing or by means of tugs employed for that purpose, and have the residue of their cargoes brought down, as in the case of large vessels. Large quantities of cotton are annually exported from that port, and the masters and owners of vessels engaged in the trade are as well acquainted with the navigation and the course of business as at the larger commercial ports. Owners send freighting vessels to that port in ballast or otherwise, seeking employment for their vessels, and trust very largely to the discretion of the master to stipulate upon the terms and. conditions for transporting the cotton to other domestic ports, or to the foreign market.. Northern vessels are largely engaged in that trade, and find thíir employment to a considerable extent from the agents of the manufacturer of the raw material, or from the northern merchant who has become the purchaser of the same, for the supply of the manufacturing establishments in the northeastern states. Shipments are made through agents or brokers residing in the port of lading, who contract with the master of the vessel for the transportation of the cotton, and deliver the same to him in pursuance of the contract of shipment When the contract is for the transportation of cotton in vessels requiring the cargo to be lightered, in whole or in part, the master employs the lighter in behalf of the vessel, and pays for such partial conveyance on account of the owners. Transportation coastwise to the northern ports may be safely made in vessels of either of the classes before mentioned, so that the shipper or his agent has no motive or interest to inquire whether the cargo is to be light-ered or taken on board at the wharves. Ho contracts as in this ease that the cotton shall be .transported for a given freight from the [363]*363wharf or the cotton-press, as the case may be, to the place of destination. Different vessels of the same tonnage .require a greater or less depth of water, according to their construction, and accordingly vessels of an intermediate size may or may not require the assistance of lighters, as they are well or ill constructed for that peculiar navigation. Whether they can or can not go up to the wharves and take in their whole cargo is well known to the master of the vessel, but may not be known to the shipper or his agent Shippers are governed, in making such contracts, by the price to be paid for the transportation, and are only indirectly interested in the cost of light-erage, so far as it affects the price of freight On the other hand, the master, as the agent of the owners, has the means of knowing the state of navigation, the construction of his vessel, and the cost of performing the service, and is bound to determine whether he can afford to accept the proffered terms for the transportation of the goods. Masters are the agents of the owners, and as such have an implied authority to bind them, even without their knowledge, by contracts relative to the usual employment of the ship. “Owners,” says a learned commentator, “rarely navigate their own ship, but almost always intrust its conduct and management to the master. They hold him forth to the world as authorized to contract, and by reason of their employment of the ship, and the profit derived by them from that employment, they are bound to the performance of every lawful contract made by him relative to the usual employment of the vessel.” Abb. Shipp. (Ed. 1846) 156; 3 Kent, Comm. (9th Ed.) 220; Chit. Carr. (Ed. 1857) 225; The New World, 16 How. [57 U. S.] 473; Smith, Merc. Law, 559; Grant v. Norway, 10 C. B. 688. Possession of the cotton in this ease was to be taken by the master at the cotton-press. His contract was to carry a specified number of bales, and to transport the whole parcel from one given place to another. In the strictest sense, therefore, it was by its terms an entire contract for the conveyance of a given quantity of goods. Sayward v. Stevens, 3 Gray, 97. Five sixths of the specified quantity had been taken from the cotton-press by the master, and was already on board the vessel. He employed the lighter in behalf of the vessel to bring down the remainder, and had agreed to pay for the service on account of the bark. Beyond question, it was a marine service which the lighter had engaged to perform, and she was in the employment of the master for the benefit of the vessel, and, in contemplation of law, was the agent of the owners in the performance of the service. Nothing can be more certain than that the service performed by the lighter was a marine service. She was required by the engagement to transport the cotton over navigable waters within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the United States. Whether- the water above the bar is more or less affected by the ebb and flow of the tide, it is nevertheless salt water, and is as much within the admiralty jurisdiction as the gulf itself, or the open sea. Her employment in no sense whatever emanated from the shipper. By the terms of the contract between the master and the shipper, the former as much agreed to transport the cotton over the twenty or thirty miles of navigable water, lying between the wharf and the anchorage of the vessel below the bar, as over any other part of the route from there to the port of destination. Whatever, therefore, the lighter did, in forwarding the cotton on the route, was a part-performance of the contract made by the master with the shipper, for which the owners were to receive compensation in the freight earned by the vessel. Freight could not be earned by the vessel, unless the cotton was first transported over this part of the route embraced in the contract As the vessel'could not perform the service, some other agency was absolutely indispensable to enable the vessel to earn freight, and by the usage of the port it was entirely competent for the master to employ a lighter.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 361, 1 Cliff. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-edwin-v-naumkeag-steam-cotton-co-circtdma-1859.