The Enrique

7 F. 490, 5 Hughes 275, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 12, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 7 F. 490 (The Enrique) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Enrique, 7 F. 490, 5 Hughes 275, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100 (D. Md. 1881).

Opinion

Morris, D. J.

The libellant seeks to recover the value of 126 head of beef eattie shipped by him on board the Spanish steamer Enrique, 2,300 tons, at Baltimore, to be carried to Liverpool, and which were cast overboard on the voyage. By a contract dated December 2,1880, the agent of the steamer agreed with the libellant, a large cattle dealer of Chicago, to let to him the deck freight room of the steamer for about 100 cattle on deck, the freight to be 60 shillings per head, payable in cash before sailing, and whether delivered or not delivered at Liverpool. The contract provided that the space for each beast should be not less than eight feet by two feet six inches, and that the stalls should be constructed at the ship’s expense, to the satisfaction of the shipper and of the underwriters’ inspector. It further provided with particularity for furnishing by the ship of water for the cattle, gangways for loading and unloading, space under deck for forage, free passage out and back for drovers, for six days’ notice to shipper of steamer’s readiness to receive the animals, and of the exact number the ship would take, and that the steamer [492]*492should pay any additional cost of keeping the animals if the steamer did not sail at the expiration of the notice.

One hundred and twenty-six head of cattle, many of them weighing over 1,700 pounds, were duly put on board, under the superintendence of an agent of the libellant, on the eighteenth of December, 1880, filling up all the available deck room of the steamer, both forward and aft. The freight was paid in advance, and thereupon four bills of lading, all' of the same tenor and effect, were delivered to and indorsed “accepted” by the libellant’s agent. These bills of lading, among other things, stipulated that the cattle were to be carried on the upper deck, and that the steam-ship owners should not be responsible for any loss that might arise through the cattle being washed overboard or jettisoned. They also stated that the acceptance thereof was a recognition of the bill of lading as the contract binding both carrier and shipper. They contained in substance the same stipulation as to the contract for the care and feeding and watering of the cattle, and the usual exceptions against fire and the perils of the sea, and for liberty to tow and assist vessels, etc. The steamer sailed with a general cargo, principally cotton, grain, and provisions, and about 10 hours after leaving the capes of the Chesapeake encountered very rough and tempestuous weather, which lasted from the night of the 20th until some time in the night of the 24th, and in the gale that prevailed during that time the steamer shipped heavy seas, which broke down many of the stalls, carried away a portion of the rail, and did some other damage to the ship. In consequence of the violence of the storm some of the cattle were washed overboard. Some were drowned on deck, and some were badly crippled and ■injured. Almost from the commencement of the storm it was impossible to feed or water the cattle, and the rolling of the ship prevented those which were not injured from standing. On the 21st five were found dead, and thrown overboard. On the 22d, the storm not abating, the ship -was hove to, and all the cattle aft of the foremast were cast over; •and on the 24th, the storm still continuing, some 20 or 30 '.beasts remaining in the forward part of the deck, and which [493]*493had been in some measure protected by the forecastle deck, wore cast over. When the storm abated, on the night of the 24th, none of the cattle were left on board.

The libellant claims that the cattle were thrown overboard, not because they were dead or dying, and therefore unfit for further transportation, as is alleged by the respondent, but because it was necessary to jettison them to save the vessel and the rest of her cargo from impending danger. The libellant further claims that the acceptance of the bill of lading by his agent, who was appointed simply to attend to putting the cattle on board, was without authority and not binding upon him, and that the live-freight contract, and not the bill of lading, is to determine his rights; and further, that in any event the exception in the bill of lading for loss from the cattle being jettisoned is void as against public policy.

Counsel for libellant have strenuously contended that the paper called a “live-stock freight contract” is to be treated as a charter-party for the use of the deck of the steamer, and that being a charter-party the rights of the parties to it are not to be affected by the terms of the bill of lading. To this I cannot agree. The cattle were to be brought from Chicago to Baltimore for shipment, and as keeping them there would be attended with expense, the shipper required to know before they left Chicago that the steamer would be ready to take them, the number she would take, the amount of freight, and the arrangements for their care and subsistence. These matters are very carefully sot out in the contract, but it contains noire of the exceptions for the protection of the shipowner usually to be found' in charter-parties and bills of lading; and I cannot think it was intended to supersede the usual bill of lading. If it did, the ship-owner would, in effect, have become insurers of the. safe delivery of the cattle, a result never contemplated by either party. The stipulations of the bill of lading do not contradict the contract, but are supplementary to it. It is shown that the libellant had made several shipments of cattle from Baltimore to Liverpool by steamers of this same line after making similar contracts with the same agents, and that in every instance precisely [494]*494'Similar bills of lading, in sets of four, were given and aer éepted. The libellant’s agent testified thqf of these four he had always sent one to the libellant at Chicago, one to the rngent of'the underwriters of the cattle, one to the consignees at Liverpool, and had given the other to the foreman of the drovers on board.

' The case does not, as it seems to me, come within the principle of any of the cases cited, in which it has been held 'that, as between ship-owner and charterer, the charter-party ' should override the bill of lading in case of conflict between . them. If, then, the bill of lading is to be treated as the evidence of the final contract between the parties in those particulars in which it is not found to contradict the previous • contract, we are to consider whether its effect is to release the ship-owner from contribution for the cattle if thrown 'overboard to save the ship; and, if that is its meaning, is it ' such a limitation of the carrier’s liability as the court should Uphold ? It is true that the defence made by the answer rests mainly upon the allegations that the cattle were cast overboard, not because they endangered the ship, but because 'they were either.already dead or so nearly so as to be beyond hope of recovery. But this issue presents a question of fact -naturally'difficult to determine from the evidence. Unques- ' tionably numbers of the cattle are shown to have been dead, ■ or dying, when thrown .over. All were greatly exhausted from want of food and drink, from the violence of the blows they ■ received from the broken timbers of the pens and from each ■ other, and from being thrown about by.the pitching and roll- ■ -ing of the vessel, and from being drenched with salt water. -. Whether any, and if so, how many, it would have been possible, when the storm abated, to have resuscitated and deliv- . ered in Liverpool in merchantable condition, it would be . difficult to determine.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. 490, 5 Hughes 275, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-enrique-mdd-1881.