The Ferreri

9 F. 468, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 200
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedNovember 19, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. 468 (The Ferreri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Ferreri, 9 F. 468, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 200 (E.D.N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Benedict, D. J.

The facts in this case are as follows:

In September last one Theodore Michel agreed, through a broker, to purchase of the libellants 167 barrels of resin, the resin to be shipped on the bark Ferreri in the name of the libellants, they to take the ship’s receipt and deliver the same to Michel upon his paying for the goods. Accordingly, the libellants directed Johnson & Hammond, the keepers of a yard, where the libellants had resin stored, to deliver 167 barrels of resin to the bark Ferreri on their account. Johnson & Hammond sent the goods to the hark, where they were received by the mate, who gave in return a shipping receipt stating the receipt of the goods in question in good order from Johnson & Hammond on board the bark Ferreri for account of Tolar & Hart. After the goods had thus been placed on board the-bark, Michel, who was agent for the bark in this port, procured the master to issue to him, as shipper, a bill of lading for the goods so'delivered, and then absconded without paying the libellants for them, although payment had been demanded, accompanied by a tender of the shipping receipt. After the departure of Michel, Tolar & Hart demanded of the master that he issue to them a bill of lading for the goods in question, accompanying the same with a tender of the shipping receipt. The master refused, upon the ground that he had already issued a hill of lading for the goods to Michel, whereupon Tolar & Hart libelled the vessel. .

Upon these facts it is plain to be seen that Tolar & Hart had no intention to part with their goods until the same were paid for. This intention they carried into effect by causing the goods to be placed on board the vessel in their name, and by taking the shipping receipt for the goods as received by the vessel on their account. The delivery of such a receipt to Tolar & Hart bound the ship-master to execute or withhold the bill of lading according to their direction, and left the title to the property unchanged. Brown v. Peabody, 3 Kern. 121. When, therefore, after Michel had absconded, the master refused to issue a bill of lading for the goods to Tolar & Hart, assign[469]*469ing no other reason except that he had already given a bill of lading to Michel, he was guilty of converting the property. A formal demand for the return of the property would have been a vain act after the master had refused to give a bill of lading to the libellants, placing his refusal of the libellants’ demand for a bill of lading upon the ground that he had already given a bill of lading for the goods to Michel. Such a refusal was equivalent to saying: “I have determined to transport this resin to Marseilles, and there deliver it to the holder of the bill of lading already issued to Michel.” Such a refusal rendered a subsequent demand of the goods unnecessary.

Tolar & Hart, upon the master refusing under these circumstances to give them a bill' of lading, could waive any right depending upon, an implied contract on the part of the master to give them a bill of lading for their goods, then on board his vessel, and proceed for the tort. This right they can enforce in the admiralty. The goods were on board a vessel for the purpose of shipment. The locality was navigable water. The tort, therefore, was maritime in character, and within the jurisdiction of the admiralty. For such a tort the ship herself is bound. The goods were actually on board the vessel. The tortious act was that of the master of the vessel. In cases of affreightment the goods are bound to the vessel and the vessel to the goods. This vessel is, therefore, bound to these goods, and liable to the owners thereof for their loss, destruction, or conversion by the act or the neglect of the master of the ship.

I entertain no doubt, therefore, as to the right of the libellants to maintain an action in rem against this vessel to recover the value of the resin in question. The difficulty with the case, if any there be, arises out of the method of framing the libel. The averments of the libel are these:

That; the libellants sold the resin to Michel to he delivered to the bark for the sum of $553.96, to be paid on delivery of the goods to the vessel and the production of the usual shipping receipt therefor; that the resin was delivered to said vessel and a shipping receipt therefor given to the libellants by the master; that by the custom of the port no bill of lading shall he made or delivered by the master except upon the surrender of the shipping receipt; that the master has given a hill of lading to Michel without a surrender of the receipt, and refused to give a bill of lading to the libellants; that the vessel is about to proceed to á foreign land, and if she he allowed to depart without giving the libellants a bill of lading and procuring the surrender of the bill of lading given to Michel, or giving indemnity against damage, the libellants will be remediless.

[470]*470The prayer of the libel is as follows:

“ Wherefore, the libellants pray that process in clue form of law, according to the course and practice of this honorable court in eases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, may issue against said vessel, her tackle, apparel, and furniture, and that all persons having any interest therein may he cited to appear and answer all and singular the matters aforesaid; that they may be compelled to issue a bill of lading for said goods to these libellants and procure a surrender of - the bill of lading given to said Michel, and may indemnify the libellants against all loss and damage by reason of the issuing of said bill of lading to said Michel; and that the said vessel may be condemned and sold, and the libellants paid any damages they may sustain in the premises, with interest and costs, and may have such other and further relief as to law and justice appertain.

No exception has been taken to the libel on the ground of inconsistency in the relief prayed for, and under such a libel it is open to the libellants to take any decree warranted by the facts that may be within the scope of his prayer. But it is said by the claimant the libel proceeds upon the theory of a right in the libellants to have a bill of lading of the goods, and therefore the action is simply an action for specific performance. The libel, however, contains facts sufficient to sustain a decree for conversion, and the prayer is, among other things, that the vessel be condemned and sold to pay any damages sustained by the libellants by reason of the premises. I am unable, therefore, to hold that the only right set up in the libel is the right to have a bill of lading.

Again, it is said, in behalf of the- claimant, if the action be treated as an action for damages, the damages claimed are those arising from the failure to receive a bill of lading, and not damages for converting the resin. But, as already pointed out, the facts set forth make a case of conversion, and the general prayer is to be paid damages accruing to the libellants out of the premises. It cannot, therefore, be held that the method of framing the libel, objectionable as it certainly is, constitutes, in the absence of any exception, an insurmountable obstacle to treating the action as based upon a maritime tort. It is not seen, therefore, that any legal objection stands in the way of considering this case to be an action to recover damages for the conversion of the property in question, and as, upon the argument, the desire to have it so treated was expressed, that course will be pursued.

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21 A.D.2d 463 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F. 468, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ferreri-nyed-1881.