The Fri

154 F. 333, 83 C.C.A. 205, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4526
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1907
DocketNo. 1,991
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 154 F. 333 (The Fri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Fri, 154 F. 333, 83 C.C.A. 205, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4526 (2d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

WALLACE, Circuit Judge.

The libel in this action was filed to recover, the value of 706 head of cattle and 309 calves, belonging to the libelants, and shipped by them on the steamship Eri in September, 1902, at the port of Carthagena, United States of Colombia, for transportation to Cienfuegos, Cuba. The vessel sailed for Cienfuegos on September 24th, and two days later, shortly after midnight, stranded on the Bajo Nuevo reef, and in consequence the cattle had to be thrown overboard and were lost.

The stranding was caused by a fault of navigation on the part of the master of the steamship in failing, when he laid the vessel’s course late in the afternoon of September 25th for passing to the eastward of the reef, to make due allowance for the strong set of the ocean current to the westward. He was an experienced .navigator, but he had never navigated a vessel in that part of the Caribbean Sea, and relied con'cerning the force and direction of the preváiling currents upon the information he had sought from other navigators, and upon the instructions given in the charts and official publications with which he had been provided. But he permitted his judgment to be unduly influenced in departing from these instructions by his deductions based upon his own observations throughout the preceding day.

The controlling question presented by this appeal is whether under the contract of affreightment the vessel was relieved of liability .to the libelants for a loss arising from this fault of navigation. The case involves to some extent a consideration of the law of the, United States of Colombia, the country in which the contract was made.

[335]*335The material provisions of the statutes of Colombia are those which provide that in the absence of a charter party the terms and conditions of a contract of affreightment are those stated in the bill of lading, and require the charter party to be in writing, or established by documentary or written evidence where the freight exceeds 200 pesos ($2), and those which permit parties to renounce any rights which relate only to the private interest of the renouncer. The testimony of the experts, lawyers of Colombia, justifies the conclusion that the unwritten law of the country permits and gives effect to stipulations in contracts of affreightment whereby the vessel and her owners are exempted from responsibility on account of errors or carelessness of em-ployés in navigating the vessel.

The cattle were shipped pursuant to a charter party agreed to between the libelants and the owners of the steamship, in form such as had been executed between the parties on former occasions when the libelants had chartered steamers for cattle shipments of the vessel owners. It happened, however, that at the time of this agreement none of the blank charter parties were accessible, and the parties agreed that the blank forms such as had been customarily used between them should constitute the contract except as to the terms of freight. This agreement is satisfactorily established by documentary evidence. The shipper’s agents by letter inquired whether the shippers accepted the clauses of the customary charter party, and to this letter the libel-ants replied in effect that their only objection was that they had not promised to pay freight for as many cattle as the Fri should carry, but only for as many cattle as they were able to load. Subsequently the master of the Fri delivered a bill of lading to the libelants, which was accepted by them, reciting $4,250 as the gross freight, a sum equivalent to the full capacity of the vessel. The libel alleges this sum as the agreed freight.

The blank form of charter party which had customarily been signed by the parties provided that the vessel should have the fittings and, means of ventilation to comfortably and properly carry the cattle, and that the charterers should load the full capacity of the vessel, and contained a stipulation exempting the vessel and her owners from liability for errors of navigation “occasioned by negligence, default or error of judgment of the pilot, master or mariner.” The bill of lading which was delivered to the libelants provided, among other things, that the shipment should be “subject to all the terms and provisions of, and all the exemptions from, liability contained in the act of Congress of the United States approved on the 13th day of February, 1893, c. 105, 21 Stat. 445 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2947], meaning the act known as the “Harter Act.”

The ground upon which the court below condemned the vessel was that the disaster was caused by the negligence of the master, that the stipulation in the charter party was qualified by the provision in the bill of lading in reference to the Harter act, and that it had not been so satisfactorily proved by the owners of the vessel that they had used due diligence in the selection of the master as to enable them to obtain the benefits of the Harter act. In his opinion the District Judge said, speaking of the master:

[336]*336“The variety of his long experience at sea indicates sufficient skill to conduct the steamer during a four days’ voyage without collision with the reef. He was careless in gathering facts, or in failing to use facts that were plainly laid before him in a printed book. Capacity to perform a duty includes not only technical skill, but also disposition to use the same.”

It appeared by the proofs, and was undisputed, that the master for over years had navigated ocean vessels as master in many seas. Before he was appointed to the command of the Fri by her owners he had been in command of another steamship of theirs for over a year, and he had made several voyages in command of the Fri before the voyage upon which the disaster took place. They had had an ample opportunity to estimate his capacity. It would seem to be holding them to an extreme and impracticable rule of diligence to require them to give better proof of his general competency than was actually shown. The' testimony in respect to his navigation upon the voyage in question, to which it is not necessary to advert, was sufficient to show his competency generally; and it does show that the disaster happened not through his incompetency or inefficiency, but by putting his own judgment, based upon his general experience and what he thought he had ascertained respecting the force and direction of the currents during the previous two days, against the instructions of the books and charts with which he had been provided. Passing, however, the question whether the evidence was not sufficient to prove that the owner of the vessel had exercised due diligence to select a competent master, and therefore sufficient to exempt the vessel in view of the provisions of the Harter act, it remains to be considered whether the court below was correct in deciding that the stipulation in the bill of lading so far qualified the stipulation in' the charter party as practically to displace it.

The bill of lading was a printed form adapted for use when the owners.of the Fri chartered any of the vessels of their line for voyages to ports of the United States, and, if the present-charter had been for a voyage to one of these ports, the stipulation would in some respects have afforded them a larger protection than they would have obtained under the charter party. It is quite inadmissible to consider it as enlarging a liability which it was designed to restrict. This is so, irrespective of the particular circumstances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 F. 333, 83 C.C.A. 205, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-fri-ca2-1907.