The Hellig Olav

282 F. 534, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2666
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1922
DocketNo. 288
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 282 F. 534 (The Hellig Olav) 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 Hellig Olav, 282 F. 534, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2666 (2d Cir. 1922).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

This is a libel against a steamship because of the latter's failure to deliver certain merchandise which it was agreed should be carried from New York to Copenhagen, and for the breach of the contract of carriage damages in the sum of $200,000 are asked.

The libelant is engaged in the business of packing and shipping beef and pork and their products. In March, 1915, the libelant shipped certain meat products from Chicago to Copenhagen on through bills of lading. The goods were delivered at Chicago by libelant to the Traders' Despatch, and bills of lading were issued by the latter, which stated that the goods were to be carried to the port of New York and thence by the Scandinavian-American Line to Copenhagen. These bills of lading provided that the steamer was not to be liable for loss or damage occasioned “by arrest or restraint of princes, rulers, or peopie.”

On the arrival of the goods at New York they were delivered to the Danish steamship Helig Olav, of which Dot Forenede Dampskibs Selskab, commonly known as the Scandinavian Line, is owner and claimant. Upon the delivery of the goods to the steamship in New York, the steamship company issued ocean bills of lading, which bills were the regular forms of bills of lading in use by the steamship company at the time of the shipment, and contained the usual provisions exempting the carrier from liability, including the provision exempting, as respects the property covered by the bills, for loss or damage occasioned by “arrest and restraint of princes, rulers, or people.” They also provided that “the shipment is accepted at the sole risk of the owners thereof, of arrest, restraint, capture, seizure, detention, or interference of any sort by any power.”

It appears that the vessel left New York on April 1, 1915, and ten days later, when about'70 miles west of Scotland, was stopped by a British war cruiser, and a British officer boarded the ship and required her to proceed to Kirkwall for inspection.* On her arrival at [536]*536Kirkwall the British naval officers and officials came on board to examine the ship’s papers, which they took ashore with them. This happened on April 11th, and on April 14th they were returned to the ship with the information that she could proceed on her voyage. It appears, however, that on the day of the seizure of the papers the managing director of the United Shipping Company, Limited, which was the London agent for the owners of the steamship, was informed by “the Contraband Committee,” a department of the British Foreign Office, that the goods involved herein would either have to be removed from the steamer at Kirkwall, or, in the alternative, the company would have to give an undertaking to return them to England for proceedings before the prize court. The United Shipping Company thereupon gave a letter to the Director of Trade Division, Admiralty War Staff, which stated that, in consideration of the steamship being allowed to proceed to Copenhagen, the company guaranteed that the goods specified should be returned to England as soon as possible. This was done for the convenience of the vessel, to avoid the delay to her passengers and to her noncontraband cargo, which would have been occasioned if she had been compelled to unload what was claimed to be the contraband cargo which she had on board.

The ship, having thus been released from detention, sailed from Kirkwall on April 15, and without the presence aboard the vessel of any representative of the British government—that government relying simply on the carrier’s undertaking to return the goods to England. When the ship reached Copenhagen, she at once unloaded her cargo, with the exception of that portion which was claimed to be contraband. That she refused to deliver to the consignee, although a demand for its delivery was made by him. The contraband goods were transferred, however, to the Alexandra on April 27th, and were carried by her to the port of Newcastle, England. On the arrival of the vessel at Newcastle on May 1st, the merchandise herein involved was seized as prize, and was subsequently brought into the British prize court and condemned as contraband.

The record contains a copy of a letter from the British Foreign Office, London, May 20, 1915, addressed to the Secretary of the United Shipping Company, Limited, in which' the writer says:

“I am directed by Secretary Sir E. Grey, to certify to you that the items of the cargo of your steamship Helig Olav enumerated in the accompanying list were seized by the Admiralty, but that, in view of the guarantee given by your company that all these goods should be returned to this country to be dealt with in the prize court, the steamer was allowed to proceed to her destination on April 14th with the cargo on board.”

That the goods were in fact contraband we think is clear although that is not conceded and is not in issue. The crown asked for the condemnation of the goods on the ground that, while they had been consigned to Leopold Gyth in Copenhagen, the latter in reality was the agent in Scandinavia for the German government, and the goods were for that government, and that an indemnity had been given to the consignors by the Deutsche Bank of Berlin. The record of the proceedings in the British court shows that after the government produced its proof the claimant withdrew its claim and admitted its guilt.

[537]*537The question presented, therefore, is whether the provision in the bills of lading which exempted the carrier from liability for loss or damage occasioned “by arrest and restraint of princes, rulers or people” applies to the facts of this case. The court below was of the opinion that it did, and that there was consequently no obligation to deliver this particular merchandise at Copenhagen, and a fortiori no conversion. The libel was accordingly dismissed, and appeal to this court was taken.

The appellant on this state of facts asks this court to determine certain questions:

First. Can a common carrier of a neutral country, who has received freight and undertaken to carry goods to destination, after its steamer has been required by a belligerent to put into a port of the latter’s country for examination, be relieved of the common carrier’s obligation to deliver cargo at destination by giving a promise to the belligerent government that the cargo after being taken to destination will be brought to the belligerent country and delivered to the belligerent?

Second. Where a neutral vessel is directed to put into port in a belligerent country for examination, and thereafter, without the disturbance or removal of any cargo on board, is told.that she is free to proceed in consideration of a promise by her owners to bring the cargo to the belligerent country, after completion of the original voyage, and the carrier gives such promise, and the vessel in fact does complete her original voyage by proceeding to her destination in a neutral country, where she discharges her cargo, has there been up to that point any seizure or capture of the vessel’s cargo by the belligerent country, within the meaning of the words “seizure or capture” in the bill of lading?

Third. Where, under the circumstances just indicated, a common carrier, after discharging the cargo at destination in a neutral country, reloads the cargo into another vessel, and carries it to a belligerent country, and delivers it to a belligerent, can the carrier be protected against the claim of the consignee by an exception of restraint of princes in the bill of lading?

Fourth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 F. 534, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-hellig-olav-ca2-1922.