The Heranger

101 F.2d 953, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4884, 1939 A.M.C. 369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 14, 1939
DocketNo. 8889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 101 F.2d 953 (The Heranger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Heranger, 101 F.2d 953, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4884, 1939 A.M.C. 369 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinions

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

Appellants, libelants in the court below, filed a libel against the Norwegian Motor-ship “Heranger,” her tackle, apparel and furniture, and Westfal-Larsen & Co., A/S, a corporation, respondents and appellees, for damages to a cargo of bananas shipped on appellee vessel from Balboa, Canal Zone, to Los Angeles and San Francisco, California.

The libel is in the form usually employed in cargo damage cases, alleging delivery to the vessel in good order and condition, a promise to re-deliver in like good order and condition, and discharge in a damaged condition.

The respondents filed a joint answer in which they denied the allegations mentioned in the preceding paragraph and set up six affirmative defenses. One of these defenses merely defined the measure of damage to be applied and is of no consequence upon this appeal. Of the remaining five, two were predicated upon section 3 of the Harter Act, 46 U.S.C.A. § 192, one pleading it directly and the other pleading a bill of lading provision incorporating the statutory exceptions. The remaining three pleaded bill of lading provisions which, in substance, relieved the vessel of liability for damage resulting from condition of the goods upon delivery to the vessel or inherent vice.

On April 28, 1936, Elliott Shipping and Land Co., for account of appellants, delivered to the “Pleranger” 6,184 stems of bananas at Balboa, Canal Zone, for transportation to Los Angeles, or San Francisco, the choice of such ports of destination being at the option of appellants. When the bananas arrived at Los Angeles, they were examined by an agent for appellants, one J. Scott Rider, and found to be in poor condition and unsalable as first class fruit, due, as alleged by appellants, to the fault of appellees.

From the evidence presented the following appears:

Appellants entered into an agreement with Elliott Shipping and Land Co., whereby the latter was to supply the former with bananas and as part of the arrangement Elliott Shipping and Land Co. was to load the bananas on the “Heranger.”

In connection with the carriage of these bananas Mr. Rider, the agent for appellants, gave instructions to the Steamship Corporation relative to the temperatures to be maintained during the shipment, which were attached to a letter dated April 23, 1936, and which were as follows :

“Precool to 46 degrees Fahrenheit. When bananas are loaded the delivery temperature should be 52 degrees until the return temperature is 56 degrees (approximately 20 hours) thus removing the natural heat of the fruit. Then raise delivery temperature to 53 degrees and watch returns carefully. If return temperature reduces to 55 degrees the temperatures are correct; if however, the return temperature does not [954]*954come down to 55 degrees the delivery temperature should he reduced to 52 degrees until the return temperature has settled to 55 degrees for 12 hours. Delivery temperatures can then be raised to 53 degrees and maintained if returns show 55 degrees or as low as 54 degrees. This above is not to be accomplished by excessive fan speeds.
“The carrying temperature throughout the remainder of the voyage should be 53 degrees for delivery temperature and 55 degrees, or as low as 54 degrees for return temperature.”

These instructions were cabled by the Steamship Corporation to the Master of the ship through its agent in the following form: “Instruct Heranger on arrival Cristobal precool to 46 Fahrenheit maintain intake temperature during loading 52 continue this until outlet after about 20 hours is 56 then increase intake to 53 until outlet 55 but if not reached reduce intake again to 52 until outlet is 55 for 12 hours then increase intake to 53 maintaining 55 or lowest 54 outlet thereafter.”

The bananas were cut on April 26, 1936, between the hours of 6 A. M. and noon by Elliott Shipping and Land Co., placed on the river bank and covered with leaves. Later, the fruit was loaded in small boats and covered with fresh cut green leaves and transported down the river to El Real. From El Real to Balboa the fruit was transported by small motorships, being loaded both in the hold and on the deck.' Ventilation in the hold was afforded by removing sections of the forward and after hatches. On deck, the fruit was protected by a covering -of fresh green leaves.

The motorships were brought alongside the boat landing at Balboa at 6:30 A. M., April 28, 1936. The fruit was then placed on land, trucked to the “Heranger,” brought on board and stowed. Loading was commenced at about 7 A. M. The interval between the cutting and stowing of the bananas, as variously estimated by different witnesses, ranged from 52% to 61% hours. The temperature at all times was very high, on the two preceding days it ranged from 78 degrees to 88 degrees, and on the day of loading it was hot and sultry and the temperature at the wharf in Balboa was 87 degrees.

Loading of the bananas on the “Heranger” took place under the direction of Ralph Robert Beardsley, employed as a banana inspector by Elliott Shipping and Land Co. According to' his testimony (taken by deposition) the bananas arrived at Balboa in good condition excepting some 297 stems thereof which were rejected because over-ripe, spotted", bruised and for other reasons. The bill of lading also contained a recital of the receipt of the bananas in “apparent good order and condition.” ..

Mr. Rider, appellants’ agent, testified that he saw the discharge of a portion of the bananas in Los Angeles; that “the condition was ripe, turning, and apparently heated.”; by “turning” is meant “the colof is beginning to show, turning from green to yellow.”; by “heated” is meant, “that the process of ripening has started, but has not possibly got so far as to show the damage and yellow color.”; that not all of the bananas were that way, only a certain percentage of them were not salable as first class merchandise; such bananas were not decayed but had deteriorated, that is, “the fruit was not sound and merchantable.” He further testified that no instructions had been given to the cutters on the plantation as to these particular bananas, but that there was a standing instruction as follows: “They shall be of . good quality, which refers to scarring, etc., and they shall be of a grade and maturity which will not be too full to carry safely on a length of trip of eight days, or ten days, or twelve days.”; that the proper state at which to cut the fruit would depend to a certain extent on the length of the voyage; that for a trip such as the “Heranger” engaged on from Balboa to San Pedro and San Francisco, bananas should be cut the shortest period possible before shipment. This witness said it would be difficult for him to say what would be a safe time “because it depends a great deal on the ship that you have to carry them forward, and other angles, but we will say 60 to 65 or possibly 70 hours- would be safe, preferably a shorter time,” depending “upon the condition of maturity of the bananas at the time they were cut.”

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Related

Stetson v. United States
155 F.2d 359 (Ninth Circuit, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
101 F.2d 953, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4884, 1939 A.M.C. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-heranger-ca9-1939.