The Indrapura

171 F. 929, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 256
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 14, 1909
DocketNo. 4,757
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 171 F. 929 (The Indrapura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Indrapura, 171 F. 929, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 256 (D. Or. 1909).

Opinion

WOLVERTON, District Judge.

The steamship Indrapura was chartered by the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company from the Indrapura Steamship Company to ply between the ports of Portland, Or., and Hong Kong, China. The charter party was assigned by the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, with the consent of the steamship company, to the Portland & Asiatic Steamship Company, a subsidiary concern of the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company. In October, 1902, on a proposed voyage out from Hong Kong bound for Portland, she received from libelant’s assignors for carriage to Portland 361 bales of jute, 119 bales of Hessian cloth, and 60 bales' of twilled cloth, alleged to be of the value of upwards of $15,000. This cargo had been shipped from Calcutta to Hong Kong on another steamer, and was at the latter port transhipped to the Indrapura. It appears from the libel that, after the shipment was received by the Portland & Asiatic Company and laden aboard the vessel for transportation to Portland in accordance with the bill of lading, the steamship, by order and direction of the owners and [931]*931managing owner, and with the full knowledge and consent of the Portland & Asiatic Company, was placed in a dry dock at Hong Kong, without maritime necessity, to have her bottom painted; that while in dry dock, and after she had been there for two clays, and while the goods aforesaid were laden aboard of her as a part of her cargo and while her bottom was being painted, to wit, on November 16, 1902, the Indrapura by the negligence of the owners and officers and crew was set on fire; that after ineffectual attempts to extinguish the fire that portion of the ship’s hold containing the merchandise was flooded with water, in consequence of which the jute and Hessian cloth were destroyed or rendered valueless, and the twilled cloth was damaged to such an extent that the salvage on it amounted to but $284.58. Libelant is assignee of the claims for damage resulting from the disaster, and brings this suit to recover therefor.

Exceptions were interposed to the libel, which proceed upon the ground that the respondent is exempt from liability under the provisions of section 4282 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 29 13), damage to the cargo having been caused by “fire happening to or on board the vessel,” coupled with the general objection that the libel does not state facts sufficient upon which to base the suit. Uibelant’s cause is based upon the theory that by going into dry dock after the goods were received for transportation the ship was guilty of a deviation, in consequence of which the owners became liable in damages for the value of the cargo destroyed as for a breach of (he contract of affreightment. The injured cargo having been insured against marine loss, and the libelant having taken an assignment of the assured’s right of action against respondent, the libelant must recover,, if at all, in the right of the shipper against the carrier, and not by any contractual relation springing from the contracts of insurance. St. Louis, etc., Railway v. Commercial Ins. Co., 139 U. S. 223, 235, 11 Sup. Ct. 554, 35 L. Ed. 154. It is the duty of the owner of a vessel receiving cargo for transportation to proceed without unnecessary deviation or delay in the course agreed upon in the contract, or, if none be designated, in the customary or usual track of sea to the port of delivery. Carver, Carriage by Sea, § 285; 1 Parsons on Shipping & Admiralty. p. 171, note; Niagara v. Cordes, 21 How. 7, 16 L. Ed. 41; Express Co. v. Kountze, 8 Wall. 342. 19 L. Ed. 457; Merrick v. Webster, 3 Mich. 268; Davis v. Garrett, 6 Bing. 716, 19 E. C. L. 212. It therefore becomes necessary to inquire, first, whether the vessel deviated; and. second, what tlie effect thereof is, if it did.

The term “deviation” in the law of shipping has at the present day a varied meaning and wide significance. It was originally employed, no doubt, for the purpose its lexicographical definition implies, namely, to express the wandering or straying of a vessel from the customary course of voyage; but it seems now to comprehend in general even-conduct of a ship or other vehicle used in commerce tending to vary or increase the risk incident to a shipment. Thus delay in starting a shipment when unreasonable or unexcused came to be regarded as a deviation, not because the vehicle employed departed from the usual route of travel, but because the risk of shipment was changed or increased, and became, in effect, not the same as the one with reference [932]*932to which the parties contracted. 3 Kent’s Com. 315; Coffin v. Marine Ins. Co., 9 Mass. 436; Phillips v. Irving, 49 E. C. L. 325; Mount v. Larkins, 8 Bing. 108, 21 E. C. L. 214. The reason for grafting this meaning upon the word is stated in this last case to be:

“Because the voyage, commenced after an unreasonable interval of time, would have become a voyage at a different period of the year, at a more advanced age of the ship, and, in short, a different voyage than if it had been prosecuted with proper and ordinary diligence; that is, the risk would have been altered from that which was intended by all parties when the policy was effected.”

So also for like reasons towing or being towed was added to the list of acts to which is properly imputable an element of risk not contemplated by the contract, and therefore constituting a deviation. Natchez Ins. Co. v. Stanton, 2 Smedes & M. (Miss.) 340, 41 Am. Dec. 592; Scaramonga v. Stamp, 5 C. P. Div. 295; Crocker v. Jackson, 1 Sp. 141, Fed. Cas. No. 3,398; Stewart v. Tennessee Marine Ins. Co., 1 Humph. (Tenn.) 242. In consonance with the enlargement of the meaning of “deviation” in maritime law to meet the exigencies of commerce, it seems a just estimate of its present scope that the Supreme Court of Ohio made in Wilkins v. Insurance Company, 30 Ohio St. 317, 341, 27 Am. Rep. 455, namely:

“Strictly speaking, a ‘deviation’ originally meant only a departure from the course of the voyage, but now it is always understood in the sense of a material departure from or change in the risk insured against, without just cause” — quoting 2 Parsons, Mar. Ins. p. 1.

The same broad meaning is recognized and sanctioned in Audenreid v. Mercantile Ins. Co., 60 N. Y. 482, 19 Am. Rep. 204:

“It [deviation] is not confined to a departure from or going out of the direct or usual course of a voyage; but it comprehends unusual or unnecessary delay or any act of the charterer or his agent which, without necessity or just cause, increases or changes the risk included in the policy.”

And in Bulkley v. Insurance Co., 2 Paine (U. S.) 82, Fed. Cas. No. 2,118, Thompson, Circuit Justice, said:

"The shortness of time or distance of deviation is immaterial if voluntary and without necessity, and not justified by usage.”

A case of value in this discussion is Amsinck v. American Ins. Co., 129 Mass. 185, 186, where we find the following statement of the law:

“Any departure from the route named in the policy to a port or place not named, and any delay in prosecuting the voyage, without necessity or just cause, or any delay at a port named in the policy, for the prosecution of business not connected with the business of the voyage, or any unreasonable delay at such port in prosecuting the business of the voyage, is a deviation.

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Bluebook (online)
171 F. 929, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-indrapura-ord-1909.