The Kirkhill

99 F. 575, 39 C.C.A. 658, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1900
DocketNo. 309
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 99 F. 575 (The Kirkhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Kirkhill, 99 F. 575, 39 C.C.A. 658, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169 (4th Cir. 1900).

Opinion

BRAWLEY, District Judge.

The British steamship Kirkhill, of 2,347 tons net register, and guarantied to have at least--cubic feet of actual cargo space available for cotton in bales, was chartered September 13, 1897, to load a full and complete cargo of cotton from the port of Wilmington, N. C., to Hamburg, Bremen, Amsterdam, or Rotterdam. The ship commenced loading on October 16th, and in progress of loading a dispute arose as to whether the charterers had the right to load cargo in certain alleyways which at that time,\ as appears from the master’s protest, were filled with coal for the voyage. At a later date, and before the loading wap completed, the master removed the coal there stowed to the deck, and gave notice to the charterers that he would stow cotton there, but that he would only sign bills of lading for the alleyways cargo at the shippers’ risk, as the cotton stowed in the alleyways would be necessarily exposed to the weather during the voyage, and might meet with some damage. To this proposal the charterers objected, and demanded a clean bill of lading for the part of the cargo to be stowed in the alleyways. Upon the refusal of the master to give such clean bills of lading, the ship was cleared for Bremen on November 5, 1S97, and this libel was filed, alleging damage caused by the refusal to sign clean bills of lading for the proposed alleyways cargo. The district court held that the libelant had no right to demand a clean bill of lading for this portion of the cargo, and dismissed the libel. .

The sole question for decision is whether the charterer was entitled to demand clean bills of lading for cotton which was to be carried in the alleyways spaces on deck. The record does not contain a precise description of the steamship Kirkhill, but the alleyways spaces were described in the argument before us by the proctor for appellee, and the description was accepted as substantially correct, and is about as follows: Eor a distance amidships, and extending from side to side, is an upper deck house which supports the officers’ bridge. , There are gaps in this deck erection forward and aft of the bridge, where the main deck is left quite open. The covering over the midship part of such deck space is for the protection of the engine room and the quarters for the men, with fore and aft passages on each side leading out. These are the alleyways. At the front end of such a passage or alleyway is a door of wood or iron opening out upon the open main deck, and, when cotton is stowed there, bales are placed as close as possible in the outboard side of such passage, so as to leave a narrow gangway alongside the cotton for the passage of the crew and engineers. Such spaces are covered over, but cannot be permanently closed in, as the doors at-the end have to be opened by the crew in passing in and out. They cannot be made water-tight, because they cannot be covered, as are the hatches, by tarpaulin covers, which prevent possibility of leakage. These vertical doors at the front of the alleyways have to', stand the full impact of the seas which may sweep over the deck. [577]*577Tlie damage which might occur to cotton stowed there was described in tbe recent case of The William Grane (D. C.) 50 Fed. 444. In that case, on a voyage from ¡Savannah to Baltimore, the steamer encountered a severe storm, and shipped a heavy sea on the starboard side near the bow, just forward of the bulkhead inclosing the starboard alleyway, and tbe wave boarded the vessel with such force that it flooded the forward main deck, broke down the bulkhead on the starboard side, wrenched off seven feet of wooden shutter next to it, and, crossing the ship, hurst open the iron cargo ports and bulwarks on the port side, carrying away a portion of the port rail, flooding the starboard alleyway, and saturating the cotton so that it suffered damage to the extent of $10 a bale. The district court was satisfied, by the testimony in that case, that this location in that vessel was “as safe for cotton as below the hatches of the main deck,” these alleyway spaces being designed in the planning of the ship for carrying cargo, and that the established rule that a clean bill of lading imports that the goods are to be carried under deck was not applicable to “steamers navigating our inland and coastwise waters on short voyages.” '

There is a difference in the construction of American coastwise steamers and British cargo steamships, but the record does not enable us to point it out with precision. It is clear, however, that cotton stowed in alleyways, such as are above described, is subject to special dangers and hazards beyond the ordinary sea perils to cargo carried below and secured under deck. Especially is this the case with cotton shipped for a winter voyage on, the North Atlantic in the month of November, when storms are likely to be encountered.

In The Waldo, Fed. Cas. No. 17,056, a portion of a cargo of potatoes wras stowed on deck, and a clean bill of lading was given therefor. The ship was held liable for the damage to the deck cargo, although Hiere was some proof that it was stowed on deck with the knowledge of the shipper; the court holding that there is a presumption in every contract of affreightment that the goods shall be secured under deck. “It is for a master, who wrould exempt himself from the risks of a deck passage, to remove that presumption. The ordinary and proper evidence would be a memorandum to that effect on the face of the bill of lading.”

In The Wellington. Fed. Cas. No. 17,384, 635 barrels of apples were shipped from Vermilion, in the state of Ohio, to be delivered at the port of Milwaukee. One hundred and ninety-five barrels had been stowed on deck, and in the storm were jettisoned. A clean bill of lading had been given. Upon a libel to recover their value, the court says:

“I conclude, upon principle and authority both, that parol evidence of agreement or consent of the shipper that his goods may he stowed on deck cannot he received where a clean bill of lading is given,'and full freight is charged, as in this case. Here was a clean hill of lading, a transfer of which would vest the title to 635 barrels in the purchasers. The master should have made a memorandum on the bill of lading, or ha.ve required the written consent of the shipper on the bill that the number of barrels not receivable under deck might be shipped on deck.”

[578]*578In some of the earlier cases in this country it was held by some of the state courts that proof of a well-known usage might be received to overcome the presumption from a clean bill of lading, but the weight of the best authorities is that a clean bill of lading negatives any carriage except under deck. Such was the rule in New York, where Nelson, C. J., says in Creery v. Holly, 14 Wend. 26:

“It is true, in this case, that nothing is said in the bill of lading as to the manner of stowing away the goods, whether on or under the deck, but the case concedes that the legal import of the contract, as. well as the understanding of the usage of merchants, imposes upon the master the duty of putting them under deck, unless otherwise stipulated; and, if such is the judgment of the law upon the face of the instrument, parol evidence is as inadmissible to alter it as if the duty was stated in express terms.”

The case of Lenox v. Insurance Co., 3 Johns. Cas. 178, was an action against the underwriters upon goods partly shipped on deck and partly below for loss sustained by the deck lading having been thrown overboard for the common safety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 F. 575, 39 C.C.A. 658, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-kirkhill-ca4-1900.