The M. V. Silversandal

26 F. Supp. 61, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1372
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 61 (The M. V. Silversandal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The M. V. Silversandal, 26 F. Supp. 61, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1372 (S.D.N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

CLANCY, District Judge.

This is a libel for alleged damage to 269 bales of European Estate ribbed smoked sheet rubber, shipped on the Silversandal from Soerabaja, Java, where it was taken aboard on May 8, 1937, to New York, where the vessel arrived on July 12, 1937.

Two hundred and twenty-four bales of the libellant’s rubber were loaded into the No. 2 lower hold at Soerabaja as part of a cargo of 6,576 bales stowed in this hold. In the forward part the rubber was stowed on top of bales of hemp covered with a single, solid layer of dunnage, the rubber being stowed to a height of six or seven tiers. In the after part of No. 2 hold were five or six rows of cased rubber stowed clear athwartships which acted as a bulkhead or stiffener. The bales of rubber were placed hard against and aft these cases where the tank top had been double dunnaged, and the limber boards at the turn of the bilge were squared off with bundles of rattans carried as broken stowage. These rattans of one-half to one inch diameter and of irregular lengths, approximating twenty feet, were packed in eight inch bundles which were stowed to a height of five or six feet and at the top extended about five feet from the limber boards. On top of the rattans thwartship dunnage was laid, then a layer of fore and aft dunnage and upon this the rubber was tiered to a height of 8 or 9 bales. In the center where rubber was stowed from the tank top, the stow ranged in height from eleven to thirteen tiers.

Forty-five of the bales were , stowed in the two forward compartments of No. 4 lower hold as part of a stow of 5,734 bales. These compartments were about eighteen feet deep, twenty-seven feet wide and thirty-five feet long and were squared off with dunnage. They were stowed to a height of some nine tiers. All the bales of rubber in both hatches were placed flat side down and no other cargo was stowed on top of them.

[62]*62The libellant complains that- this stowage was bad but we do not agree. We think dunnage laid between the tiers of rubber would certainly indent the bales. The first officer thought so and we agree with his judgment and think that the nature of rubber confirms it. Again, it would be well nigh impossible to so dunnage bales received on board in unlike sizes and irregular shapes; their heights varied, the mate said, as much as six or seven inches. Dunnage under these circumstances would subject some of the bales to even greater pressures than the manner of stow adopted by the Silversandal put upon them. It is true that most of the contortion and indentation complained of was found in the bales that were in tiers higher than the rattan stow. But, the original height of the piled rattans was fixed as that of a man which is a variable on which no computation can fairly be made of the extent if any of their subsequent depression. To find whether they sank and where and to what extent and why would be to hazard a guess for how closely the rattans lay when stowed, how truly aligned and where they sank, if they did — whether at the middle of the pile or towards the keel or towards the spar ceiling; would all be involved in a determination that the mechanical forces so thought to be set in motion caused the condition of the output bales and there is no evidence in the case to enlighten us on any of these features of the rattan stow.

It was admitted in the pleadings and during the trial that the rubber was received on board the Silversandal in actual good order and condition. When discharged, all but twenty of the libellant’s bales were crushed and misshapen and' some of them were indented; how many, was not made clear.

Rubber is a universally known and used commodity. Its outstanding characteristics are resiliency, flexibility and extensibility and these characteristics are known and recognized by its every user. The rubber in the bales in suit is manufactured in strips about six feet long which are doubled into lengths, not at all exactly, to make a bale about twenty-five inches long. These doubled lengths are superimposed flatly on each other in a pile and several of these piles, together weighing two hundred and fifty pounds, are subjected to pressure and bound with wire hoops and then wrapped in burlap. It will appear from this that the doubled ends of the strips will make a thicker and more resilient end than the free end of the strip and if one end of the bale was made of more doubled than of free ends that fact alone would make that end more resilient than the opposite end. The metal loops or binders are wholly concealed by the burlap wrapper and there is no evidence in the case that anybody on the Silversandal knew or had reason to know that there was a metal binder. The number of hoops differs on different bales and no standard of number or position on the bale was proved or even hinted. The average bale is twenty-five inches high and long and twenty-one inches wide. It was a number of such bales that were presented to the Silversandal for shipment and surely, considering its structure and content, no cargo with the possible exception of metal ingots could better promise to sustain the roughest treatment.

The respondent admits the bales were altered in shape and flattened and that loss was sustained by the libellant. This loss is met in the rejection of tender without an allowance by the consignee’s vendee and, maybe, such a tender was insufficient under their contract of sale, but we are not deciding their rights. The elements of the loss are not altogether clear to the Court. The testimony of the inspectors indicates that acceptance or nonacceptance of bales of rubber in a flattened and misshapen condition such as those of the libellant is largely arbitrary. The representative of the purchaser looks casually upon an entire shipment and either accepts it with an allowance or rejects it. It appears that the same purchaser would accept a shipment of its own in a condition which would call for rejection had it been tendered by another. It further appears that a shipment is viewed as a whole and whereas a lot containing a number of somewhat compressed bales might on one occasion be accepted, a lot containing a greater percentage of bales compressed, but to a less degree, would on another occasion be rejected. This Court is not convinced that the mere acceptance or rejection by an inspector for a purchaser for reasons not apparent — indeed [63]*63not clearly explained in a reasonably long trial — is sufficient ground for determining the existence of any damage whatever of a character properly attributable to the ship or her owner. The experts at the trial did not agree among themselves on the reasons for their disapproval. We think possibly that an inspector either consciously or unconsciously considers the adherence of burlap lint to the rubber in determining whether certain bales should be accepted, and that an expert may determine whether or not it is adhering merely by looking at a bale without closer examination. But damage by reason of the adherence of the burlap lint is not part of libellant’s claim. It was expressly disclaimed by its attorney during the trial. We comment upon it only in an endeavor to understand the inspector’s acceptance or rejection after a casual observation.

In view of the fáct that the baled rubber is a raw product and is cut up and mangled as the initial step in its treatment for any use, we are unable to understand why any bale’s shape ■ or lack of shape can per se be an element of damage. Explanations given are that, the misshapen bale cannot be fed into the mechanical slicer but it turned out as would be expected that the mechanical slicer was adjustable.

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Related

Bache v. Silver Line, Ltd.
110 F.2d 60 (Second Circuit, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 61, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-m-v-silversandal-nysd-1938.