The Phoenicia

90 F. 116, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 90 F. 116 (The Phoenicia) 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 Phoenicia, 90 F. 116, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6 (S.D.N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The above four libels were filed in behalf of some 60 consignees to recover the damage to their goods, which v,ere shipped at Hamburg in January, 18i)5, on board the new steamship Phoenicia, and damaged to the amount of about $1-0,000 on the voyage to New York. The goods in question were all stowed in the between-deeks of compartment No. 4, and consisted of a large quantity of sugar in bags, and much other miscellaneous merchandise, such as linen goods, hosiery, woollens, paper, rubber goods, earthenware, toys, musical instruments, hardware, feathers, barley, coffee, glassware, etc. The damage arose from sea water, which gained access to the compartment through a leak in one of the ordinary ports on the starboard side of the compartment a little above the water line. „

The steamer sailed from Hamburg on January 14th, entered Havre; at noon on the 16th, passing through two of the massive stone gateways from the Avant Port into the Bassin Bellot, and on the following high tide at about 1:40 a. m. of January 17th, loft: Havre by the same gateways and proceeded on her voyage. She mot heavy weather almost constantly; and at 6 p. m. of the 25th of January, when near the Grand Back, four feet of water was discovered in (he well, coming from heavy dripping from beneath the between-decks of No. 4 compartment. Immediate examination disclosed the leak in question. With every roll of the ship two jets of water spurted through the port, one near the top and another near the bottom, by reason of the fact that the brass ring that held the window of the port did not close tightly upon the rubber bed against which it shut, but was bent inwards for a few inches along the top and bottom about 1/io of an inch. This discovery was made about days after the steamer left Havre; and there can be no doubt that the opinion of the master is correct that the leak had then been in operation for a considerable time; that the sugar had at first absorbed the water as it entered until the sugar was saturated and then melted; and after the water.ways had become choked, and the movement of the cargo, in consequence of part melting, had at last worn away the wooden part of the iron flooring and carried away some of the bearings and screws, that holes were made in the deck sufficient to permit the water to run through it as found on January 25th.

The libels charge that the vessel was unseaworthy when she sailed, on account of the imperfection of the port at that time. The answers aver that the ship was in all respects tight and seaworthy, and that tin; leak was caused by sea perils arising on the voyage, without any fault of the ship or her owners, either from pounding in tin; heavy seas, or encountering some obstructions, or as a result of two or three unavoidable contacts with the stone gateways in entering and departing from Havre, whereby the port, which was previously tight, was sprung so as to leak. The answers also allege; due diligence on the part of the owners to make the ship in all respects seaworthy; that if there was any defect in the port, it. was a latent defect; that by the bills of lading, it was provided, that the ship and the owner should nut be liable for any latent [118]*118defect, nor for any accident of navigation occasioned by any negligence or fault of any of tlie servants of the ship; that all questions arising thereunder should be governed by the German law, and that by the German law, these stipulations are valid.

The Phoenicia is a new steel steamship 460 feet long, 52 feet beam and 36 feet depth of hold. She was built near Hamburg and great pains were taken to make her in every respect a first-class ship. This was her first voyage. Her trial trip was made in the River Elbe on December 28, 1894, and she was then approved and delivered to her owners, and immediately after began to take cargo on board. The window of the port in question was 10 inches in diameter, a little forward of midships, nearly under the bridge, and would touch th<j water line upon a mean draught of 26J feet. On her trial trip she was light, and this port was then from 10 to 12 feet above water. On entering Havre her mean draught was 23 feet 9 inches so that the lower edge of the port was 2 feet 6 inches above the water line; and on leaving Havre, where she took on cargo, though none additional was taken in No. 4 compartment, her draught was 4 inches greater, so that the port was then 2 feet 2 inches above water.

It is evident that if at the time of sailing the port was loose and leaky, as when found on January 25th, a leak so near the water line would render the steamer unfit for the carriage of cargo in that compartment, and that the loss should be charged to the ship. Nor could such a defect, if it then existed, be regarded as a “latent defect”; because it was easily discoverable upon inspection by the water test; a tes't which is easily made, and which according to the evidence is customarily made, and which reasonable prudence requires to be made, as respects ports so near the water line, before a ship sails on her first voyage. This test can be easily applied with the hose. It was applied to the decks in Hamburg, and aft-erwards twice applied to this glass port at New York. The particular description of the inspection made at Hamburg shows, however, that this test was not applied to any of the ports before the ship sailed from Hamburg; nor was the “chalk test” applied, which also tries the tightness of the fit. The only inspection and test 'there applied were to try the outer blind to see if it would go in and out, and to screw up tight the-glass door and the inner cover; and that would not disclose any such leak as this, although it existed at that time precisely as when it was discovered on January 25th. Had either the water test or the chalk test been applied, there is no doubt that if any defect in this port then existed, it would have been discovered; and if it had been proved by any such test that no leak was then discoverable, no reasonable doubt would have remained that the defect arose upon the voyage, and thus the chief difficulty in the case would have been removed.

For the principal difficulty is not so much a theoretical one, whether such a leak in a sound port might possibly be produced on the voyage by the causes alleged; but whether there is such satisfactory evidence showing with a reasonable degree of certainty that the faulty condition of the port and consequent leak did arise [119]*119on the voyage, as to dispense with proof by some proper and actual test that the port was tight when the ship sailed.

A further question arises upon whom the burden of proof in this respect rests; and in case of doubt, whether the ship or the merchant shall bear the loss. Upon the latter point, the law, as I understand it, is that the burden of proof rests upon the ship. In The Edwin I. Morrison, 153 U. S. 199, 233, 215, 14 Sup. Ct. 823, the decision turned essentially upon this principle. It was there repeatedly stated by Chief Justice Fuller in delivering the opinion of the court, that it is for the owners to show affirmatively the safety and sufficiency of the slop's condition when she sails, by making all ordinary and reasonable tests.

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Bluebook (online)
90 F. 116, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-phoenicia-nysd-1898.