The President Polk

43 F.2d 695, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1930 A.M.C. 1358
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 1930
DocketNo. 360
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 695 (The President Polk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The President Polk, 43 F.2d 695, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1930 A.M.C. 1358 (2d Cir. 1930).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

Stein, the libelant, shipped eighty bales of goat skins on the S. S. President Polk at Shanghai for New York. The. steamer stowed them in her lower hold in which were [696]*696fpur of her fresh-water tanks. These had been nearly emptied when she reached Shanghai, and they were there drained, opened, cleaned and coated on the inside with cement, so as to be ready to receive fresh water at Hongkong, the next port of call. They had each two manholes, fitted with plates, all of which except two were properly set in place and made tight. These two both belonged to one tank; one was laid on top of it, the other was set in the manhole but not screwed down. When this tank was filled at Hong-kong, the water escaped, ran aft, and injured the skins. Stein sued for the damage, but the District Court dismissed the libel, holding that since the ship had not meant to make the plates tight till she reached Hongkong, she was seaworthy at Shanghai, where the voyage began, and the fault was one of management.

As all the testimony was taken out of court we are in as good a position to decide upon the facts as the judge below. We think it clear that the Polk, when she broke ground at Shanghai, intended to sail with her freshwater tanks sweet, clean and tight, and that she meant to fill them at Hongkong without further attention. The hold in question was at least half full of freight, probably two-thirds, and was to take no more cargo at Hongkong, though more was to be stowed in the ’tween decks above. The tanks were filled at Hongkong without any examination whatever; while of course this may have been due to negligence, it tends to show that they were supposed to be ready. Three of the four had their plates in place and tight; the one which leaked had one in place, though not tight. This effectually disposes of the argument that they had been left off to allow the cement to harden. All the tanks had been cemented; presumably all must be equally dry. If it be assumed that the one which leaked was the last to be cemented, both plates would have been left off for purposes of ventilation. To set one and not make it tight, and to leave the other on the tank top, was the one thing to demonstrate, not deliberation, but neglect. Furthermore, the leak was discovered only through the prying of a curious eooley who broached the hatch to the mam hold and went below. Certainly if the engineer had understood that he was to leave off all the plates till he filled at Hongkong, he was a curiously shiftless officer. He was not called, nor was his absence accounted for, an omission which under the circumstances bears very heavily against the ship, for he was the officer in complete charge of this part of the ship’s management.

-Against this there is only the master’s word that he had directed the engineer to leave off the covers till the ship reached Hongkong, when he was to reset them and fill. Ignoring the engineer’s failure to confirm this, and his disregard of it as to three out of four of the tanks, the master’s own report, made the very day of the accident, completely disposes of his testimony. In it he says that the engineer had gone down at Shanghai while the coolies were putting on the plates and “that he thought same were securely put on and made tight.” He had not noticed “that anything was wrong with the manhole plates on the tank.” Again, “these tanks being empty until we arrived here this morning, when the procedure of filling the tanks commenced about nine o’clock and the usual way of filling fresh water was done.” It is impossible to add to the conclusiveness of this language. It is evident that the ship’s officers supposed that all the plates were tight at Shanghai, meant to make them so and failed as to two, probably through the slackness of the supervision over the coolies by the local port staff.

In The Steel Navigator (C. C. A.) 23 F. (2d) 590, our main discussion was on the hypothesis that the officers supposed the manhole plates to have been finally set at Batavia. Even so we considered the ship not unseaworthy, because the fitness of the tank at Batavia was only for the latex, and the latex was cancelled at Singapore. As it did not appear that water would certainly, be substituted for latex, we thought the failure at Batavia to make fast the plate could not affect her seaworthiness. If however the officers supposed the ship to be ready for the latex at Batavia and in fact she was.not, she was in fact unfit at that port for her proposed voyage. Seaworthiness is a condition' upon the excuse given by section three of the Harter Act (46 USCA § 192); the suit was not upon the breach of warranty, and the ship had therefore to be seaworthy in general. If the Steel Navigator was unseaworthy at Batavia, it is a little hard to see how the cancellation of the consignment "at Singapore could affect that fact; the condition required by section three never existed. We now prefer therefore to rest that decision upon the fact that the officers did not intend finally to prepare the tank for latex at Batavia. In the ease at bar, having found that the Polk got the tanks finally ready at Shanghai, and expected to do nothing more about them, their fitness at that port was the critical issue.' They were eoncededly unfit, and the ship was unseaworthy. International [697]*697Navigation Co. v. Parr, 181 U. S. 218, 226, 227, 21 S. Ct. 591, 45 L. Ed. 830.

A second defense depends upon provisions in the bills of lading that “all claims *' ° * for any loss of or damage to * merchandise shall be presented * 'within ten days after discharge; * * * and no suit on any such claim so presented or to recover for any such loss or damage shall be maintained unless summons or other process be served " “ within thirty days from and after the day and .date that such claim be so presented.” The injury to the bales was discovered on May 10, 1926, and an effort was at once made to separate the dry from the wet. The last, twenty-four in all,' were reconditioned ashore, as best the claimant could, were forwarded upon another ship of the line, The President Adams, reached New York on July fifteenth, and were delivered on July twenty-second. Meanwhile the Polk had arrived in New York on July first, where, she delivered the supposedly sound skins, fifty-six bales, on July fifteenth. Either at the outturn or in conditioning it was, however, discovered that four of these had been wetted and were injured; this damage forms a part of the claim.

On May thirteenth the claimant wrote from Shanghai telling Stein of the injury to the twenty-four bales which were to be reconditioned and go forward on the Adams. Later it apparently advised him of the Polk’s arrival on July first, in answer to which Stein wrote on July second that he trusted the separation of the dry from the wet bales at Shanghai had been successful, but that he doubted it, and that ‘in view of the possible damage to the shipment now arriving, we ■wish to notify you that we will hold you responsible for any loss that may be found upon delivery to us, as well as any loss which may later be determined after the hides have been put through process.” This was the only daim for “loss or damage”; the suit was started on October twenty-third.

The claimant argues, first, that a claim made before delivery does not satisfy the bill of lading, and, second, that the suit was not begun within thirty days after presentation of the claim. It does not suggest that the letter of July second was directed only to the skins arriving on the Polk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 F.2d 695, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 3936, 1930 A.M.C. 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-president-polk-ca2-1930.