The Progreso

103 F. 504, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 314
CourtDistrict Court, D. Washington
DecidedJuly 3, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 103 F. 504 (The Progreso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Progreso, 103 F. 504, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 314 (washd 1900).

Opinion

HANFORD, District Judge.

The libelant, in his capacity as receiver of the Seattle & Yukon Steamship Company, an insolvent corporation, commenced this suit to recover damages for losses to said corporation alleged to have been caused by the breach of a contract by which the steamship Progreso was chartered for the purpose of carrying passengers and freight between Seattle and SI. Michaels dining the season of 1898. The firm of D. R. Campbell & Sons have come into tire case as interveners, on the ground that, by virtue of an assignment of the charter party made to them as security for [506]*506money loaned to the Seattle & Yukon Steamship Company, they are entitled to any damages which may he recoverable. It is admitted that the charterer paid to the owners of the steamship the full amount of money stipulated to be paid for the first voyage, and that the steamer was dispatched to St. Michaels with passengers and freight taken on board at Seattle, Vancouver, and Victoria. The owners defend on the ground that the Seattle & Yukon Steamship Company made contracts with passengers and shippers for through transportation from Seattle, Vancouver, and Victoria, via St. Michaels, to Dawson City and other points on the Yukon river, and failed to make adequate arrangements for carrying the passengers and freight beyond St. Michaels, and when the Progreso arrived at St. Michaels the landing of her passengers and freight was not permitted until arrangements were made for carrying them up the river, so that the ship was detained an unreasonable time at St. Michaels, and her master was compelled to incur very heavy expenses. The court has had a wearisome task, in having to digest over 2,000 typewritten pages of testimony and a quantity of documents submitted as evidence, presenting a vast amount of details, with most tedious repetitions and reiterations; but, after all, the case must be determined upon a few important and salient facts, which are as follows: The Seattle & Yukon Steamship Company attempted to do a large and lucrative business without capital other than its pretentious name, the energy of its promoters, and $70,000 borrowed from a manufacturing firm in the state of Maine. The Progreso was chartered to run from Seattle to St. Michaels, and a. contract was made with a shipbuilding firm in Seattle to sell to the company three river steamboats which were being built at Seattle, and were to be delivered at St. Michaels. These boats were partly paid for, and the balance of the purchase price, $68,000, was to be paid on delivery.. With these facilities and preparations, the company commenced advertising and soliciting business, and passenger tickets were sold, without any regard to fixed rates, to about 240 fortune seekers, 157 of whom paid for through transportation, via 'St. Michaels, to Dawson City, and other points along the Yukon river; and about 1,000 tons of freight was received, more than half of which was for delivery at Dawson) City. The money borrowed from' the interveners and collected from passengers was mostly expended in making partial payments for the river boats, in fitting, equipping, and supplying the Progreso for her first trip, and for the general expenses of the company. When the steamer was dispatched, she had on board 250 tons of coal, which the company had bought as a cash purchase, but for which no payment was made, and several other lots of merchandise of which the company obtained possession without making payment. A comparatively small amount of freight was to be collected at St. Michaels, part of it was payable at Victoria or Vancouver upon the return of certificates showing delivery of the goods at Dawson City, and a considerable part of it was payable only from proceeds of the cargo after it had been sold. Mr. Grayson, as an agent of the company, was sent on the Progreso, with about $5,000 in money, and drafts to the amount of $35,000 drawn upon the auditor of the insolvent company, who had been previously sent to [507]*507the Yukon river with a quantity of merchandise for sale, the value of which, I have not been able to ascertain from the evidence. This agent and the officers of the company knew at the time of his departure that with the means at his command he could not make payment for the river boats, and they had no expectation of securing them. It was necessary to persuade the builders to deliver one or more of the boats unpaid for, or else raise sufficient money by collections of freight and by the sale of tickets for return passage from St. Michaels to Seattle to cover the expenses of landing the passengers and cargo, and forwarding the same up the river, or else the company must necessarily fail to perform its contracts for transjiortation of passengers and freight to points beyond St. Michaels. The passengers could not he landed and abandoned at that inhospitable place, because the United States military officers there would not permit vessels to discharge passengers for whom no provisions had been made for habitations or for transportation to their places of destination. The managing officers of the company had no right to expect that Mr. Grayson would be able io make any terms at Bt. Michaels with the,boat builders to get possession of all or either of the river boats contracted for, because the general manager of the company had been distinctly warned by the shipbuilding company that payment as stipulated in the contract, at the time of delivery of the boats, would be exacted. See Campbell v. Moran Bros. Co., 38 C. C. A. 293, 97 Fed. 477. The evidence convinces me that failure to perform the company’s contracts with its passengers and shippers was the only possible outcome of the venture. The general manager of the company knew before the ship left Victoria that the company had failed to make adequate provisions for fulfilling its passenger and freight contracts, and that it was unable to do so. Soon after leaving Victoria the passengers became suspicious, and during (he run northward there was continual discussion among them, and threatening demonstrations were made towards Mr. Grayson, who realized that, as the representative of the defaulting company, he was the object of their wrath, and that he would probably be lynched at St. Michaels unless he could-in some way elude these victims of misplaced confidence. As wras natural under the circumstances, he hastened to get ashore on arrival at St. Michaels, and immediately arranged to return fo Beattie on the first vessel to depart. 'Capt. Gilboy, commander of the Progreso, was prompt and resolute in grasping the situation. Before arrival at Bt. Michaels he informed Grayson that the company’s charter would be terminated as soon as (he Progreso anchored at St. Michaels, and on the day of her arrival he caused the arrest of Grayson, and, by threatening him with a criminal prosecution, compelled him to execute an assignment of all the supplies and property belonging to the company which was then in the Progreso, and the freight hills. After securing all that Grayson had to turn over, except the cash, the captain made his own arrangements for getting the passengers and cargo landed and forwarded up the Yukon river. He was obliged to deal with a clear case of necessity. The passengers had to be carried up the river, for the reason that there was no other way to get them out of the ship and free her so she could return; [508]*508and the captain was the only person at the place authorized to hypothecate the ship, which was the principal available resource. He had to secure a river boat, and purchase fuel and provisions necessary for the trip, and for boarding the passengers and crew during the time of their necessary detention.

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Bluebook (online)
103 F. 504, 1900 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-progreso-washd-1900.