The Saigon Maru

267 F. 881, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1013
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 16, 1920
DocketNo. 7467
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 267 F. 881 (The Saigon Maru) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Saigon Maru, 267 F. 881, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1013 (D. Or. 1920).

Opinion

WOLVERTON, District Judge.

This is a libel, instituted by the Pacific Export Lumber Company against the Japanese steamer Saigon Maru, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the libelant by reason of the vessel’s having refused to carry a full deck load of sawn lumber, which it had by charter party contracted to do.

On or about March 19, 1917, libelant and claimant, Osaka Shosen Kaisha, entered into a charter party, whereby libelant chartered the Saigon Maru to carry a full cargo of lumber or timber, including a full deck load, from a port on the Columbia or the Willamette river to Bombay, India. Pursuant to the charter party, the steamer came to Portland, and here received on board a full cargo of lumber within her hold, and 241,559 feet, board measure, on her deck, but refused to take any further amount.

The libelant, claiming that the vessel could safely carry on deck on her voyage 750,000 feet, and was about to depart without taking on the full cargo which she had contracted to carry, instituted this libel to recover the damages which libelant would sustain by reason of such default on the part of the ship. Libelant bases its damages upon loss of profits on its sale of dumber to lumber merchants in Bombay, that is to say, upon the portion sold and not delivered, and its liability to such lumber merchants for failure to deliver to them the amount contracted to be delivered at Bombay, relying upon the due fulfillment of the charter party on the part of the ship, for transportation of the lumber to that port, as agreed. Among other things, it is alleged that libelant had sold the cargo.of lumber to be carried to Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co., Bombay; the amount being 5,500 tons, 10 per cent, more or less, so that the minimum quantity to be delivered under the contract was 4,950 tons; that the owners and agents of the Saigon Maru knew, when they chartered her to libelant, that libelant had sold the cargo in Bombay, and was chartering the vessel for. the express purpose of transporting such cargo to Bombay, and that a certain portion of said cargo would consist of timbers of long lengths.

[883]*883[1] The vessel having agreed to carry a full cargo of lumber, including a full deck load, the question to be settled is whether she was of sufficient capacity to carry safely the amount on deck that libelant claims she should have carried, or any greater amount than she did carry, having in view the voyage which she undertook to make.

The Saigon Maru is a tramp steamer, in length 354 feet, breadth of beam 50.3, and depth of hold 28.2, with gross tonnage of 4,354, and net 2,740. The route of the voyage took the vessel through the North Pacific Ocean to Nagasaki, Japan, thence through the Strait of Formosa and the China Sea to Singapore, thence through the Strait of Malacca, by Achin Head, and through the Indian Ocean, up the coast by Colombo, and thence on to Bombay. The vessel left Portland June 5th, and arrived at Nagasaki July 2, at 2:30 p. m. She proceeded on her voyage July 4th, at 5 a. m., and arrived at Singapore July 17th, at 2:15 p. m. She weighed anchor at 5:30, and proceeded on to Bombay, arriving there at 12:50 p. m. August 2d. Her voyage took her through the North Pacific at th¡e quiet season of the year, when rough seas were not to be expected', through the China Sea at a season when typhoons were to be expected, and through the Indian Ocean in the monsoon season. The voyage, however, was made without incident, or the encountering of unusual stress of weather anywhere on the route; the log indicating at the worst, “Sea rather rough,” with a wind velocity of from 4 to 5.

The libelant produced, in support of its contention that the vessel did not take on a full deck load of lumber, Captains Emile C. Genereaux,. Andrew Hoben, and W. C. McNaught, all marine surveyors of long experience in that line, as well as upon the sea in various capacities. All these men were present while the ship was taking on her cargo, and made a survey of her as to her seaworthiness. Genereaux and Hoben were of the opinion that she could have safely carried 700,000 feet of lumber on deck. The former seemed to have no doubt of it, while the latter was more conservative, but nevertheless rather firm in his view that such a load would not have endangered her navigation on the voyage. Capt. McNaught said:

“I considered, owing to the dimensions of the ship, that she ought not to have had less than 600,000 feet of lumber, not less, and then not been near to her marks, and had plenty of stability; possibly 700,000, I wouldn't say, but not less than 600,000 feet of lumber, * * * minimum deck load for ship of that size and dimensions.”

These men were handicapped in determining what the stability of the vessel would have been with such a deck load upon her, for the reason that the captain of the vessel positively refused to permit any more lumber to be put aboard than the deck load with which she went to sea, nor would he allow any of the usual tests to be made to determine the vessel’s stability as the loading continued.

Henry Rothschild, president and manager of Brown & McCabe, stevedores, who had loaded many lumber cargoes for all parts of the world, was of the view that the Saigon Maru should have carried 400,000 or 500,000 feet more in her deck load, “compared,” as he says,, “with other vessels that we have loaded.”

[884]*884Mr. W. D. Wheelwright, president of the libelant company, who has had long experience in shipping lumber to the Orient and the west coast of South America, and0 elsewhere, was of the opinion that the Saigon Maru should have carried, at that season of the year, a minimum deck load of 750,000 feet. He also gives a list of four vessels, of similar dimensions to the Saigon Maru, which carried deck loads ranging from 620,175 to 854,308 feet, being an average of 743,587 feet.

The stanchions were first put in, of sufficient length to accommodate the larger deck load. The captain directed these to be sawed off to suit the load which he had made up his mind to take. It should be observed in this connection that Capt. Hoben and Capt. McNaught, and perhaps Genereaux, had had large experience as seamen in the China Sea and the Indian Ocean, and, of course, had in mind the vessel’s intended voyage. Capt. McNaught, in speaking of these seas for the months of June, July, and August, was of the view that they were not worse than numerous other parts of the oceans of the world, or that the storms are much more frequent.

Besides the cargo of lumber, the vessel carried 500 tons of coal on deck, 200 tons between decks, and somewhat over 500 tons in her hold. To be more particular, she left port with from 1,210 to 1,220 tons aboard. Her trimming tanks were all full; also her fresh-water tanks, except one small one, of 18 tons capacity, which was partially filled. These tanks have a capacity of 901 tons.

The captain’s.reasons for not taking more cargo on deck were two, namely: That the terrible seas through which he had to navigate would not permit of it, and that a higher deck load was liable to interfere yvith his steering rodfe, and thereby endanger the ship and cargo. The steering rods are carried, one on either side of the ship, on iron stanchions extended “approximately 3 feet 6 inches above the- bulwark” rail, and strengthened by stays, some running from the bulwark rail and some from the deck, which the captain describes as very strong. The bulwark rail is about 4 feet in height.

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Related

San Juan Trading Co. v. Marmex
107 F. Supp. 253 (D. Puerto Rico, 1952)
Guinness v. Miller
291 F. 769 (S.D. New York, 1923)
Osaka Shosen Kaisha v. Pacific Export Lumber Co.
260 U.S. 490 (Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
267 F. 881, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-saigon-maru-ord-1920.