The Santee

21 F. Cas. 411, 2 Ben. 519
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 411 (The Santee) 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 Santee, 21 F. Cas. 411, 2 Ben. 519 (S.D.N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

This libel is filed against the steamer Santee, to recover the sum of $5,000, as the value of thirteen bales of cotton shipped from Mobile to New York by that vessel. The libel-lants’ claim is founded on two bills of lading, one dated January 19, 1806, for seventy-two bales, and the other dated January 24, 1800, for seventy bales. The shipment was by Baker, Robbins & Co.; and each bill of lading specifies that the bales of cotton described in it (and the marks on which are given in the bills of lading) shall be delivered at the port of New York, the dangers of the seas, &e., excepted, to the libellants, Sawyer & Wallace, or their assigns. Each bill of lading also contains, following the foregoing delivery clause, these words; “It is expressly understood that the articles named in this bill of lading shall be at the risk of the owner, shipper, or consignee thereof, as soon as delivered from the tackles of the steamer at her port of destination (the collector of the port being hereby authorized to grant a general order of discharge immediately after the entry of the ship), and they shall be received either at New York or Brooklyn, by the consignee thereof, package by package,-as so delivered, and if not taken away the same day by him, they may (at the option of the steamer’s agents) be sent to store or permitted to lay where landed at the expense and risk of the aforesaid owner, shipper, or consignee.” The one hundred and forty-two bales were properly marked and numbered when they were shipped, with the same marks and numbers set forth in the bills of lading. The entire cargo was cotton, except that there was one bag of wool. There were, in all, on board, seven hundred and ten bales of cotton, shipped under bills of lading. On the arrival of the steamer at New York, the libellants paid the freight to the agents of the steamer, on the one hundred and forty-two bales of cotton, on the presentation of a bill therefor by such agents, and before any of the cotton was unladen from the vessel. Only one hundred and twenty-nine of the bales specified in the bills of lading came to the possession of the libellants. The whole one hundred and forty-two bales were unladen from the vessel at New York, and placed upon the wharf. After all the parties, except the libellants, who claimed cotton that was on board of the vessel, had removed from the wharf such cotton as they desired to remove, there remained on the wharf thirteen bales of cotton, but none of those bales corresponded, as to mark or number, with any of the bales consigned to the libellants, and it is clear, from the evidence, that no one of those thirteen bales was cotton consigned to the libellants. It is not denied by the claimant that the vessel was bound to deliver, under the bills of lading, the identical bales of cotton that were shipped. The claimant insists, however, that the responsibility of the vessel under the bills of lading was discharged by the unlading of the cotton specified in the bills of lading, from the vessel, and its de--posit on the wharf, after notice to the libel-lants of the arrival of the vessel and of the place where the cotton would be discharged. In regard to this point, not only did the li-bellants know of the arrival of the vessel, and pay the freight on the cotton, but it is shown that the libellants sent eartmen with carts to the wharf where the vessel was lying, to receive the cotton, before the vessel commenced to discharge the cargo. The li-bellants claim that the vessel failed to comply with the bills of lading, in not delivering the thirteen bales to the libellants, and in wrongfully delivering them to some other party. No evidence is given to show what became of those thirteen bales. The libellants also claim that the special clause in the bills of lading does not relieve the vessel from liability; that the conditions contained in it are unreasonable and should not be enforced; that if the consignees were required under it to receive the cargo, package by package, then the entire cotton on board should have been assorted on the vessel, and the lot belonging to each consignee should have been delivered by itself and at one time; that as, in this case, no separation was attempted until after the cotton was landed on the wharf, the consignees were thereby absolved from the duty of receiving the cotton package by package; and that, notwithstanding such special clause, the general rule is applicable to [413]*413this case, which requires that the different consignments in a cargo, shall, when discharged, be separated by the vessel, so as to render them accessible to their respective consignees. It is shown that in this case the cargo of cotton was unladen, bale by bale, as it came to hand, without reference to what consignment it belonged to; that the mate of the vessel, who had charge of the unlading of her, tried to separate the various consignments of cotton, and among others, the consignment of the libellants, after the bales were landed, and that receipts were required by the mate, and were given, for all the cotton that was removed from the wharf, before it was allowed by him to be removed. ■It is insisted by ■ the libellants that this course of conduct shows that the vessel claimed, retained, and exercised possession of the cotton after it was landed on the wharf; that, therefore, the mate, acting for the vessel, must have made a wrong delivery of the thirteen bales of cotton; and that the case is thereby taken out of the operation of the special clause in the bill of lading.

The special clause in question is, so far as my observation extends, one recently introduced into bills of lading, and I am not aware that any judicial construction has been given to it. The general law, in the case of an ordinary bill of lading, containing merely the usual clause for delivery to the consignee at the port named, is well established — that delivery on the wharf of the goods transported by the. vessel is sufficient, provided due notice be given to the consignee, and provided also the different consignments are properly separated so as to be open to inspection by their respective owners, and a fair opportunity is afforded to the consignee to remove his goods, but that the carrier is responsible for the value of the goods if he delivers them to the wrong person, even though by mistake or imposition. The Eddy, 5 Wall. [72 U. S.] 481, 495; Story, Bailm. § 545b; The Huntress [Case No. G.914], Under the ordinary bill of lading the due and proper separation of the goods by the carrier for the use of the consignee is an indispensable prerequisite, in addition to notice to the consignee of the time and place of delivery, to relieve the carrier from responsibility. 8 Kent, Comm. 215; The Eddy, above-cited; The Ben Adams [Case No. 1.289]. But, I think the rule is different in regard to a bill of lading containing the special clause in question. That clause seems to have been introduced in view of the law as settled in regard to what is required to constitute a delivery under an ordinary bill of lading. It seems to have been framed expressly to relieve the vessel from the responsibility of separating the different consignments on the wharf after they are unladen. It provides, first, that the cotton shall be at the risk of the consignee as soon as it shall be “delivered from the tackles” of the vessel, at New j York.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 411, 2 Ben. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-santee-nysd-1868.