The Shand

21 F. Cas. 1155, 10 Ben. 294
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1155 (The Shand) 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 Shand, 21 F. Cas. 1155, 10 Ben. 294 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a libel by the Donner & De Castro Sugar Refining Company, the owners of part of the cargo of the ship Shand, against the ship and her owners, to recover damages on account of her failure to deliver her cargo in good order and condition, pursuant to the stipulations of her bills of lading. She shipped at Manila, among other goods, 34,742 mats of sugar, weighing about 2,430,940 pounds, and sailed from that port for New York on the 1st day of August, 1876. The sugar was stowed in the lower hold and properly stowed, and dun-naged. It was shipped under bills of lading which acknowledged its receipt in good order and condition, and stipulated for its delivery in New York in like good order and condition, “all and every the dangers and accidents of the seas and navigation of whatsoever kind excepted.” The ship delivered in New York only 31,663 mats weighing about 1,008,863 pounds. As to the 3,079 mats not delivered it appeared that they were jettisoned at sea; and the loss of weight in the mats that were delivered was about 1.206,545 pounds. And for this failure to deliver and this loss of weight the suit is brought. The libel charges “that the said ship and her owners have failed to keep and perform the contracts in | said bills of lading contained or to deliver the | said sugars in conformity therewith; but on the contrary, by reason of carelessness and negligence on the part of said ship and her owners, and their servants or agents, a large part of said sugars were totally lost and a large portion of the remainder delivered in a damaged condition.” The answer alleges | that part of the sugar was necessarily jetti- ¡ soned to save the ship and cargo and the lives of those on board, and that all the sugar which was lost or destroyed or jettisoned or which was not delivered was lost, destroyed or not delivered solely from the causes excepted in the bills of lading, and not from any fault, negligence or carelessness on the part of the ship and her owners, or their servants or agents. The answer further alleges in excuse of the damage to the cargo that the ship sprung a leak on the voyage, by reason of violent storms and stress of weather, and that the damage was the residí of this leak.

The proofs are sufficient to show that when the ship left Manila she was tight, staunch and strong. It is true that no evidence is given of any survey or examination made before her sailing, nor of any survey or examination of her hull after her discharge in New York to account for or u> show the nature [1156]*1156and position of fhe leak which she undoubtedly had in her upon her arrival; but the un-contradicted testimony of her master and mate as to her condition, and the fact that she was several months at sea and encountered considerable rough weather before a leak of any importance appeared, and that the leak did appear only after she met with very tempestuous weather, sufficient to account for the injury to a good ship, are clearly proof enough that she was seaworthy at the time of her sailing. ■ The proofs also are sufficient to show that the circumstances of danger under which part of the cargo was jettisonéd were such as justified the act, and that it was done under reasonable apprehension on the part of the master that the ship might founder, and for the purpose of cheeking the leak and for the safety of all concerned. As to that part of the loss, therefore, the defence is clearly made out and the libel-lants have no claim.

From the timé the ship was off Cape Bat-ieras she encountered very heavy weather and the crew were kept constantly at the pumps, and even after the jettison of part of the cargo the leak continued. On the night of the 25th of December, 1876, she took the pilot, being then about sixty miles S. S. E. of Sandy Hook. She came to anchor at quarantine about midnight of the 26th. Her crew were exhausted with constant working at the pumps. The captain and the pilot had thought it necessary to call to their assistance two tugs to bring her in, and they had done so. From quarantine the master telegraphed to the consignees of the ship, Grin-nell, Minturn & Co., of New York, for a fresh gang of men to work the pumps. At 5 o’clock in the morning of the 27th and again at S14 o’clock, the pumps were sounded. At the first sounding they found nearly nine feet of water, and at the second sounding within an inch of ten feet. The depth of the hold from the platform on which the sugar was stowed, to the deck beams, was eleven feet and seven inches, and from the bottom to the platform, three feet and four inches. The ship left quarantine about noon on the 27th, and soon after leaving, took on board a fresh gang of men to work the pumps, and from the time they arrived they were able to control the leak with the ship’s pumps. She arrived at -Martin’s stores shortly after noon of the 27th of December, with ten feet of water in her hold. There is considerable conflict of testimony as to the amount of water in the ship before her arrival at quarantine. The pilot, testifying from his recollection as to the behavior of the ship, and from his apprehensions lest she should founder, and also from his recollection as to the reports of the soundings, makes the depth of water eleven feet on the afternoon of the 26th. and six feet at five in the morning of that day; but he is evidently mistaken as to The amount, as appears by the log and the testimony of the master and mate. The captain testified to the cor-reetness of the entry in his log, which shows that on Wednesday, the 27th of December, they sounded and found six feet four inches. He says this was very early in the morning and that there was no time before that when they had so much water in her as that. The evidence shows that the water had been gaining in consequence of the exhaustion of the crew, till it reached a maximum of about ten feet, and that the leak was such that fresh men at the ship’s pumps were able to hold it in check.

That a very considerable damage to the cargo of sugar had been done by sea water at the time of the ship’s arrival at the pier is very evident. A large part of the sugar had been submerged in the water for nearly twenty-four hours, and this must have resulted in great wastage of the sugar. It is claimed by the libellants that the evidence does not warrant the conclusion that before Wednesday the -water ever rose higher than the bottom of the cargo. But even that quantity of water, with the ship rolling and tossing in a heavy sea, must have very seriously wet and washed the sugar in the lower part of the ship. As soon as possible after her arrival at the pier, the consignees of the ship, upon the master’s report and application for aid, engaged the Coast Wrecking Company to send a steam pump, with sufficient men to work it, to the ship. This was done, and about eight or nine in the evening, the steam pump was got to work and worked continuously till three o’clock the next morning, when the pump sucked, having reduced the water to three feet and four inches, which was as low as its suction pipe reached. After the steam pump was got working the ship’s pumps were stopped.

For all the loss and damage to the cargo by the salt water up to the time that the ship was thus pumped out by the steam pump, the libellants have no claim against the ship and her owners. The cause of the injury was a peril of the sea, and upon the most rigorous rule of diligence which has ever been enforced against the ship or the master in the effort to resist and overcome the effect of the threatened danger, this ship and her master and crew had up to that time discharged their entire duty to the cargo. They had used their utmost endeavors to protect the cargo from the threatened peril.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1155, 10 Ben. 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-shand-nysd-1879.