The Star of Hope

22 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Hask. 36
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 1099 (The Star of Hope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Star of Hope, 22 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Hask. 36 (D. Me. 1866).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This charter-party was executed at Boston, on Thursday, the 27th of April, 1865, and recites that the vessel, then in Boston, was chartered for a voyage from Farmingdale, in Maine, to Fort Gaines, or Mobile. Ala., the owners covenanting that the brig should be kept tight, staunch and strong during said voyage, and the charterers, that they would furnish cargo sufficient for the loading, — lumber on deck, ice in the hold, and would pay the gross sum of $4,250 freight for the voyage as stipulated. Lay-days were agreed upon and demurrage provided for. The contract also stipulated that “this charter shall commence when the vessel is ready to receive cargo at the place of loading, and notice given to the party of the second part, the dangers of the seas and navigation of every nature and kind mutually excepted;’’ these two stipulations being contained in the printed portion of the charter. The vessel sailed from Boston on Tuesday, May 1, and did not arrive at Farming-dale until the 24th of May.

The respondents contend, that by reason of this delay they were exonerated from all liability under the charter-party, that the usual time for this vessel to have made the passage to Farmingdale would not have exceeded five or six days, and that it was in the nature of an implied warranty or condition precedent that the vessel should have sailed forthwith from Boston, and should be at Farming-dale ready for her cargo within the time such vessels usually make the voyage, and that as she did not sail forthwith from Boston, and did not arrive seasonably, they are thereby discharged from their obligation to receive and load the vessel when she did arrive and report herself in readiness.

The charter-party stipulates “that the charter shall commence when the vessel is ready to receive cargo and notice thereof given to the charterers.” If this language is to be taken strictly and literally, I do not perceive [1100]*1100that there was any contract in force between the parties until the vessel arrived and reported at Farmingdale; and yet it would hardly be contended, in case this vessel had been sent on a different voyage by her owners, and the voyage contemplated by the charter-party entirely defeated, never commenced, that the owners would not have been accountable to the charterers for the damages sustained by them, and that they would have been justified in saying, the contract did not have any force or effect until the brig arrived at Farmingdale, and if it was for our interest to send her elsewhere, we had a right so to do without our incurring any liability to the other party by so doing.

In Lowber v. Bangs, 2 Wall. [69 U. S.] 728, which was an action for breach of a charter-party, Judge Swayne in delivering the opinion of the majority of the supreme court lays down the following rules, viz.: “That the construction to be put upon contracts of this sort depends upon the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the language of the individual instrument. All mercantile contracts ought to be construed according to the plain meaning to men of sense and understanding, and not according to forced and refined constructions which are intelligible only to lawyers, and scarcely to them. Contracts, when their meaning is not clear, are to be construed in the light of the circumstances surrounding the parties when they are made, and the practical interpretation which they by their conduct have given to the provisions in controversy.”

Guided by these rules, there can be no doubt, although there is no express agreement in this instrument that the vessel should proceed to Farmingdale, and although it is expressly stated' “that the charter shall commence when the vessel is reported ready to receive cargo at place of lading,” that the owners nevertheless were under an obligation, growing out of this charter-party, that their vessel should sail for Farmingdale, and that the respondents should furnish her a cargo, and that this stipulation, as to the commencement of the charter, must be limited in its application to the terms and provisions therein expressed, which would naturally take-effect and operate after the vessel’s arrival at Farmingdale, and she had. commenced loading under her charter.

No particular time being fixed by the agreement, either for the vessel’s sailing from Boston or her arrival at Farmingdale, the contract. in reference to these points being implied from the residue of the charter-party, what is the contract that the law implies these parties entered into? Is it, that the vessel, at the moment of the signing of the charter, is ready for sea and will sail forthwith, and will arrive within the usual time for such a voyage? Or is it, that the owners will use all diligence on their part, and as far forth as is in their power will expedite the purposes of the voyage, making no unreasonable delay in its commencement or deviation after the voyage has onee begun? Do the owners become insurers of the vessel’s arrival within the usual time, and of her readiness to receive her cargo? Or are they excused, if by the perils of the sea the vessel is delayed and the voyage protracted, if she aft-erwards completes her passage and offers to receive and carry forward the cargo to the port of destination; is there an implied warranty or condition precedent, as to the time of the vessel’s being ready to receive her cargo, when nothing of the kind is so expressed in the contract? If the owners had expressly stipulated that the vessel should be at Farmingdale on a day certain and report for cargo, no one will deny their power to have made such an agreement, or that the courts would hold them to its very letter, however unreasonable. But there is a clear distinction between express and implied obligations; as is well said, there is a distinction recognized by the courts between covenants implied by operation of law, and express covenants; the latter are taken more strictly, and for the reason, that when a party, by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself, he is bound to make it good, and is not excused, although prevented by inevitable necessity, because it is said he might have provided against it by his contract. On this ground it has been held, that if a ship be warranted to sail on or before a particular day, but is prevented from sailing on that day by an embargo, the warranty is not complied with., In the case of covenants implied by operation of law, if the party is disabled to perform without any default on his part, and has no remedy over, the law will excuse him. Fland. Shipp. 240, note. Upon general principles, in all contracts by charter-party, when there is no express agreement as to time, it is an implied stipulation that there should be no unreasonable or unusual delay in.commencing the voyage. If the clause in this charter-party relating to the commencement of the charter had been omitted, if the vessel sailed seasonably on the voyage to Farmingdale, and was delayed by tempestuous weather, or driven out of her course to Bermuda. the authorities are very clear that the respondents would not thereby have been excused from loading the vessel on her arrival at Farmingdale, the owners being without fault. The owner must repair his vessel as soon as he reasonably can, and the charterers must await her readiness. “The carrier is not responsible for delay on the voyage on account of boisterous weather, adverse winds or low tides, or the like. These are dangers and accidents of navigation, over which he has no control, and against which his contract contains no warranty.” Fland. Shipp. § 219.

In Clark v. Massachusetts, F. & M. Ins. Co., 2 Pick.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Hask. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-star-of-hope-med-1866.