The Strathdon

94 F. 206, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 29, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 F. 206 (The Strathdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Strathdon, 94 F. 206, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117 (E.D.N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

On November 1, 1893, the ship Strath-don, bound from Java to Mew York, while passing through the Suez Canal, was set on lire between decks by the overheating of the donkey boiler, through die neglect of the man in charge thereof, and without the personal negligence of the ship owners. The means employed to extinguish the lire caused the losses which are the subject of adjustment in this action, which is brought by the owners of the cargo, which is a single interest, to recover contribution from the ship owners. The facts are fully stated in the action between the same parlies, involving the question of the carrier’s liability for the whole loss. See 89 Fed. 374. In that action the court adjudged that the claimants were free from negligence and liability. The present questions come up on exceptions to the report of a special commissioner, to whom all the issues in this action were referred. The commissioner determined: (1) That the questions in issue should be decided according to American law, although the ship was of English registry, and sailed under a charter party made in England, which stipulated for the application of the English law, and the observance for the purposes of average of the York-Antwerp Kales of 1890; (2) that the owners of the ship, on account of the negligent act of their servant, whereby the fire occurred, cannot recover contribution, from the cargo owners for the ship’s losses, and that, as a consequence, no action can be maintained against the ship owners for contribution towards the Josses' of cargo. The conclusion reached by the court renders it unnecessary to review the finding of the commissioner that the question in issue should be decided according to the American law. The following discussion relates (1) to the claimants’ contention that no action whatever can be maintained against the ship owners for contribution towards the losses of cargo; (2) to the claim of the owners of the cargo that the losses of the ship owners must be excluded from the adjustment, in case one be directed. As to the first inquiry, the claimants’ position is this: If the fire had not been caused by the negligence of the person in charge of the donkey boiler, the owner of the ship would have been liable to contribute in general average towards the losses of the cargo; but, as the fire was caused by the negligence of the person in charge of the donkej boiler, the carriers (owners of the ship), under The Irrawaddy Case, 171 U. S. 187, 18 Sup. Ct. 831, could not recover contribution for [208]*208their losses-from the cargo, and that, as a consequence, the cargo owners cannot recover contribution towards cargo losses from the carriers. This contention of the claimants is not approved. It is true that under The Irrawaddy Case the carriers could not affirmatively demand contribution, because, notwithstanding the exculpation from the payment of damages for the loss of cargo accorded them by the fire and Harter acts, they are deemed guilty of constructive negligence when they seek to recover contribution for the ship’s losses. But this imputed negligence does not exempt them from an action for contribution in general average at the instance of the cargo owner for cargo loss. The cargo owner has such action if the carriers be free from such imputed negligence; and can it be asserted logically that the carriers, when free from negligence, are liable to the cargo owners, but that this liability is discharged because the carriers are negligent, and such negligence caused the loss? According to such a contention, it is better to be negligent than unoffending. By it the carrier may plead his own wrong to escape an obligation that would be due from him, if he were without fault. The contention that a debtor, may absolve himself from a debt by showing that his wrong was the occasion of the obligation violates essential principles, and cannot be otherwise than vicious. Without further discussion, the conclusion respecting the first inquiry is that the owner of the cargo may maintain an action for contribution for the losses of the cargo, although the carriers could not have maintained a similar action for the ship’s losses. Thereupon the second inquiry arises: What losses should go into the adjustment, — the cargo losses.alone, or both the ship’s and cargo’s losses? Now, the libelants’ contention is that, as the carriers could not assert a claim for contribution, the owners of the cargo (there is a single ownership of the cargo) may invite an adjustment, and exclude the carriers from any beneficial participation, but, on the other hand, impose upon them the burden of contribution. This contention is based upon the theory that the status of the carriers is that of wrongdoers, whether they seek or are invited to a general average adjustment. For the purpose of reaching a correct conclusion the principles underlying general average may be considered briefly. When, in a sea adventure, the master of the ship, or some person-of equivalent authority, voluntarily and necessarily makes a sacrifice of the ship or cargo, in whole or in part, for the purpose and with the result of saving the residue, or the lives of those on board, from a common, impending peril, the ship, cargo, and freight earned must contribute proportionally to the part thereof saved towards making good the loss suffered and the expenses necessarily incurred thereby. The contribution is called general, gross, or -extraordinary average. The Star of Hope, 9 Wall. 203; 3 Kent, Comm. p. 232; Ord. de la Mar. (1683) bk. 3, tit. 7, and arts. 1-3; Birkley v. Presgrave, 1 East, 220, 228; Walthew v. Mavrojani, L. R. 5 Exch. 116, 120. The broad and equitable nature of the rule primarily contemplates ratable contribution from all interests saved towards all interests sacrificed. 1 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. p. 338; Ben. Adm. p. 166, [209]*209§ 295; Abb. Shipp. (13th Ed.) p. 635; Id. (5th Ed.) pp. 347, 348. The spirit and intention of this law is to place the persons interested, as far as may be, in the same relative position which they occupied before the peril was met, or “in order to recoup the loser, and place him once more on a footing with his co-adventurers.” Macl. Shipp. (4th Ed.) p. 688. This intendment involves necessarily reciprocity of obligation and right, mutuality in taking and receiving payment. But, as stated by Judge Brown in Heye v. North German Lloyd, 33 Fed. 60, 64, while “reciprocity is undoubtedly the ordinary rule in general average,” there are exceptions to this “reciprocity of right and obligation,” as in the case o£ cargo carried on deck (The Paragon, 1 Ware, 322 [see annotations to same in 18 Fed. Cas. 1,085]; Triplet v. Van Name, 2 Cranch, C. C. 332, Fed. Cas. No. 14,176; Heye v. North German Lloyd, 33 Fed. 60, 65),goods shipped without the master’s knowledge, the; baggage of passengers, clothes of seamen, provisions for the ship, and munitions of war (Id.). These exceptions all turn upon the nature of the goods, the place or circumstance of their carriage. Is there another exception, based on the cause of the impending danger, and the relation thereto of the person whose goods are sacrificed? If the fault of the owner of the ship or cargo was the proximate cause of the peril, he could not invoke the benefit of the law of general average. But when he is brought in at the instance of the cargo owner, his fault, if it existed, was not formerly a matter of consideration. This happened for reasons now to be stated. In Carv. Carr, by Sea, § 373a, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
94 F. 206, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-strathdon-nyed-1899.