The Tornado

108 U.S. 342, 2 S. Ct. 746, 27 L. Ed. 747, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1045
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 30, 1883
Docket237
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 108 U.S. 342 (The Tornado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Tornado, 108 U.S. 342, 2 S. Ct. 746, 27 L. Ed. 747, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1045 (1883).

Opinion

108 U.S. 342 (1883)

THE TORNADO.
ELLIS & Others
v.
ATLANTIC MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY.

Supreme Court of United States.

Decided April 30th, 1883.
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA.

Mr. Thomas J. Semmes and Mr. Richard De Gray for the appellants.

Mr. P. Phillips, Mr. J. McConnell, and Mr. W. Hallett Phillips for appellees.

*343 MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a libel in admiralty against cargo of the ship Tornado, brought by the master and owners of that vessel, to recover freight money. The district court and, on appeal, the circuit court, dismissed the libel. The libellants have appealed to this court. The material facts found by the circuit court are these: On the 24th of February, 1878, the ship, while moored at the wharf in New Orleans, and bound on a voyage to Liverpool, England, and before she had broken ground for said voyage, was discovered to be on fire in her hold. Her master had given bills of lading for the transportation from New Orleans to Liverpool, with the exceptions usual in bills of lading, of 5,195 bales of cotton, of which 5,008 had been put on board, 164 were on the levee, and 23 had not reached the levee. Water was pumped into the ship to extinguish the fire, and, on the 26th, near six o'clock P.M., being filled with water, she sank to the bottom of the river alongside of the wharf, a part of her bulwarks remaining above water. While so resting upon the bottom of the river, the ship, cargo and freight were, on the 27th, libelled in the district court, for salvage, by the New Harbor Protection Company, and about two o'clock P.M. of that day the marshal, by virtue of a warrant of seizure issued by said court on said libel, took possession of the ship and cargo. On the 28th, about noon, the ship was pumped out and raised alongside the wharf, and the discharge of the cargo on board was commenced, all of it being damaged by water, and some of it by fire, 336 bales having been removed by the salvors in an undamaged condition before the ship sank but after the fire was discovered; but salvage was claimed and allowed on the entire cargo. On the same day, the proctor for the salvors filed in the district court a motion in writing, suggesting that the whole cargo then being discharged from the ship was greatly damaged by water and some of it by fire and water, and would in all probability have ultimately to be sold, being in an unfit condition to be sent to its destination, and an order of the court was thereupon made directing a sale of the cargo by the marshal upon the levee as it came out of the ship, on two days' advertisement, in such lots as might *344 accumulate from day to day. On the same day an application was made to the court by the master of the ship, in which he represented that he was desirous and entitled to bond the ship and cargo, and asked for a rule upon the libellant to show cause on the next day, March 1st, why the order to sell the cargo should not be rescinded, and the master be allowed to bond the cargo. On March 1st the rule came on for hearing. The proctor for the salvors, and counsel representing the insurers of the cargo, appeared and resisted the rescinding of the order of sale, and counsel appeared for the master, who filed a formal claim to the ship and cargo. On the trial of the rule witnesses were examined orally before the judge, among them various representatives of the underwriters on the cargo, who were called as witnesses by the proctor for the salvors, and who testified that if their interest were to be consulted they preferred that the cotton should be sold by the marshal as it came out of the ship, and that the master should not be permitted to bond the cotton. The counsel for the insurers of the cargo then asked leave to be heard on their behalf. To this the counsel for the master and claimant objected, and insisted that counsel for the underwriters on the cargo could not be heard until after the proof of abandonment to them by the owners of the cargo and acceptance of the abandonment. Thereupon Mr. Palfrey, president of the Factors' and Traders' Insurance Company of New Orleans, which was one of the companies represented by said counsel, and one of the witnesses who had been called to the stand as above stated, was recalled by said counsel and testified that so far as his company was concerned the loss on the cargo had been paid or ordered to be paid, and said company had become the owner of the cotton insured by it, and abandonment thereof had been made and accepted by his company. After this said counsel was allowed to and did make an oral argument in behalf of the underwriters, in opposition to the motion to rescind the order to sell which had been obtained by the salvors, but no pleadings were filed in behalf of the underwriters. Upon the trial of the rule evidence was also taken, by order of the court, in relation to the condition of the cargo, and whether the same was or was not a total loss. On *345 March 5th, and before the district court had made any decision or order on the rule to rescind the order for the sale of the cotton, a proctor representing underwriters at Lloyds, by leave of the court, filed an intervention for the interest of the insurers of the freight on the cargo, in which it was prayed that the order for the sale of the cargo be rescinded. This intervention was supported by affidavits filed by the intervenors and by a brief of the proctor. Afterwards, on March 6th, after consideration of the rule taken by the master of the ship to rescind the order of sale, and of the evidence and arguments thereon, and of the last named intervention, and of the affidavits and brief submitted therewith, the court ordered that the master be allowed to bond the ship and such of the cotton then stored in the levee steam cotton-press as was in good order, amounting to 523 bales, and that the remainder of the cargo on board the ship or upon the levee, which was more or less damaged, be sold by the marshal after three days' notice, and all questions of freight were reserved by the court, and the court appointed a trinity master to advise and assist in making sale of the cotton. On the 19th of March, the underwriters filed their claim, claiming all of the cargo, and procured an order from the judge of the district court to be entered on their claim, suspending the right given to the master, on the 6th of March, to bond such of the cotton as was stored in the levee cotton-press, to wit, about 500 bales, until the further order of the court. On March 26th, the master not having bonded the cotton, a rule was taken and duly served on him to show cause why the order of March 6th, so far as it allowed him to bond a portion of the cotton, should not be rescinded, and the movers of the rule, the insurers of the cargo, be allowed to bond the same. The rule was heard on March 27th, the movers of the rule and the master being represented by their respective counsel, and was by the court made absolute, without opposition, and the order allowing the master to bond said portion of the cargo was rescinded, and the movers of the rule were allowed to bond the same.

On the 30th of March, the present libel was filed. The unsold cargo and the proceeds of that which had been sold *346 were then in the custody of the marshal, in the suit for salvage.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re GRAND JURY PROCEEDINGS
744 F.3d 211 (First Circuit, 2014)
Hilton Oil Transp. v. Oil Transp. Co.
659 So. 2d 1141 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1995)
Wong Wing Fai Company, S.A. v. United States
840 F.2d 1462 (Ninth Circuit, 1988)
American Tobacco Company v. Goulandris
173 F. Supp. 140 (S.D. New York, 1959)
L. N. Jackson & Co. v. Royal Norwegian Government
177 F.2d 694 (Second Circuit, 1949)
Wood v. Bartolino
146 P.2d 883 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1944)
Linea Sud-Americana, Inc. v. 7,295.40 Tons of Linseed
29 F. Supp. 210 (S.D. New York, 1939)
Megan v. Updike Grain Corporation
94 F.2d 551 (Eighth Circuit, 1938)
Tulsa Opera House Co. v. Mitchell
1933 OK 469 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1933)
Clifford v. Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corporation
57 F.2d 1021 (Fifth Circuit, 1932)
Duluth Superior Milling Co. v. American Linseed Co.
212 N.W. 200 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1927)
The Capitaine Faure
10 F.2d 950 (Second Circuit, 1926)
Cooper & Cooper, Inc. v. Cameron
10 F.2d 950 (Second Circuit, 1926)
Ellamar Mining Co. v. Alaska S. S. Co.
5 F.2d 890 (Ninth Circuit, 1925)
Donlan v. Turner, Dennis & Lowry Lumber Co.
282 F. 421 (Ninth Circuit, 1922)
H. Hackfeld Co., Ltd. v. Castle
198 P. 1041 (California Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 U.S. 342, 2 S. Ct. 746, 27 L. Ed. 747, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-tornado-scotus-1883.