The Venezuela

173 F. 834, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 F. 834 (The Venezuela) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.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 Venezuela, 173 F. 834, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166 (W.D.N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

This is a libel in rem to recover a balance due for work and labor performed upon the steamer Venezuela, and furnishing said steamer, pursuant to written contract, two furnaces with cast-iron fronts, together with breeching and smokestack, at the agreed price of $2,9(53; also for supplying a new blowpipe for the boiler, amounting to $90; and for extra work performed and money-expended in subsequently repairing furnaces at the ports of Cleveland and Bay City. The Davidson Steamship Company, claimant, has filed a cross-libel in personam, alleging a breach of contract, in that the work of fitting the steamer with new furnaces was not performed in a proper and workmanlike manner; that the furnaces constantly leaked, causing a loss of time and delay in the steamer’s navigation and trips. Such a counterclaim, when it is shown to relate to matters contained in the original libel, and where the claims of the libelant and cross-libelant arise out of the same transaction, is unquestionably maintainable under admiralty rule 53. The Highland Fight (D. C.) 88 Fed. 296; The Electron (D. C.) 48 Fed. 689.

It is claimed by the cross-libelant that credit was not given the vessel, and therefore no lien was created for the services performed or the materials furnished. The facts and circumstances, however, sufficiently show that the manufacturers of the furnaces looked to the vessel, aiid not to the owner, for compensation for their entire services. There certainly existed a tacit understanding that the Venezuela should be bound, and that libelants should have a lien for their labor performed and materials furnished. The Newport (D. C.) 107 Fed. 744 ; The Gracie May. 72 Fed. 283, 18 C. C. A. 559. We may now consider the case on its merits.

[836]*836The particular fault with the work performed on the furnaces is claimed to have arisen from defective riveting of the inner end to the flange of the 'flue sheet. The furnaces were 8 feet long and 42 inches in diameter, and of the pattern or style known as the “straight end furnace.” It was necessary, to properly and securely fit them in place, not only to join their ends to the flue sheets, but to caulk the joints to enable resisting the heat of the fire and withstand the pressure from water. The proofs show that after the furnaces were installed in the boiler of the steamer in the spring of 1906, and before the steamer departed for her trip, the work 'was examined by government inspectors, who tested their capacity and found them to be free from leakage or defects. The contracts contained a postscript requiring the work to pass government inspection. Such inspection or test, however, cannot be considered to relieve the libelants from liability on their implied warranty that the work under the contract would be properly performed and free from such defects as were only discoverable after use and trial. Osgood Carleton et al. v. Lombard, Ayres & Co., 149 N. Y. 137, 43 N. E. 422. The libelants were certainly called upon to perform their work of riveting in such a way as to make the furnaces reasonably fit for the purposes intended, and they cannot be permitted to claim that, merely because the hydrostatic test did not disclose latent defects or leakage, the work was properly and practicably done.

The proofs are that within 6 hours after the departure of the vessel from the port of Buffalo on her voyage up the Lakes on April 25, 1906, the furnaces leaked badly at the joint where the flue sheets were connected'to the ends of the furnaces, and in consequence thereof the steamer was obliged to put in at Cleveland for repairs. There she was partially repaired by Mr. Maher, a boiler maker, who was subsequently relieved by the libelants with the sanction of claimant. Libel-ants completed the repairs, which delayed the Venezuela for about 10 days, when she again started and completed her trip. No complaints of 'faulty workmanship or leakage were thereafter made -to libelants until August 30th, when they were notified by claimant that the furnaces again leaked. Between the time of re-riveting and alterations in parts of the furnaces at Cleveland and the last-mentioned date, a period of 4 months, the Venezuela was constantly engaged in her business of transporting merchandise, and libelants had no reason to suppose that the work continued unsatisfactory, or that the furnaces did not adequately perform their functions. On September 1, 1906, the libelants, at the request of the owner of the Venezuela, went to Bay City to inspect the furnaces, and, if necessary, to make further alterations and repairs. In a conversation with Mr. Davidson, the president of the claimant, the witness Tashenberg, one of the libelants, stated that, as the steamer used-a Howden apparatus to induce a draft in the furnace, it would not be possible to keep the riveted joints at the end of the furnaces absolutely secure from leaks without the use in the furnaces of a fire-brick arch. Mr. Davidson, however, insisted that under the contract the libelants were required to perform their work without leakage and without the necessity of using fire brick.

[837]*837Testimony has been introduced tending to show that it was common experience for leaks to develop at such joints in straight end furnaces using the so-called Howden draft, soon after firing the furnaces, in the absence of a fire-brick protection. Upon this subject there is much conflict of testimony; the cross-libelant claiming- that a fire-brick arch was not essential to the efficient use of the furnaces. If there was a common understanding at the time of making the contract relative to the use of a fire-brick lining or arch in connection with the furnaces and induced draft of the type used by the Venezuela, such usage, custom, or common understanding may be read into the contract as accompanying it by implication. Peterson v. Cedar Logs (D. C.) 127 Fed. 869; The Mary N. Bourke (D. C.) 135 Fed. 895. But, whatever probative force such testimony tending to establish a customary usage might ordinarily be entitled to receive, it has, 1 think, been negatived by the action oE libelants in proceeding to Cleveland and Bay City for the express purpose of alterations or repairs, without a clear understanding that they would regard such work as extra or additional to that originally done. The evidence convincingly shows that the original leakage was due to failure to use proper rivets, or such as would have the required bearing on the plate. There is evidence to show that the joined sheets were not up, and that in a few instances the rivet holes were not opposite or fair. The original work was not such as to prevent leaking without the use of fire brick at the joints.

Libelants claim that from the beginning of the work they repeatedly stated to the engineer of the Venezuela and to Mr. Davidson that the Howden draft, which was used by the steamer, induced draft which would furnish heat of such intensity that, to protect the joints, a firebrick arch in the furnaces would be required. Nothing, however, was stated at the time of making the contract to indicate that fire brick for the interior of the furnaces was necessary to protect the joints, and, moreover, libelants knew that the owner of the Venezuela objected to its use. In this connection I may state that claimant’s t;eason for declining to use fire brick, on the ground that it would result in diminishing the draft area of the furnaces, with consequent loss of ef ficiency, is not thought of conspicuous consequence. It is probably true that the draft would be somewhat reduced, but the extent thereof wotdd be negligible.

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Bluebook (online)
173 F. 834, 1909 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-venezuela-nywd-1909.